GAO: U.S. lacks cybersecurity R&D master plan, leadership, coordination

Published 8 July 2010

GAO says United States does not have prioritized national cybersecurity research and development agenda; “Without a current national cybersecurity R&D agenda, the nation is at risk that agencies and private sector companies may focus on their individual priorities, which may not be the most important national research priorities,” auditors wrote

The U.S. federal government’s cybersecurity research and development programs lack needed leadership and coordination, according to government auditors. According to the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the government does not have a prioritized national cybersecurity research and development agenda. Officials also do not have the ability to track all active and completed cybersecurity programs and a process sufficiently to share key information between government and industry, auditors wrote in a report, titled “Cybersecurity: Key Challenges Need to Be Addressed to Improve Research and Development,” released yesterday.

“Without a current national cybersecurity R&D agenda, the nation is at risk that agencies and private sector companies may focus on their individual priorities, which may not be the most important national research priorities,” auditors wrote.

FCW’s Ben Bain writes that GAO said that although the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) and its multi-agency coordination body named the Subcommittee on Networking and Information Technology Research and Development (NITRD) have recently tried to improve coordination, key problems remain. The lack of a national agenda makes it more likely that programs will not reflect national priorities, important decisions will be postponed, and agencies will lack overall direction, GAO said.

To fix the problems, the auditors recommended that the head of OSTP and the White House’s cybersecurity coordinator direct NITRD to:

  • Develop a comprehensive national R&D agenda that contains priorities for short-term, mid-term, and long-term complex cybersecurity R&D, input from industry and academia, and is consistent with an updated national cybersecurity strategy.
  • Tell the cybersecurity coordinator about shortages in the cybersecurity field so that information can be used to update the national cybersecurity strategy to correct personnel weaknesses.
  • Work with Office of Management and Budget to develop a way to keep track of all ongoing and completed federal cybersecurity R&D projects and their funding.
  • Use that new tracking mechanism to develop an ongoing process to make federal R&D information available to agencies and industry.

Officials from OMB and OSTP said they believe an agenda is contained in existing documents, according to GAO. The auditors, however, said the documents are either outdated or lack appropriate detail.

 

In response, the science office wrote, “While [OSTP] cannot concur with certain of the findings in [the report], current OSTP actions and plans are in line with GAO’s Recommendations for Executive Action and [OSTP] can fully support these recommendations.”