KGRKJGETMRETU895U-589TY5MIGM5JGB5SDFESFREWTGR54TY
Server : Apache/2.4.62
System : FreeBSD fbsdweb2.web.rcn.net 14.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE releng/14.1-n267679-10e31f0946d8 GENERIC amd64
User : www ( 80)
PHP Version : 8.3.8
Disable Function : NONE
Directory :  /domains/roger.dnai/2007book/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Current File : /domains/roger.dnai/2007book/grimes07.htm
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
<html><!-- InstanceBegin template="/Templates/2007template.dwt" codeOutsideHTMLIsLocked="false" -->
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="doctitle" -->
<title>CSDR 24th International Workshop on Global Security, Michele Alliot-Marie, Herve Morin, General Henri Bentegeat, General Jean-Louis Georgelin, General James L. Jones, Marc Perrin de Brichambaut, Patrick Auroy, Kent Schneider, Ambassador Mahmoud Karem, Admiral Giampaolo Di Paola, General Franciszek Gagor, Dr. Arthur T. Hopkins, George Joulwan, Borys Tarasyuk, Jean de Ponton d'Am&eacute;court, General Rainer Schuwirth, General Egon Ramms, Gen Ulrich Wolf, Louis Gallois, Marwan Lahoud, Denis Ranque, Edgar Buckley, Assistant Secretary John Grimes, Tim Bloechl, EADS, Northrop Grumman, Microsoft, Robert Ranquet, Admiral Jean Betermier, Giovanni Bertolone, Robert Ranquet, Alenia Aeronautica, Roger Weissinger-Baylon, WMD, Weaapons of Mass Destruction, NATO, EU, UN, OSCE, Paris Air Show, French Defense Minister, Afghanistan, Iraq, Kosovo, Climate Change, Energy, Boeing</title>
<!-- InstanceEndEditable -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/2002Book/emx_nav_right.css" type="text/css">
<style type="text/css">
<!--
.style5 {font-weight: bold;
	color: #000000;
	font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
	font-size: large;
}
.style7 {font-size: 2px}
.style8 {font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif}
.style17 {
	font-size: x-small;
	font-weight: bold;
}
.style18 {font-size: x-small}
.style217 {font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif}
.style219 {font-style: normal; font-weight: normal; font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; }
.style19 {font-size: 11px}
.style20 {
	color: #006699;
	font-size: large;
}
.style21 {font-size: small}
.style22 {font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: small; }
-->
</style>
<style type="text/css">
<!--
.style23 {font-size: medium}
.style24 {font-size: large}
.style25 {
	color: #006699;
	font-weight: bold;
	font-style: italic;
}
.style26 {
	color: #006699;
	font-size: medium;
	font-weight: bold;
}
.style27 {
color: #006699;
font-size: medium;

}


.style293 {

font-size: large;
color: black;

}
-->
</style>
<!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="head" --><!-- InstanceEndEditable -->
</head>
<body> 
<div class="skipLinks">skip to: <a href="#content">page content</a> | <a href="../book2007TEST/2002Book/pageNav">links on this page</a> | <a href="#globalNav">site navigation</a> | <a href="#siteInfo">footer (site information)</a> </div>
<div id="masthead"> 

  <h1 align="center" id="siteName"><strong>Center for Strategic Decision Research</strong></h1> 

 <div id="globalNav">    <div id="globalLink"> 
      <a href="/index.html" id="gl1" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Home</span></span></a><a href="/2007book/joulwan07" id="gl2" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Paris '07</span></span></a><a href="/2006book/jung.htm" id="gl2" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Berlin '06</span></span></a><a href="/2005book/alliotmarie.htm" id="gl2" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Paris '05</span></span></a><a href="/2004book/PeterStruckKeynote.htm" id="gl3" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Berlin '04</span></span></a><a href="/moscow03/weissingerbaylon.htm" id="gl4" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Moscow '03</span></span></a><a href="/berlin02/scharping.htm" id="gl5" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Berlin '02</span></span></a><a href="/2001Book/workshop2001.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Helsinger '01</span></span></a><a href="/2000Book/workshop2000.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Berlin '00</span></span></a><a href="/99Book/workshop1999.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Budapest '99</span></span></a><a href="/98Book/workshop98.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Vienna '98</span></span></a><a href="/97Book/workshop97.htm" id="gl6" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Prague '97</span></span></a><a href="/96Book/Workshop96.htm" id="gl7" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Warsaw '96</span></span></a> 
      <a href="/95Book/95Workshop.htm" id="gl8" class="glink"><span class="style18"><span class="style19">Dresden '95</span></span></a></div> 
</div> 
</div> 


<div id="pagecell1"> 
  <div id="breadCrumb"><br>
     <table width="386" border="0" align="center">
      <tr>
        <td width="66" height="68"><p><img src="../2004book/logo-kevin-web.jpg" alt="csdr logo" width="60" height="66"></p>        </td>
        <td width="340"><div align="left" class="style262">
          <p><span class="style293">international workshop series<br>
          on global security </span><br>
            </p>
        </div></td>
      </tr>
    </table>
  </div> 
  <div id="pageNav">  
    <div id="sectionLinks">
      <p align="center" class="style17"><strong>Table of Contents<br>
      24th International Workshop - </strong><strong>Paris '07</strong></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17"><span class="style18"><span class="style219"> </span>

	<span class="style219"><a href="/2007book/weissinger07.htm">Preface- Dr. Roger<br>
	Weissinger-Baylon<br>
	Workshop Chairman<br>
	</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="/2007book/ranquet07.htm">Foreword - Ing General<br>
	Robert Ranquet<br>
	</a></span>
	<span class="style219"><a href="/2007book/joulwan07.htm">Opening Dinner Debate - <br>
	General George Joulwan<br>
	Former SACEUR<br>
	</a></span></span><br>
	Global security challenges:  <br>
        Is there hope for <br>
        Afghanistan or Iraq?<br>
      </p>
	  
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/bentegeat07.htm">General Henri Bentegeat<br>
        President of EU Military Committee</a>
	  <a href="/2007book/georgelin07">Gen Jean-Louis Georgelin C<strong>hef d&rsquo;&eacute;tat</strong>-<strong>major</strong> des arm&eacute;es - France</a><a href="/2007book/amecourt07.htm">Mr. Jean de Ponton d'Amecourt - French Dir of Strategic Affairs</a><a href="/2007book/schuwirth07.htm">General Rainer Schuwirth <br>
        Chief of Staff, SHAPE</a><a href="/2007book/ramms07.htm">General Egon Ramms <br>
      Commander, Allied Joint Force Cmd, Brunssum</a>
      <a href="/2007book/akram07.htm">
        Amb Munir Akram<br>
        Pakistan's Amb to UN</a><a href="/2007book/zhan07.htm">
        Major Gen ZHAN Maohai<br>
        Vice Chair of China IISS</a><br>
        Energy &amp; Climate Change<br>     
      
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/jones07.htm">General James Jones<br>
        Former Supreme Allied Commander Europe</a><a href="/2007book/ashton07.htm">Mr. John Ashton<br>
        UK Special Repr for Climate Change</a><br>
        Security in the Balkans &amp; Black Sea region<br>
      
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/baramidze07.htm">Georgian Vice Prime Minister Giorgi Baramidze</a>      
        <a href="/2007book/tarasyuk07.htm">Ukrainian Foreign Minister Borys Tarasyuk</a> 
      <a href="/2007book/mediu07.htm">Albanian Defense Minister Fatmir Mediu</a><a href="/2007book/bliznakov07.htm">Bulgarian Defense Minister Veselin Bliznakov</a><a href="/2007book/bezhuashvili07.htm">Georgian Foreign Min Gela Bezhuashvili</a><a href="/2007book/ildem07.htm">Ambassador <strong> Tacan Ildem</strong><br>
Turkish Amb to NATO</a><a href="/2007book/buzhinsky07.htm">
        Lt Gen Evgeniy Buzhinsky<br>
        Russian Ministry of Defense</a><br>
        Time for new strategies?<br>
        NATO after the Riga Summit<br>
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/eldon07.htm">Amb Stewart Eldon<br>
        UK Ambassador to NATO</a>
        <a href="/2007book/orgaz07.htm">Amb Pablo Benavides Orgaz<br>
        Spanish Amb to NATO</a>
        <a href="/2007book/stefanini07.htm">Amb Stefano Stefanini <br>
        Italian Amb to NATO</a><a href="/2007book/dipaola07.htm">Adm Giampaolo Di Paola<br>
        Italian Chief of Defense<br>
        </a><a href="/2007book/gagor07.htm">Gen Franciszek Gagor Polish Chief of Defense</a><br>
        How can the EU, NATO, the OSCE, and UN reform?<br>      
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/brichambaut07.htm">Amb Marc Perrin de Brichambaut<br>
        OSCE Secretary General </a><a href="/2007book/lintonen07.htm">Amb Kirsti Lintonen Finnish Amb to UN</a>
        <a href="/2007book/brodi07.htm">Amb Gabor Brodi<br>
        Hungarian Amb to UN</a><a href="/2007book/rinkevics07.htm">State Sec Edgars Rinkevics - Latvian MOD</a><a href="/2007book/linkevicius07.htm">Amb Linas Linkevicius<br>
        Lithuanian Amb to NATO<br>
        </a>
        <a href="/2007book/chizhov07.htm">Amb Vladimir Chizhov<br>
        Russian Amb to the EU<br>
        </a><a href="/2007book/monteforte07.htm">Vice Adm Ferdinando Sanfelice di Monteforte<br>
        Italian Mil Repr to NATO</a><br>
        Dealing with middle east:<br>Views from North Africa
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/yousfi07.htm">Amb Youcef Yousfi<br>
        Algerian Amb to UN and former Foreign Minister</a><a href="/2007book/karem07.htm">Amb Mahmoud Karem<br>
      Egyptian Amb to EU and Repr to Med Dialogue</a><a href="/2007book/alem07.htm">Amb Menouar Alem<br>
        Moroccan Amb to EU and Repr to Med Dialogue<br>
        </a>
      
      <p align="center" class="style17">WMD and cyber threats
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/pfirter07.htm">Amb Rogelio Pfirter<br>
        Director-General, OPCW</a>
        <a href="/2007book/hopkins07.htm">Dr. Arthur T. Hopkins<br>
        Assist to U.S. Sec of Defense -  Nuclear &amp; Chemical &amp; Biological</a><a href="/2007book/aaviksoo07.htm">Estonian Defense Minister<br>
        Jaak Aaviksoo</a><a href="/2007book/grimes07.htm">Hon John Grimes<br>
        US Assistant Secretary of Defense - NII<br>
        </a><a href="/2007book/lentz07.htm">Mr. Robert Lentz<br>
        US Dep Asst Sec for NII<br>
         </a><a href="/2007book/wolf07.htm">Lt General Ulrich Wolf<br>
         Dir of NATO CIS Service Agency<br>
         </a>
         <a href="/2007book/bloechl07.htm">Mr. Tim Bloechl<br>
        Microsoft Exec Director</a>      
      
      <p align="center" class="style17">How industry can help address the global challenges<p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/lahoud07.htm">Mr. Marwan Lahoud<br>
        Chief Operating Office EADS</a><a href="/2007book/schneider07.htm">Mr. Kent Schneider<br>
President, Defense Group<br>
Northrop Grumman IT<br>
</a><a href="/2007book/auroy07.htm">Mr. Patrick Auroy<br>
Deputy Director,<br>
French DGA
        <br>
</a><a href="/2007book/volkman07.htm">Mr. Alfred Volkman<br>
        Dir, Defense Cooperation<br>
        US Dept of Defense<br>
        </a>
        <a href="/2007book/linnenkamp07.htm">Dr. Hilmar Linnenkamp<br>
        Dep CEO, EDA</a>
        <a href="/2007book/lind07.htm">Mr. Jan-Olof Lind<br>
        Swedish National Armaments Director</a>
        <a href="/2007book/buckley07.htm">Dr. Edgar Buckley<br>
        Thales Senior Vice President</a>
        <a href="/2007book/trice07">Dr. Robert Trice<br>
        Lockheed Martin <br>
        Senior Vice President<br>   
        </a><a href="/2007book/bertolone07.htm">Ing. Giovanni Bertolone<br>
        CEO, Alenia Aeronautica</a>
      
      <p align="center" class="style17">The way ahead &amp; why current approaches don't work      
      
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/martinusz07.htm">Amb Zoltan Martinusz<br>
        Hungarian Amb to NATO<br>
        </a><a href="/2007book/ducaru07.htm">Amb Dumitru Sorin Ducaru<br>
        Romanian Amb to NATO</a><a href="/2007book/kujat07.htm">        General Harald Kujat<br>
        Former Chair of NATO Military Committee</a>
    </div>
  </div> 
  <div id="content">
    <div class="story"><!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="EditRegion3" -->
         <!-- Start of StatCounter Code -->
<script type="text/javascript">
var sc_project=3086157; 
var sc_invisible=0; 
var sc_partition=27; 
var sc_security="33bf0688"; 
</script>

<script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.statcounter.com/counter/counter_xhtml.js"></script><noscript><div class="statcounter"><a class="statcounter" href="http://www.statcounter.com/"><img class="statcounter" src="http://c28.statcounter.com/3086157/0/33bf0688/0/" alt="free website hit counter" /></a></div></noscript>
<!-- End of StatCounter Code -->
      <table width="100%" border="0">
        <tr>
          <td  bgcolor="#006699" height="18" colspan="5"><div align="center" class="style285" style="font-weight: bold; color: #FFFFFF">Paris '07 Workshop</div></td>
        </tr>
      </table>
      <div class=Section1><p align="center"><span class="style26">THE POWER AND CHALLENGES OF THE INTERNET</span></p>
        <div align="center">
            <table width="763" border="0">
              <tr>
                <td width="435"><div align="center" class=""><em><img src="2007images/DSC_1098-1 Henri Serres, John Grimes, Tim Bloechl, Ulrich Wolf, Jaak Aaviksoo, Robert Lentz DAY III.JPG" alt="U.S. Asst Sec of Defense John Grimes with Cyber-defense panel" width="427" height="209"></em></div></td>
      <td width="10" rowspan="2"><div align="center"></div></td>
      <td width="304" rowspan="2"><div align="center" class="style27">
        <p class="style26">The Honorable John Grimes<br>
        U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense for<br> 
        Networks and Information Integration,<br> 
        Chief Information Officer (CIO)<br>
          </p>
        </div></td>
    </tr>
              <tr>
                <td> U.S Assistant Secretary of Defense John Grimes (2nd from left),  with (from left to right) Henri Serres, Chief Information Officer in the French Defense Ministry,  Microsoft Executive Director Tim Bloechl, Lt. Gen. Ulrich Wolf, Dir of NATO's CIS Service Agency,  Estonian Defense Minister Jaak Aaviksoo, and Dep Assistant Secretary of Defense Robert Lentz.</td>
              </tr>
            </table>
        </div>
        <p align="center" class="style26"><em> &quot;The threats we face
in the information environment can come from anyone, from harmless teenagers <br>
to
criminal organizations, non-state actors, and nation-states that are
intentionally <br>
infiltrating and corrupting our systems.</em>&quot;</p>
<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; It is a  pleasure and an honor for me to talk to all of you today. Actually, though, I  feel like a fish out of water, because usually I talk to my own kind of  folks&mdash;techies&mdash;and we talk about networks and systems and that kind of thing.  But I believe I can add a few things to the discussion, although this morning I  sat in on the first session, which was very enlightening, and a number of my  points were discussed. But global security can mean different things to  different people. Security is a perception&mdash;what you see depends on where you  stand. </p>
        <p align="center" class="style26">THE  POWER AND CHALLENGES OF THE INTERNET</p>
        <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Let me start by talking about  connections. As we all know, we live in a global society whose pace has been  accelerated by the advent of the telephone, data networks, jet airplanes,  television, and now the Internet. Some historians think that globalization  started with the 707 and the telephone back in the early '50s, and of course it  is gaining speed every day. You cannot overestimate what the Internet is now  doing. It is pervasive. You can get connected just about anywhere. And it has  moved us beyond the Industrial Age into the Digital Age or the Knowledge Age,  in what some call a borderless society. To understand it better, you may want  to read <em>The World Is Flat</em>, which is  about as good a reference as you can read if you want to understand the impact  of information on our society. <br>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In my own work the key thing I am  charged with is information sharing, and the only way you can share information  quickly is through the Internet. But the 9/11 Commission that certain  government elements&mdash;law enforcement, foreign intelligence&mdash;did not share  information. &nbsp;Some of the difficulties  associated with the lack of sharing came from activities conducted by DOD  intelligence and counter-intelligence units during the 1960s and 1970s when the  United States  experienced significant civil demonstrations and protests.&nbsp; Over time, information on the legitimate  political positions and expressions of U.S. persons was collected and shared  with law enforcement authorities.&nbsp; These  acts were determined to be abuses of Constitutional rights and laws were passed  to prevent DOD, law enforcement and intelligence agencies from collecting and sharing  certain information. &nbsp;As national  security concerns evolved &ndash; particularly in light of 9/11 &ndash; the US Patriot Act  loosened restrictions in certain situations.<br>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of course, technology plays a bigger  role than ever before.&nbsp; Now the Internet  is heavily involved. A few months ago, when I had breakfast with  representatives of the Federal Reserve Bank, we discussed their concerns about  all the international finance transfers that are taking place at night&mdash;$12.4  trillion have been transferred. Their concerns are not only about the physical aspects  of transfers but also the connectivity involved. It is the same with  international air traffic control and with worldwide public health and with the  military. We had some scares when misinformation was put on the Net. So we  benefit from Internet technology capabilities but they also bring us problems. <br>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The downside to Internet technology,  of course, is that information can be stolen or damaged and service can be  denied. Personal identities can be stolen, money, credit cards, intellectual  property&mdash;we see it every day. In the military, the Department of Defense, the  amount of information that is being ex-filtrated from our unclassified networks  is just unbelievable&mdash;and supposedly we have some of the best defense.</p>
        <p align="center" class="style26"><strong> FACING  THE LOSS OF CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE</strong></p>
        <p>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In the public's mind, the  fastest-growing problem right now is the criminal element. The non-state actors  &ndash; like terrorists &ndash; are all exploiting the capabilities and vulnerabilities of  the Net. And the Net does have vulnerabilities&mdash;just ask Microsoft. Before they  even get out a fix for a problem, another problem hits.<br>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I do not want to sound like an  alarmist, but I want to give you some empirical data about how devastating it  can be if you lose a critical infrastructure. About a year and a half ago, off  the coast of China,  an earthquake took out an undersea cable. Although most of the traffic was  rerouted, the capacity really went down, and if several such events happened  simultaneously, you would have consequences you do not want to even think about.  That cable going out was not catastrophic, but it definitely disrupted a lot of  information sharing and of course the enormous amount of trade that takes place  between China  and us.<br>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Another issue is satellite systems,  which we do not often think about. But we have become more dependent on  satellites, especially in remote areas without infrastructure or wireless  capabilities, and satellites are now used to back up special undersea cable  connections. One issue with satellites is that there has been intentional  interference with GPS signals. Of course, GPS signals are critical&mdash;we all  depend on them one way or another, whether for locations or for system timing.  Not long ago there was an attack on Brazil's power grid, the SCADA  network, which caused major disruptions.&nbsp;  We are working with industry to prevent more of these kinds of attacks  from happening.<br>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The threats we face in the  information environment can come from anyone, from harmless teenagers to  criminal organizations, non-state actors, and nation-states that are  intentionally infiltrating and corrupting our systems. Recently, when I was in Brussels, a serious broadband cyber-attack was perpetrated  on Estonia&mdash;the  aggressor patched together a network of more than a million compromised  computers using public domain machine-launched waves of denial of service  attacks that lasted for nearly a month. Telephones switches were flooded, data  packets and emergency numbers were temporarily unreachable, and e-mail was  crippled for four days. This was no haphazard attack&mdash;it was orchestrated.  General Wolf's team provided some assistance&mdash;most people do not realize that  NATO has a cyber-space center of excellence in Estonia. These are the kinds of  things that can inflict severe damage and loss of life. </p>
        <p align="center" class="style26"><strong>THE  GLOBALIZATION OF THE SUPPLY CHAIN</strong></p>
        <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The Internet is now quickly moving  to wireless communication to enable mobility. I live and die by this PDA (<em>holding up a BlackBerry</em>). As an aside  here I want to mention an issue related to the Internet&mdash;at the International  Telecommunication Union (ITU, a U.N. organization) meeting, a worldwide radio  conference in Geneva this October, there is going to be some very serious  discussion about the spectrum that supports the Internet, because any time you  broadcast in free space someone is probably able to intercept what you send and  break it down.<br>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; But back to information sharing and  the globalization of supply chains. As you know, many of our contractors and  many of our businesses build and assemble products on a global basis. Boeing and  Airbus are prime examples. Both have contractors in all part of the world, both  are connected and sharing parts, and we are very concerned about that because  many supplies are coming on- and offshore. So we are working to ensure  production continues and we can depend on getting critical components in times  of national emergency. <br>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One of the most critical elements in  this is software. Every major program I have that is in trouble, be it a  weapons system or a business system, invariably involves software. A lot of  software code is written overseas, a piece here and a piece there, and then all  the code is integrated. We are always concerned about what may be in that code.  You may wish to ask Tim Bloechl when he speaks about Microsoft regarding what  the company is doing to protect software code for both its business and  government customers.&nbsp;</p>
        <p align="center" class="style26"><strong>PROTECTING KEY INFORMATION SYSTEMS</strong></p>
        <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One of the elements of the Riga  Declaration underscores how critical NATO believes command and control  information is&mdash;the declaration speaks for the first time about protecting key  information systems against cyber-attacks. But we are going to have to address  this subject in all that we do, and here I will talk about another area of ITU.  When General Jones was at EUCOM, he pushed very hard for what we call  stabilization or reconstruction of nations. That means going into a nation  before you have to put in weapons to train people, establish an infrastructure,  and develop communications and technology. We are making this kind of critical  effort now and I believe other countries are as well, especially to assist Third World countries that need that kind of help to  stabilize their government. &nbsp;All too  often destabilization occurs when nations do not have an infrastructure in  which the government can operate and provide services to support the people.  Our new command, AFRICOM, is going to have State Department inter-agency  organizations as well as two deputies, so we are doing what General Jones  urged&mdash;we are out there for peaceful purposes, stabilizing and reconstructing  and restoring peace.</p>
        <p align="center" class="style26"><strong>PROTECTING  THE ECONOMY</strong></p>
        <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Now I want to comment about  something that happened recently. Last May the FBI took down a guy from Ghana who was  going to take out JFK airport. Two comments he made that the FBI intercepted  are 1) just by taking down JFK America will be demoralized, and 2) through  military or business means we will take down the American economy. That is the  focus of many terrorist groups now, whether they are religious groups or  otherwise. <br>
  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Immediately after 9/11, the  president decreed that the National Security Telecommunications Advisory  Committee to the President, which I was chairing, ensure that Wall Street was  back up on the following Monday morning. &nbsp;We broke all the rules and we got Wall Street  back up to signal to the world America's  economic base was still functioning. Everyone was concerned the devastation  would snowball, just as the Wall Street plunge snowballed during the Great  Depression. The president realized the terrorists were focusing on our economy  and worked to prevent them from taking it down.</p>
        <p align="center" class="style26"><strong>THE  NEED FOR INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION</strong></p>
        <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;The ITU, with its global cyber-security  agenda, plans to help increase technical and legislative cooperation among its  191 members. To do this they are going to establish teams to help nations in  need but they are also going to encourage nations to do more on their own.&nbsp; The Department of Defense is also encouraging  cooperation among agencies and partners.&nbsp;  For example, and the work to limit the damage of the cyber-attack on Estonia ended  up involving NATO as well as EU Justice ministers. The way ahead, at least for  the foreseeable future, will involve cooperation between international  organizations involved in Internet or radio systems if we are going to have  safe and assured use of the Internet, because it is under continual major  attack by numerous and varied actors. Like our air traffic systems and our  water systems, all of our information systems are fragile and subject to being  brought down. </p>
      </div>

<!-- InstanceEndEditable --></div> 
  </div>  
  <div class="style8" id="siteInfo">    <a href="#">Top of page </a> | <a href="../index.html">Home</a> | &copy;2007
    Center for Strategic Decision Research</div> 
</div> 
<br> 
</body>
<!-- InstanceEnd --></html>

Anon7 - 2021