K.S. Rajan (21
March 2012)
"U.S. accelerating
cyberweapon research"
About one year ago the US (and possibly Israel) disrupted the
Iranian atomic program by means of Stuxnet.
Later, they contemplated doing same with Lybia's air defense
system but "[they were] not ready to do that [at that moment]".
In fact, the problem with such ultra-sophisticated cyber-weapons
is that It can take over one year to craft and test one.
It is thus natural that they are aggressively researching ways
to accelerate their creation process: " “We need cyber options
that can be executed at the speed, scale and pace” of other
military weapons, Kaigham J. Gabriel, DARPA deputy
director, said in testimony last month to Congress. ".
From today's Washington Post, also available at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/us-accelerating-cyberweapon-research/2012/03/13/gIQAMRGVLS_print.html
, FYI,
David
U.S. accelerating cyberweapon research
By Ellen Nakashima,
The Pentagon is accelerating efforts to develop a new generation
of cyberweapons capable of disrupting enemy military networks
even when those networks are not connected to the Internet,
according to current and former U.S. officials.
The possibility of a confrontation with Iran or Syria has
highlighted for American military planners the value of
cyberweapons that can be used against an enemy whose most
important targets, such as air defense systems, do not rely on
Internet-based networks. But adapting such cyberweapons can take
months or even years of arduous technical work.
When U.S. military planners were looking for ways to disable
Libya’s air defense system before NATO’s aerial attacks last
year, they discussed using cybertechnology. But the idea was
quickly dismissed because no effective option was available,
said current and former U.S. officials.
They estimated that crafting a cyberweapon would have taken
about a year, including the time needed to assess the target
system for vulnerabilities.
“We weren’t ready to do that in Libya,” said a former U.S.
official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the
sensitivity of the discussions. “We’re not ready to do that now,
either.”
Last year, to speed up the development of cyberweapons, as well
as defensive technology, then-Deputy Defense Secretary William
J. Lynn III and Marine Corps Gen. James Cartwright, then vice
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, placed $500 million over
five years into the budget of the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency, one of the Defense Department’s premier
research organizations.
The agency also has launched new cyber-development
initiatives, including a “fast-track” program.
“We need cyber options that can be executed at the speed, scale
and pace” of other military weapons, Kaigham J. Gabriel,
DARPA deputy director, said in testimony last month to Congress.
Pentagon officials, meanwhile, are developing a congressionally
mandated strategy for the rapid acquisition of cyberweapons that
can keep pace with threats and technology.
Officials are researching cyberweapons that can target “offline”
military systems in part by harnessing emerging technology that
uses radio signals to insert computer coding into networks
remotely.
“To affect a system, you have to have access to it, and we have
not perfected the capability of reaching out and accessing a
system at will that is not connected to the Internet,” said Joel
Harding, an independent consultant who is a former military
officer and former director of the Information Operations
Institute.
Even if an operator gains access, he said, “unless you already
have custom-written code for a system, chances are we don’t have
a weapon for that because each system has different software and
updates.”
In some cases, as with command-and-control systems, military
assets rely on Internet connections, making them theoretically
easier to target.
Without that connectivity, an attacker would have to rely on
other means — for instance, physically inserting into those
systems portable devices such as thumb drives or computer
components that have been altered.
But such approaches lack the control and predictability that
military commanders desire, experts say.
The amount of disclosed spending by the Pentagon on
cybersecurity and cybertechnology — offensive and defensive — is
$3.4 billion this year. The U.S. Cyber Command, based at Fort
Meade, was created in 2010 and has a budget of $154 million this
year.
U.S. officials say that existing cyberweaponry has the potential
to disable components of a weapon system, although it is
not likely to destroy the system.
Cyber tools might be used in conjunction with other tactics and
weapons. Cybertechnology might, for example, enable an attack by
delaying enemy recognition of it until it is underway.
“It will probably never be just a standalone cyberattack on a
network,” said Lt. Gen. Charles R. Davis, commander of the
Electronic Systems Center at Hanscom Air Force Base, who buys
the tools and software that support the Air Force’s offensive
and defensive cyber activities.
Cybertechnology was not a significant factor in military
operations 10 years ago, Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, said during an Atlantic Council
discussion in December. “Cyber is a significant factor
today.”
In Iraq, during the 2007 surge of U.S. combat forces, the
National Security Agency used cyber tools to muddle the signals
of the cellphones and laptop computers that insurgents used to
coordinate their strikes, according to previously published
reports confirmed by former U.S. officials. U.S. cyber operators
used those techniques to deceive the enemy with false
information, in some cases leading fighters into an ambush by
U.S. troops.
But countering Libya’s air defenses was a different story. The
operation arose quickly. Officials had not foreseen the Arab
Spring uprising against Libyan strongman Moammar Gaddafi, and no
intelligence and engineering work had been done to exploit the
vulnerabilities of the Libyan air defense system.
Some experts believe that Israel may have used a cyberweapon to
blind Syrian radar before bombing a suspected nuclear facility
in September 2007, but several former U.S. officials say that
the technique more likely used was conventional electronic
warfare or radar jamming using signals emitted from an airplane.
The Stuxnet computer virus that reportedly disabled some 900
centrifuges in an Iranian uranium-enrichment plant in 2009 and
2010 — while it has been dubbed by control-system expert Ralph
Langner as the world’s “first digital warhead” — lacked the
precision, predictability and control that a military commander
would need during combat, experts said.
“If I’m trying to knock down an air defense system, I have to
know precisely what’s going to happen and when it will happen,”
said a former military official. “It’s a fundamentally different
approach than Stuxnet.”
DARPA plans to focus an increasing portion of its cyber research
on “offensive capabilities to address military-specific needs,”
Gabriel said recently in testimony before the House Armed
Services subcommittee on emerging threats and capabilities.
Over the past decade, instances have been reported in which
cyber tools were contemplated but not used because of concern
they would result in collateral damage. For instance, defense
and intelligence agencies discussed using cybertechnology to
freeze money in Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s bank accounts
just before the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003 to blunt his
efforts to mount a defense. The plan was aborted because of
concern that the cyberattack could disrupt financial systems in
Europe and beyond.
Within a war zone, the use of a cyberweapon may be limited by
other considerations. There is the danger of collateral damage
to civilian systems, such as disrupting a power supply to a
hospital. A destructive computer code, once released, could be
reverse-engineered and sent back at vulnerable U.S. targets or
adapted for use by foreign spy agencies. Cybertechnology also is
not always the most efficient way to attack a target — sometimes
bombs or electronic warfare are easier or more reliable.
Within the Pentagon, more money is being spent on defending
against cyberattacks than on preparing to deploy offensive
cyber operations, officials say. That is appropriate, they say,
when adversaries are trying to develop similar cyberweapons to
use against U.S. military targets that may not be secure against
attack and when Pentagon networks are probed thousands of times
daily.
But more money needs to be spent on developing cyperweapons, say
some former officials. “You’ve got to start moving investment to
the offensive side,” Cartwright said.
Pentagon spending on cybertechnology is growing even as other
areas of its budget are shrinking, officials say.
“I am still not remotely satisfied with where we are in cyber,”
Deputy Secretary of Defense Ashton B. Carter said at the Credit
Suisse and McAleese and Associates defense conference in
Arlington this month.
“I dare say,” he said, “we’d spend a lot more if we could figure
out where to spend it.”
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