New DOD command planned for cyber warfare
A new cyber warfare command at the Pentagon would engage in offensive and defensive missions, according to media reports.
A new Defense Department cyber command will both protect computers and networks in the United States and engage in offensive cyberspace warfare, according to media reports.
The new command will coordinate its efforts with a civilian cybersecurity office, according to a New York Times report.
Ira Winkler, president of Internet Security Advisors Group, favors the idea of having a unified cyber command, but he questions who will run it.
“Clearly, the National Security Agency is the most capable with regard to the scope of effort,” Winkler writes in a column for ComputerWorld. “But at the same time, I realize that the NSA's primary mission is to support the Department of Defense, and from a mission perspective, it needs to support the military, not rule the military. That doesn't mean that the bulk of the operations can't be at Fort Meade.”
Earlier this month, the Air Force announced that its cyber command, the 24th Air Force, would be based at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, according to Defense Systems.