Lisa
Ferdinando at the DoD News offers the below piece:
ARLINGTON,
Va., Jan. 11, 2018 — The vast, global networks of the Defense Department are
under constant attack, with the sophistication of the cyber assaults
increasing, the director of Defense Information Systems Agency said here today.
Army Lt.
Gen. Alan R. Lynn, who is also the commander of the Joint Force Headquarters,
Department of Defense Information Networks, described some of the surprises of
being in his post, which he has held since 2105.
Lynn spoke
at a luncheon of the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association’s
Washington Chapter.
“We do an
excellent job of defending the [Department of Defense Information Networks],
but the level of attacks that we’ve seen actually was really truly surprising
and it still continues to surprise me just how robust the attacks have become,”
he said.
‘Terabyte of
Death’ Attack: A Matter of When, Not If
A few years
ago, getting a 1-gigabyte or 2-gigabyte attack at the internet access point was
a big deal, he said. “Now, we get 600-gig attacks on the internet access points
and unique, different ways of attacking that we hadn’t thought of before,” he
added.
The Defense
Department is fortified against even larger attacks, he said.
“There’s
now, we would call it the ‘terabyte of death’ – there is a terabyte of death
that is looming outside the door,” he said. “We’re prepared for it, so we know
it’s coming.”
He noted,
“It’s just a matter of time before it hits us.”
Scale of DoD
Networks ‘Massive’
Lynn, who
retires next month, said the size of the DoD network is something else that
surprised him. He described it as a “massive,” 3.2 million-person network that
he has to defend or help support in some way.
“There’s
something happening every second of every minute globally that you can’t take
your eye off of,” he said.
The
department needs agile systems for the warfighter to stay ahead of an adversary
that is evolving and moving, he pointed out.
There are
challenges to finding solutions that scale to the DoD Information Networks, he
said. A commercial solution that works for a smaller operation might not
translate into something that is effective for the worldwide DoD networks, he
explained.
DISA, he
pointed out, is a combat support agency responsible for a multitude of
networks. He cited as examples the networks between the drones and the drone
pilots, or the F-35 “flying mega-computer” that needs a lot of data and
intelligence, or the “big pipes” that connect various entities to missile defense.
He explained
how commercial mobile platforms have been modified for warfighters to
accommodate secret or top secret communications.
“Anywhere
they are globally, if they’ve got to make a serious decision right now and it
means seconds, that’s there and available to them,” he said, adding that mobile
platforms are becoming “more and more capable as we go.”
Warfighting,
which now includes streaming drone video feeds, is happening on mobile devices,
he said. “It’s pretty cool to watch,” he remarked.
While
acknowledging DISA does do “a lot of cool IT stuff,” Lynn said all of the
efforts support a singular focus. “At the end of the day, it’s about
lethality,” he said.
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