Pentagon: 24K files stolen
By: Jennifer Epstein and Jennifer Martinez
July 14, 2011 01:40 PM EDT
http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=27153F00-B8B7-42CA-A543-AE651D81CC21

The Pentagon suffered one of its largest-ever cyber thefts this spring when 
more than 24,000 files were stolen by a foreign government, officials disclosed 
on Thursday. 

William Lynn, the deputy secretary of defense, said at the National Defense 
University in Washington that the files were stolen from a defense industry 
computer in a single intrusion in March.. 

“It is a significant concern that over the past decade, terabytes of data have 
been extracted by foreign intruders from corporate networks of defense 
companies,” he said at the start of an afternoon speech laying out the Defense 
Department’s first unified strategy for cyber security.  “Indeed, in a single 
intrusion this March, 24,000 files were taken.” 

Lynn said the massive attack was not by an individual but by another country. 
“It was done, we think, by a foreign intelligence service,” he said, declining 
to identify the country. Theft “was data-related,” he said. 

That cyber break-in and others have galvanized the Pentagon to develop new 
cybersecurity rules aimed at guarding against attacks coming from within the 
military and outside it. 

“It is critical to strengthen our cyber capabilities to address the cyber 
threats we’re facing,” Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said in a statement ahead 
of Lynn’s speech. “I view this as an area in which we’re going to confront 
increasing threats in the future and think we have to  be better prepared to 
deal with the growing cyber challenges that will face the nation.” 

Lynn called some of the data stolen in cyberattacks “mundane,” but added, “A 
great deal of it concerns our most sensitive systems, including aircraft 
avionics, surveillance technologies, satellite communications systems, and 
network security protocols.” 

And websites and computer systems throughout across the defense world have been 
hit, he warned. 

“In fact, our venue here today, the National Defense University, has been 
struck,” he said. “The NDU website and its associated server were recently 
compromised by an intrusion that turned over system control to an unknown 
server.” 

The Pentagon is declaring the virtual world to be a new warfare domain like the 
land, sea and air. The military, the plan says, must continue to operate even 
if its computer systems are attacked. 

The plan includes new rules that stress deeper defenses, greater collaboration 
between the Pentagon and the defense industry, and measures to prevent theft by 
malicious insiders. 

“We’re on the bad side of a convergent threat,” Gen. James Cartwright, vice 
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said earlier Thursday. “We’ve got to 
change that around and part of that will be the deterrent construct.” 

“Right now we’re on a path that’s predictable, way too predictable,” he said.
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