Pentagon's
new cyber strategy cites U.S. ability to retaliate
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[April 23, 2015]
By Phil Stewart
REDWOOD CITY, California (Reuters) - U.S.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter is due to unveil an updated cyber strategy
on Thursday that will stress the military's ability to retaliate with
cyber weapons, a capability he hopes will help deter attacks.
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The strategy presents a potentially far more muscular role for the
U.S. military's cyber warriors than the Pentagon was willing to
acknowledge in its last strategy rollout in 2011 and singles out
threats from Russia, China, Iran and North Korea.
"The United States must be able to declare or display effective
response capabilities to deter an adversary from initiating an
attack," according to a copy of the document, obtained by Reuters
ahead of its release.
The Defense Department, it said, must develop "viable cyber options"
as part of the full range of tools available to the United States
during heightened tensions or outright hostilities.
It should be able to use cyber tools to disrupt an enemy's command
of networks, military-related critical infrastructure and weapons
capabilities.
The full-throated acknowledgement of such possibilities in the
unclassified document is a major shift from 2011 and reflects the
U.S. hope that it will help dissuade potential enemies.
Officials note that other tools to respond include publicly
identifying nations responsible and imposing sanctions.
Carter, speaking to reporters flying with him to California, where
he is due to meet Silicon Valley executives and speak at Stanford
University, said the primary focus of the cyber strategy was
defense.
But he acknowledged that the new strategy was "more clear and more
specific about everything, including offense."
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"It will be useful to us for the world to know that, first of all,
we're going to protect ourselves," Carter said, noting that
deterrence included "a threat to retaliate against those who do us
harm."
"We obviously have a capability to do that, not just in cyber but in
other ways."
Carter's visit comes two months after President Barack Obama visited
Silicon Valley, asking U.S. executives for closer cooperation in
defending against hackers after high-profile attacks on companies
like Sony Pictures Entertainment.
"The North Korean attack on Sony was one of the most destructive
cyber attacks on a U.S. entity to date," the document said.
The document said Russia's cyber actors were stealthy but had
unclear intentions and lambasted China's theft of intellectual
property. Iran and North Korea had "less developed cyber
capabilities" but overt hostile intent toward U.S. interests.
(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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