K.S. Rajan (13
March 2012)
"Defence groups move
to cybersecurity"
"[In these times] cash-strapped governments are cutting military
budgets while defence contractors are shedding jobs and warning
of shrinking revenues [...]"
"So it is with fortuitous timing – at least for defence
companies – that a new enemy is emerging on the world’s stage."
"Cyber attacks by well-resourced, highly capable and relentless,
usually state-sponsored attackers – so called advanced
persistent threats – are growing."
A noteworthy article from today's FT, FYI.
Have a nice week,
David
March 11, 2012 5:24 pm
Defence groups move to cybersecurity
By Carola Hoyos in London
Cyber crime
The end of a decade of war and prosperity is proving
transformative for the weapons trade as cash-strapped
governments are cutting military budgets while defence
contractors are shedding jobs and warning of shrinking revenues.
So it is with fortuitous timing – at least for defence companies
– that a new enemy is emerging on the world’s stage.
Cyber attacks by well-resourced, highly capable and relentless,
usually state-sponsored attackers – so called advanced
persistent threats – are growing.
The best known example is Stuxnet, which was aimed at Iran’s
nuclear centrifuges and is widely believed to have been
developed by the US or Israel, neither of which have confirmed
their involvement.
But dozens of similarly specifically targeted attacks have
infiltrated the systems of a growing number of government
agencies and companies, including defence contractors Northrop
Grumman, Lockheed Martin and L-3 Communications, and natural
resource companies, such as BHP Billiton.
The F-35 jet fighter programme was infiltrated in 2009. Defence
contractors, including BAE Systems, say they are targets of
constant attacks and, in fact, use that as a marketing point
when selling their cyberdefence services.
Collecting precise data on such attacks is difficult because
governments and companies are reticent to admit they have been
compromised.
Financial regulators have yet to force companies to disclose
their vulnerabilities despite their huge potential financial and
reputational harm.
“Never before has there been such a time in IT where there was
such pressure to adopt new technology practices whilst trying to
deal with such a significantly sized security issue,” James
Lyne, director of technology strategy at Sophos, the UK’s
largest cyber security company, said in a recent speech.
China is seen as the major sponsor of high-level cybercrime
involving the theft of sensitive commercial and government
information. Last week a US Congressional report by Northrop
Grumman, the defence contractor, noted China’s cyber prowess
also posed a military threat.
Jamie Shea, Nato’s deputy assistant secretary-general for
emerging security challenges, said: “Clearly in the future all
conflicts are going to involve people trying to disrupt the
information technology systems, which are not only necessary for
communication, but also for the operation of highly
sophisticated weapons systems, most of which these days are
computer driven.”
To address that new frontier, Nato last week signed one of the
most ambitious cyberdefence contracts ever to secure its network
across 50 sites and 28 member countries.
Robert Lentz, former deputy US assistant secretary of defense
for cyber, identity and information assurance, says defence
companies’ access to sensitive contracts such as that of Nato –
won by Finmeccanica and Northrop Grumman – gives them a vaunted
position in a market that is growing in the public and private
sector.
“Defence ministries are the pacesetters to implement the visions
and showcase capabilities that work,” he says. “Often times they
can become the trusted adviser of the entire public sector and
then at the same time the public sector and the critical
infrastructure sectors are communicating and collaborating more
than they ever have.”
By now almost all the major defence contractors have a cyber
element.
Much of the mergers and acquisitions activity over recent years
has involved defence companies buying knowhow or the access to
new markets. Jane’s Defence calculates that about 14 per cent of
defence acquisitions had cyber as their target last year.
In Europe, BAE Systems, Ultra Electronics and Qinetiq have the
highest cyber exposure but for most of the group the per cent of
revenue they get from cyber remains solidly in the low
single-digits.
As their understanding of the market matures, defence companies
are beginning to specialise their offering and spread out from
their traditional defence customers to other government
departments and industry.
Nevertheless, cyber is not the cure for all the defence
companies’ traditional ills.
Even Lawrence Prior, executive vice-president at BAE, cautions
against breathless excitement.
“There is so much hyperbole around the market. It’s a good
market. There’s real growth. But it’s high single-digit, low
double-digit growth depending on how you segment the market.
It’s not triple-digits growth. This isn’t venture-backed,
light-your-hair-on-fire growth.”
Meanwhile, cyber margins are usually well below those companies
make for building and servicing defence equipment and parts.
To improve on them, companies such as BAE’s Detica are moving
increasingly into offering products, rather than acting largely
as consultants.
In doing so, they will have to adapt to a faster moving, more
dynamic business than they are used to, says William Beer, PwC’s
director of the information and cybersecurity practice.
But, he added: “If they [defence contractors] make the jump into
the private sector, they stand a good chance of shaking things
up and really, really enhancing everything we do.”
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2012.