The U.S. Department of Defense rolled out its plan to shield suppliers from digital sabotage amid growing concern about cyberattacks on critical infrastructure.
The Pentagon on March 28 made public its 2024 Defense Industrial Cybersecurity Strategy, proffering four goals and many more objectives. Among them are widespread adoption of cybersecurity best practices, preservation of supply chains critical to military manufacturing, and improved communication between public and private sectors.
âOur adversaries understand the strategic value of targeting the defense industrial base,â David McKeown, the deputy chief information officer for cybersecurity, told reporters at the Pentagon. âWe have, departmentally, started paying a lot more attention to it and engaging with the companies.â³
The Defense Departmentâs pool of contractors and related resources are under constant threat of online harassment and foreign influence. Both Russia and China are known to prod U.S. companies for their closely held designs.
The National Security Agency, FBI and other federal entities in October 2022 said hackers managed to inflitrate a company, sustain âpersistent, long-termâ access to its network and abscond with sensitive information. The victim went unnamed. Years prior, Chinese-sponsored cyberattacks breached a Navy contractorâs computers, jeopardizing info tied to work on an anti-ship missile, Defense News reported.
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Pentagon suppliers are considered critical infrastructure alongside water, food and energy suppliers, health-care facilities, and transportation systems. Attacks occur often, and attackers can dogpile on flaws that go ignored, according to McKeown.
âIn this day and age, especially in the United States of America, everybody should believe the power of the hacker,â he said. âItâs been proven out numerous times.â
The cybersecurity strategy nests with the Defense Departmentâs higher-profile guidance: the 2022 National Defense Strategy, the 2023 National Cybersecurity Strategy and this yearâs National Defense Industrial Strategy.
Publication comes weeks after the department introduced its fiscal 2025 budget blueprint, which included $14.5 billion for cyber activities. The figure is about $1 billion more than the Biden administrationâs previous ask. Itâs also up from FY23, when it sought $11.2 billion.
Colin Demarest is a reporter at C4ISRNET, where he covers military networks, cyber and IT. Colin previously covered the Department of Energy and its National Nuclear Security Administration â namely Cold War cleanup and nuclear weapons development â for a daily newspaper in South Carolina. Colin is also an award-winning photographer.
Source Agencies