Tuesday

May 21st, 2024

Insight

The US military must create a Cyber Force

Admr. James Stavridis

By Admr. James Stavridis Bloomberg View

Published March 10, 2023

Two disturbing incidents roiled the cyber seas last week, one foreign and one domestic. They both strengthen the case — which was already convincing, and which I have been making for almost a decade now — for the creation of a U.S. Cyber Force.

The first incident was yet another cyberattack on a NATO member, Albania, by Iran. It was part of an ongoing Iranian campaign to attack Albania, a small Muslim nation of only about three million in the Balkans. The attacks have included zeroing out personal bank accounts, unmasking government and police informants, and degrading command-and-control networks. Iran conducts the attacks because Albania is not prosecuting an anti-Iranian group, the Mujahedeen Khaleq, that has a large presence in Albania.

The attack has raised the issue of whether to invoke NATO's Article 5, which says that an attack on one nation will be regarded as an attack on all. Because the NATO treaty was drafted many decades ago, it does not say whether a cyberattack activates Article 5. But given the evolution in warfare and expansion of cyber operations, such attacks should now fall into that category.

The second incident involved a ransomware attack on the U.S. Marshals Service. A huge amount of sensitive data was compromised, including information on fugitives, high-security individuals and law-enforcement operations. The attack has been designated a "major incident" requiring significant interagency investigation and remediation.

Ironically, last week was also when Jen Easterly, director of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, released the National Cybersecurity Strategy, which has been in the works for many months.

When I was Supreme Allied Commander at NATO, the alliance created a small center of excellence in Tallin, Estonia, to coordinate NATO cyber capabilities. It has since grown in importance. As I watch the level of cyber threat continue to grow exponentially — matching the enormous surge of devices connected to the "internet of things," which is topping 50 billion — I worry about how to protect America's and Americans' cyber assets.

Sign up for the daily JWR update. It's free. Just click here.

The U.S. has very competent armed forces defending us 24/7 — the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force and Space Force within the Department of Defense, and the Coast Guard in the Department of Homeland Security. A U.S. Cyber Force is now also necessary.

The successful creation of the U.S. Space Force three years ago provides a good blueprint for a U.S. Cyber Force. While the force is a tiny fraction of the rest of the Department of Defense, with less than 10,000 uniformed personnel, it operates nearly 100 spacecraft and a complex global network that supports U.S. satellite systems.

A U.S. Cyber Force would likely be even smaller than the Space Force, probably about 5,000 uniformed personnel. It could be lodged within either the Department of Defense or in the Department of Homeland Security (like the Space Force, it could be placed in an existing civilian-led agency or military department, reducing the need for newly created overhead). As a uniformed service, its members would be full-fledged members of the armed forces — with ranks, uniforms and a disciplined, patriotic ethos.

Most important, the creation of a U.S. Cyber Force would move America beyond the current "pick-up team" approach to cybersecurity, wherein each of the armed forces has a small number of cyber experts (most of whom rotate in and out of pure cyber jobs). The pay and benefits of many of the members of the Cyber Force would have to be at least somewhat competitive with the civilian sector, much as physicians and scientists on active duty in today's military receive bonuses and additional compensation benefits.

The creation just over a decade ago of the U.S. Cyber Command has immensely improved America's national security. Located at Fort Meade, Maryland, with the National Security Agency, it is led by a four-star uniformed officer. Many of the veterans of U.S. Cyber Command would form the core of a new U.S. Cyber Force. A Cyber Force would also allow for an independent voice in the councils of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, much as U.S. Space Force's Chief of Space Operations provides.

As the U.S. looks to a future that includes not only great-power cyber competition from Russia and China, but also mid-level cyberattacks from nations such as Iran and North Korea, the time is nigh. The nation should move forward with a dedicated U.S. Cyber Force.

(COMMENT, BELOW)

Stavridis is a Bloomberg columnist. He is a retired U.S. Navy admiral and former supreme allied commander of NATO, and dean emeritus of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. He is also an operating executive consultant at the Carlyle Group and chairs the board of counselors at McLarty Associates.

Previously:
12/07/23 Putin will carpet-bomb Ukraine unless the West acts
10/14/22 Putin's campaign of terror from the air is already failing
09/08/22 Iran reveals how its naval warfare is changing
08/02/22 US needs a global alliance against Russia's cyberattacks
06/28/22What to expect from NATO's new strategic concept
04/13/22 Nukes? Ukraine war's most potent weapon may be a cell phone
01/18/22 Russia is pushing Finland and Sweden toward NATO
10/20/21 What Colin Powell taught me about war and optimism
09/14/21 Why the U.S. Navy is hunting pirates off Africa
07/29/21 Cuba and how Biden can avoid another Mariel boatlift
07/01/21 Donald Rumsfeld never gave in
02/16/21 Keeping troops in Afghanistan makes America safer
08/19/20 Military reasons to celebrate the Israel-UAE deal
07/02/20 Taliban bounties would be a new low even for Putin
01/02/20 May the 'Space Force' be with you
08/02/19 What Iran will do next, and how to stop it
05/06/19 The 'Five Eyes' intelligence-sharing alliance should expand, starting with Israel and Japan
04/24/19 Sri Lanka attacks mark the birth of terrorism 3.0
01/14/19 Iran's tiny navy is trying to revive the Persian Empire
06/04/18 US was right to give China's navy the boot
06/04/18 Big winner of Colombia's election is the US
05/17/18 Great power politics is back as U.S. aims at Russia with resurrected Navy fleet
03/20/18 Fake advice for Putin's fake win

Columnists

Toons