By Terri Moon Cronk, DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON -- The first new National Cyber Strategy in 15
years is built on four pillars: protecting the American people, the homeland
and the American way of life; promoting American prosperity; preserving peace
through strength; and advancing American influence.
“We cannot ignore the costs of malicious cyber activity —
economic or otherwise — directed at America’s government, businesses and
private individuals,” President Donald J. Trump said in a statement yesterday
announcing the new strategy. “Guided by this [strategy], the federal government
will be better equipped to protect the American people, the American homeland,
and the American way of life.
“Through it,” he continued, “we will accomplish critical
security objectives while supporting American prosperity, preserving peace
through strength and advancing American influence. Informed by the strategy’s
guidance, federal departments and agencies will more effectively execute their
missions to make America cyber secure.”
DoD’s Role
The strategy highlights the critical and growing threat that
malicious cyber actors pose to U.S. national security. “The Defense Department
stands ready, as part of the synchronized whole-of-government approach
articulated in the National Cyber Strategy, to preserve peace through strength
by identifying, countering, disrupting, degrading and deterring behavior in
cyberspace that is destabilizing and contrary to U.S. national interests,” DoD
officials said in a statement, adding that the department's focus is on
preserving U.S. superiority in cyberspace and defending forward to disrupt the
activities of malicious cyber actors before they reach U.S. networks.
DoD also is strengthening its defensive posture through
network hardening, improved cybersecurity and working with its international
allies and partners, in addition to its Defense Industrial Base and Defense
Critical Infrastructure partners to secure critical information and
infrastructure, the Pentagon statement noted.
Protecting America’s Networks
Officials said the strategy will:
-- Protect American networks by securing federal networks
and information and the nation’s critical infrastructure;
-- Combat cybercrime and improve incident reporting;
-- Promote American prosperity by fostering a vibrant and
resilient digital economy;
-- Protect American ingenuity from threats such as
intellectual property theft;
-- Develop a superior cybersecurity workforce through
education and recruitment; and
-- Stand up to destabilizing behavior in cyberspace by
promoting responsible behavior among nation states, working to ensure
consequences exist for irresponsible cyber behavior, launching an international
Cyber Deterrence Initiative and exposing and countering online malign influence
and information campaigns.
The National Cyber Strategy will promote an open and secure
internet by encouraging other nations to advance internet freedom and advance a
multi-stakeholder model of internet governance, officials said, and also will
promote open, interoperable, reliable and secure communications infrastructure
in addition to opening overseas markets for American ingenuity and building
international cyber capacity.
Protecting the People, Homeland, Way of Life
The strategy notes that pursuing the objectives of the first
pillar will require the U.S. government, private industry and the public to
take immediate and decisive actions to strengthen cybersecurity, with each
working on securing the networks under their control and supporting each other
as appropriate.
For the government’s part in that effort, the strategy says,
the administration will act to further enable the Department of Homeland
Security to secure federal department and agency networks, with the exception
of national security systems and Defense Department and Intelligence Community
systems.
The government also will align its risk-management and
information technology technologies, improve risk management in the federal
supply chain, strengthen federal contractor cybersecurity, and ensure the
government leads in best and innovative practices.
Promoting American Prosperity
The strategy’s second pillar seeks to preserve U.S.
influence in the technological ecosystem and the development of cyberspace as
an open engine of economic growth, innovation and efficiency.
To enhance the resilience of cyberspace, the administration
expects the technology marketplace to support and reward the continuous
development, adoption and evolution of innovative security technologies and
processes and will work across stakeholder groups, including the private sector
and civil society, to promote best practices and develop strategies to overcome
market barriers to the adoption of secure technologies.
Preserving Peace Through Strength
Challenges to U.S. security and economic interests from
nation states and other groups, which have long existed in the offline world,
are now increasingly occurring in cyberspace, the new strategy notes, adding
that this now-persistent engagement in cyberspace is altering the strategic
balance of power.
As part of the National Cybersecurity Strategy’s third
pillar, cyberspace will no longer be treated as a separate category of policy
or activity disjointed from other elements of national power. The United States
will integrate the employment of cyber options across every element of national
power to Identify, counter, disrupt, degrade and deter behavior in cyberspace
that is destabilizing and contrary to national interests, while preserving
United States overmatch in and through cyberspace.
Advancing American Influence
In outlining its fourth pillar, the strategy says the world
looks to the United States, where much of the innovation for today’s internet
originated, for leadership on a vast range of transnational cyber issues.
The United States will maintain an active international
leadership posture to advance American influence and to address an expanding
array of threats and challenges to its interests in cyberspace, the strategy
says. Collaboration with allies and partners is part of this pillar, which the
strategy says is essential to ensuring continued benefit from cross-border
communications, content creation and commerce generated by the internet’s open,
interoperable architecture.
This pillar’s objective, the strategy says, is to preserve
the internet’s long-term openness, interoperability, security, and reliability,
which supports and is reinforced by U.S. interests.
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