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Is Iran
An Immediate Threat?
by Mark Armstrong |
War
with Iran Soon?
by Michael Burkert |
Fact Check: Cyberattack threat
By Jim Dexter, CNN
(CNN) -- A Washington think tank staged a mock cyberattack on the United
States on Tuesday in a bid to evaluate strategies for fighting
cyberterrorists. Former senior government officials gathered at the
Bipartisan Policy Center to play the roles of Cabinet members responding
to a simulated attack on the nation's computer infrastructure.
In his annual threat assessment, National Intelligence Director Dennis
Blair recently declared that a "successful cyberattack against a major
financial service provider could severely impact the national economy,
while cyberattacks against physical infrastructure computer systems,
such as those that control power grids or oil refineries, have the
potential to disrupt services for hours to weeks." After hearing Blair's
testimony, Senate Intelligence Chairman Dianne Feinstein, D-California,
responded, "The need to develop an overall cybersecurity strategy is
very clear."
Fact Check: Is there consensus on the likelihood of a cyberattack
against the United States?
-- According to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS),
"Critical infrastructure owners and operators report that their networks
and control systems are under repeated cyberattack, often from
high-level adversaries like foreign nation-states." Sixty percent of
U.S. Internet technology and infrastructure executives questioned in a
recent CSIS survey expect to see a "major cyberincident" (an outage of
at least 24 hours, a loss of life or a failure of a company) within two
years.
-- Despite those concerns, the economic impact of a major cyberincident
may be limited. Robert Knake of the Council on Foreign Relations
compared the potential impact to the 2003 Northeast blackout, which cut
service to 50 million people in the United States and Canada for up to
four days. "Economists place the cost of that event between $4.5
[billion] and $10 billion," he writes, calling that "a blip in the $14.2
trillion economy."
-- Knake also writes that "only a handful of sophisticated nation-states
currently have the ability to carry out a devastating cyberstrike." He
suggests that those nations would be reluctant to launch a major attack,
saying that they "also have vulnerable systems, as well as a lot to
lose, in any conflict, cyber or otherwise." Stewart Baker of CSIS,
however, warns that as years go by, more and smaller countries will
acquire the ability to launch serious attacks.
-- Professor Irving Lachow of National Defense University, which trains
government and Pentagon leaders, defines cyberterrorism as a
computer-based attack or threat made for political, religious or
ideological reasons, and designed to generate fear comparable to that
from a physical act of terrorism. He says under that definition, there
has never been a single documented incidence of cyberterrorism against
the U.S. government.
-- In a 2007 paper, Lachow and Courtney Richardson, also of National
Defense University, argued that terrorists "prefer to inflict damage
with physical means" because most cyberattacks "are not going to cause
the levels of fear desired by most terrorists."
Bottom Line: While many experts agree that the risk of a cyberattack
against the United States is real, there is no consensus as to how
likely that attack might be.
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