Cyber Workforce Ferris Wheel

Jason Healey | May 03, 2011

http://www.acus.org/new_atlanticist/cyber-workforce-ferris-wheel

There is nothing "new" in recent reports of gaps in the United States 
government's  cyber security workforce as numerous commissions and reports have 
identified the problem and solutions for over a decade.   We remain stuck in a 
Ferris wheel of our own making and worse, mistaking movement for progress.

A recently released report by the Inspector General for the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation found 35% of their special agents assigned to investigate 
national security cyber intrusions cases lacked the requisite training, 
experience, and technical skills. These are the G-men investigating the kinds 
of foreign espionage intrusions reported so frequently in the press– such as 
spying into “nuclear weapons and research labs” (2001), the theft of data on 
the F-35 fighter program (2009), “10 to 20 terabytes” stolen from the military 
(2006), or backdoors found in the electrical grid to abet future crippling 
military attacks (2009) – so this workforce shortfall is a serious matter for 
America’s national security. 

One reason for this lack of cyber expertise is that the FBI trains agents to be 
cyber specialists, only to rotate them to non-cyber jobs afterwards. Worse, 
their replacements often come with little expertise, requiring field offices to 
start the training process from scratch. 

This is of course bad for the Bureau and worse for the United States, as these 
problems are not confined to the FBI. For example, a 2010 study for Strategic 
Command found that United States military “commands are forced to do more work 
with fewer, less-qualified technicians due to high turnover of staff leaving 
positions and the inexperience of incoming replacement personnel.”   Talented 
junior officers and enlisted have quit the service, frustrated they’d been 
trained in specific, often highly specialized and classified, skills for the 
cyber battlefield only to be rotated out to run an IT help desk. All of this 
leaves the Secretary of Defense feeling “desperately short of people who have 
the capabilities (defensive and offensive cybersecurity war skills) in all the 
Services.” This is one reason why our efforts at cyber workforce resemble a 
Ferris wheel: people get on and swept up and away, but the ride doesn’t last 
long and they’re quickly replaced by someone else. The replacement takes the 
same seat and thrills to the same view, but nothing else changes.

We can take some comfort that the FBI and DoD are recognizing this problem and 
indeed there have been many excellent reports giving both wider and deeper 
insights. The Center for Strategic and International Studies report on “A Human 
Capital Crisis in Cybersecurity” gives a high-level view plus specific 
recommendations, as does “Cyber In-Security” from the Partnership for Public 
Service and Booz-Allen Hamilton while the Federal CIO Council’s report 
“NetGeneration” goes into significant depth of the demographics of the Federal 
cyber and IT workforce. 

These excellent studies, however, should only bring cold comfort as they are 
far too similar to many other reports over the years, just as influential in 
their time, now shelved and forgotten. Using words that seem chillingly 
familiar to the FBI’s, the GAO in 1996 “interviewed 24 individuals responsible 
for managing and securing systems … Sixteen stated that they did not have 
enough time, experience, or training to do their jobs properly.” Likewise, a 
finding from a 1999 DoD working group is just as true today as it was then: the 
military lacks “a consistent capability … to provide initial skill training to 
all members of the [cybersecurity] workforce, much less continuing training to 
maintain currency with the rapidly changing technology.” 

A Defense Science Board report found in 2001 that “Recruiting is difficult when 
colleges and universities are only producing enough IT graduates to fill half 
of the growing annual requirement” and the White House’s 2003 National Strategy 
to Secure Cyberspace noted “This trend must be reversed if the United States is 
to lead the world with its cyber economy.” But ten years on, the Navy still 
worries about an “expected 11.2 percent shortfall in industry-wide … which 
means there will be almost 98,000 fewer IT graduates than needed.”

This is the other reason why our cyber workforce management efforts resemble a 
Ferris wheel: the wheel turns on and on, with highs and with lows but 
ultimately covering the same ground again and again. We move, but around and 
around, never forward.

There are many solutions to these problems, which the above reports have 
discussed in more depth and quality than can be covered in a blog post.   What 
the U.S. needs (along with our private sector and international partners) is an 
understanding of the pressing need for solutions along with an awareness of the 
hard work done by those around us now and their predecessors.  

The authors of “Cyber In-Security” have a succinct and apt bottom line: “Our 
federal government will be unable to combat [online] threats without a more 
coordinated, sustained effort to increase cybersecurity expertise in the cyber 
workforce.” The problems have not changed significantly over the years, nor 
have the needed solutions. 

Unfortunately for us, one other thing has not changed much either: the lack of 
“a coordinated, sustained effort” and the resources to apply long-recommended 
fixes to solve these problems. Hopefully the current attention of the 
leadership in the White House, FBI, DoD, private sector, and elsewhere will be 
able to end the cycle and finally get us off the cyber workforce Ferris wheel.

Jason Healey is the Director of the Atlantic Council’s Cyber Statecraft 
Initiative. You can follow his comments on cyber issues on Twitter, 
@Jason_Healey. 
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