Homeland Security flunks cybersecurity prep test

By Declan McCullagh
http://news.com.com/Homeland+Security+flunks+cybersecurity+prep+test/2100-73
48_3-5722227.html

Story last modified Thu May 26 17:10:00 PDT 2005

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has failed to live up to its
cybersecurity responsibilities and may be "unprepared" for emergencies,
federal auditors said in a scathing report released Thursday.

More than two years after its creation, Homeland Security has never
developed a contingency plan to restore Internet functions in an emergency
and has yet to create a vulnerability assessment of what could happen in an
worst-case scenario, the Government Accountability Office concluded.

"DHS cannot effectively function as the cybersecurity focal point intended
by law and national policy" at the moment, the report (Click for PDF) said.
"There is increased risk that large portions of our national infrastructure
are either unaware of key areas of cybersecurity risks or unprepared to
effectively address cyber emergencies."

The dismal grade for Homeland Security comes as the federal government is
conducting a war game called "Silent Harbor" that's designed to model what
might happen during an electronic attack on the United States. It was
convened by the CIA's secretive Information Operations Center and was set to
conclude Thursday.

Thursday's report represents the most critical take yet on the cybersecurity
efforts of the still-young agency, which was intended to become a central
point for online warnings and responses inside the federal government but
instead has come under fire for being too sluggish. The November 2002 law
creating the Department of Homeland Security melded together computer
security centers from the FBI, the Defense Department, the Commerce
Department and the Energy Department.

In a letter signed by Steven Pecinovsky, a Homeland Security
inter-governmental liaison, the department took issue with the report's
conclusions. Homeland Security does not "agree with the report's implication
that the challenges experienced to date have prevented us from achieving
significant results in improving the nation's cybersecurity posture,"
Pecinovsky wrote. Because Homeland Security is a new agency, it is using
less formal, non-quantitative ways to measure progress, he added.

The GAO warned that bot networks, criminal gangs, foreign intelligence
services, spammers, spyware authors and terrorists were all "emerging"
threats that "have been identified by the U.S. intelligence community and
others." Even though Homeland Security has 13 responsibilities in this area,
it "has not fully addressed any," the GAO said.

Homeland Security has been suffering from an ongoing exodus of top-level
staff. The director and deputy director of Homeland Security's National
Cyber Security Division, a top Computer Emergency Response Team official,
the undersecretary for infrastructure protection, and the assistant
secretary responsible for information protection have all left in the past
year. (The House of Representatives this month approved a reorganization of
those departments.)

Democrats on Capitol Hill were quick to take up the report's findings to
suggest that the Bush administration's cybersecurity efforts have been a
flop.

The "report only confirms what we have known all along; the DHS has failed
to meet the responsibility for critical infrastructure protection," said
Rep. Zoe Lofgren, who represents the San Jose, Calif., area.

Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, the top Democrat on a congressional
homeland security panel, charged that "our critical infrastructures remain
largely unprepared or unaware of cybersecurity risks and how to respond to
cyber emergencies. This is unacceptable."

This isn't the first time the Homeland Security has been rapped by auditors.
Last year, one report said the agency was plagued by computer systems that
were incompatible, and another found that Homeland Security was woefully
behind in terms of sharing computer security information with private
companies.



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit 
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message 
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights 
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to