Cyber Attacks Present 'Huge' Threat, Gates Says
<http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=61729>  
Wed, 17 Nov 2010 14:56:00 -0600 



Cyber Attacks Present 'Huge' Threat, Gates Says 


By Elaine Wilson 
American Forces Press Service 

WASHINGTON, Nov. 17, 2010 - Leaders are taking steps to bring defense
industrial and domestic partners under an umbrella of protection from cyber
attacks, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said. 



 
<http://www.defense.gov/DODCMSShare/NewsStoryPhoto/2010-11/scr_101116-D-9880
W-129c.jpg> Click photo for screen-resolution image
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, right, responds to a question during an
interview with Gerald F. Seib, the Wall Street Journal's executive
Washington editor, during the newspaper's CEO Council event in Washington,
D.C., Nov. 16, 2010. The interview focused on upcoming budget cuts within
the department. Seib also is the Wall Street Journal's assistant managing
editor. DOD photo by R. D. Ward 
(Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image
<http://www.defense.gov/DODCMSShare/NewsStoryPhoto/2010-11/hrs_101116-D-9880
W-129c.jpg>  available. 


"There is a huge future threat and there is a considerable current threat
[from cyber attacks]," Gates said here yesterday during a
question-and-answer session at the Wall Street Journal's CEO Council.
"That's just a reality we all face." 

The DOD already has implemented effective protections for ".mil," he said,
and is working with its partners in the defense industrial base to offer
them similar protections. 

Leaders also would like to extend this protection to the government's
domestic side, Gates said, noting the importance of the National Security
Agency to the nation's defense against cyber threats and attacks. 

"The only defense the United States has ... against nation states and other
potential threats in the cyber world is the National Security Agency," he
said. "You cannot replicate the National Security Agency for domestic
affairs. There isn't enough money, there isn't enough time, and there isn't
enough human talent." 

The challenge, however, is offering the government's domestic side access to
NSA while also taking into account concerns for privacy and civil liberties,
Gates said. 

With this issue in mind, President Barack Obama recently approved a
memorandum of understanding based on recommendations from Gates and Homeland
Security Secretary Janet Napolitano. The MOU creates a Homeland Security
Department cell within NSA, Gates said, with the authority to task NSA, but
using its own attorneys to ensure privacy and civil liberties are kept at
the forefront. 

The cell offers a domestic security agency an opportunity to reach into NSA
in a "real-time way" for protection, Gates said. 

"My hope is over time that this will lead to better protections for both
.gov and .com," he said. 
Gates also touched on the need for "real" competition in regard to
acquisition, a topic that dovetails into his initiative to slash $100
billion from the DOD's overhead -- or the "tail side" -- and reinvest
savings into the "tooth side" of the department. 

"Too often competition in Washington is, everyone wins," the secretary said.
"That's not my idea of competition. My idea of competition in the
acquisition arena is winner takes all. 

"I think the more we can do this, and the more we can cause industry,
particularly on relatively low-technology-risk programs, to share the risk
with the government in terms of timeliness and costs, the better off the
taxpayers will be," Gates said. "And at the end of the day, I think, the
better off business will be." 
  

 



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