CybersecurityNapolitano asserts DHS cybersecurity leadership

Published 21 December 2010

Cybersecurity should be led by DHS and not left to the market or the military, DHS secretary Janet Napolitano said; this year, DHS has expanded partnerships with private industry and worked to build up liaisons with private sector industries it deems to be “critical”; DHS has also improved its partnerships with military and military intelligence this year; in October, DHS and the Department of Defense signed a cybersecurity pact to improve collaboration between the agencies and boost DHS’s encryption and decryption capabilities by co-mingling National Security Agency (NSA) cryptologic analysts and DHS cybersecurity leadership in a move that signaled progress in a sometimes uneasy relationship with the military

DHS seeks to direct cybersecurity efforts // Source: immigrationimpact.com

Cybersecurity should be left neither to the free market nor to the military to solve, DHS secretary Janet Napolitano said in a speech in Washington, D.C., last week as she reasserted her agency’s role as the locus of cybersecurity authority in the federal government.

Cyberspace is fundamentally a civilian space,” Napolitano said. “There are some who say cybersecurity should be left to the market, and there are some who characterize the Internet as a battlefield. Both the market and the battlefield analogies are the wrong ones to use. We should be talking about this as, fundamentally, a civilian space and a civilian benefit that employs partnerships with the private sector and across the globe.”

InformationWeek reports that DHS has taken the lead in the federal government on cybersecurity measures via its National Cyber Security Division. That group this year headed up a major international and inter-governmental cyber exercise, Cyber Storm III, and continued ramping up efforts to protect federal systems and critical infrastructure like power plants.

Napolitano has been an ardent supporter of DHS’ leadership role, but while she implied a DHS-centered view of cybersecurity, she did admit that DHS can not do it alone. “It is our goal to build one of the very best teams that we can to tackle the cybersecurity challenge,” she added. “No single industry or agency, quite frankly, can manage it. Cybersecurity is about effective partnerships and shared security.”

This year, DHS has expanded partnerships with private industry, for example doing a substantial amount of investigative work on the Stuxnet worm that infiltrated power plant control systems earlier this year and working to build up liaisons with private sector industries it deems to be “critical.”

InformationWeek notes that DHS has also improved its partnerships with military and military intelligence this year. In October, DHS and the Department of Defense signed a cybersecurity pact to improve collaboration between the agencies and boost DHS’ encryption and decryption capabilities by co-mingling National Security Agency (NSA) cryptologic analysts and DHS cybersecurity leadership in a move that signaled progress in a sometimes uneasy relationship with the military.

We’re working very closely along and across the federal family, particularly having worked out really the thorny issues involving how the NSA is to be used in a civilian context for protection and prevention, as well as in a military context,” Napolitano said last week.