Panetta divulges secrets to make cyber-security come alive
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*Tonight, Panetta will tell a story about what he's called a "Cyber Pearl
Harbor" *in an effort to bring the issue front-and-center* *for the U.S.
government and the private sector -- and for his own building, in which
senior officers are still trying to figure out what DoD's cyber-security
policy should be exactly. In speaking in New York to the Business Executives
for National Security this evening, Panetta's biggest challenge is to tell a
story about an decidedly un-sexy issue
that is largely based on classified information. And Pentagon officials
struggled to get just enough information de-classified to allow him to make a
substantive speech. It's always been difficult: a White House official told
Killer Apps' John Reed that telling the story of cyber-security is an
intractable problem.
"Protecting ourselves in cyberspace is an important issue we need to talk
about, but it's exceptionally difficult to be forthcoming and reassuring when
so much of our effort is classified or sensitive," the official told John.
The last thing the government wants to do is "harm our ability to protect
ourselves by putting al of our tactics, techniques and procedures out in the
open" for the bad guys to see.
http://bit.ly/OSwCE7 [1]
*Welcome to Thursday's edition of Situation Report, *where we classify almost
anything you send us on a need-to-see basis. Follow me @glubold or hit me
anytime at gordon.lubold@foreignpolicy.com [2]. Sign up for Situation Report
here: http://bit.ly/NCN9uN [3] or just send me an e-mail and we'll put you on
the list.
*Foreign policy may well come up tonight during the veep debate. *Joe Biden,
a former chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, will seek to
expose Paul Ryan's lack of foreign policy experience in a debate moderated by
Martha Raddatz, herself a seasoned foreign affairs correspondent for ABC.
This comes the day after Republicans on the Hill pummeled administration
officials with questions about U.S. diplomatic security surrounding the
attack in Benghazi -- a potential vulnerability that Ryan, if it comes up, is
expected to exploit.
*Joe Biden thought his influence on foreign affairs would be weakened when he
entered the White House/ /*but the opposite is true, writes James Traub on
the "Biden Doctrine" on FP: "Biden has played a central role in White House
decisions on policy in Afghanistan, Russia, China, Israel, and the Arab
world, and his worldly pragmatism has helped shape a White House posture less
starry-eyed, and perhaps also less hopeful, than many had expected at the
outset of Obama's tenure." http://bit.ly/RPYuwK [4]
*State was "excoriated" by a House panel yesterday for failing to have the
proper amount of security *in Libya, and witnesses and lawmakers pointed to
State Department official Charlene Lamb as the person most directly
responsible for rejecting multiple requests for increased security at the
U.S. diplomatic missions there prior to the attack on Sept. 11, 2012. The
Cable's Josh Rogin reports: "During the hearing, the top regional security
officer in Libya over the summer, Eric Nordstrom, and Lt. Col. Andrew Wood, a
Utah National Guardsman who was leading a security team in Libya until
August, placed the blame squarely on Lamb, the deputy assistant secretary of
state for international programs, whom they said was the official who denied
those requests." http://bit.ly/URKNLT [5]
*/New Reuters: The Yemeni chief of security at the U.S. embassy was shot dead
by a gunman on a motorcycle. /*/The killing had al Qaeda's fingerprints on
it, Reuters reported. /http://reut.rs/PpoMrb [6]
*Who will succeed Joe Dunford as ACMC? *Probably Lt. Gen. Jay Paxton, Jr.,
but of course we've been wrong before. The E-Ring's Kevin Baron reports that
there are other names as well: Paxton, now the commander of II Marine
Expeditionary Force at Camp Lejeune and the former J-3 on the Joint Staff, is
in the running with Lt. Gen. George Flynn, currently the J-7 on the Joint
Staff, and Lt. Gen. Robert Schmidle, the deputy commandant for aviation. Any
one of them could be chosen to succeed Gen. Joe Dunford, the sitting ACMC,
who was finally nominated yesterday to command ISAF in Afghanistan. Both
Paxton and Flynn are ground guys and Schmidle is an aviator. Traditionally
the ACMC goes to a fly-guy, but since Commandant Gen. Jim Amos is an aviator,
the Corps' No. 2 position will likely go to a ground officer. Two aviators at
the top would be a bridge too far for the tradition-bound Corps.
http://bit.ly/SQzLuE [7]
*ISAF's chief intelligence officer will be replaced by someone who doesn't
have Afghan battlefield experience. *The Pentagon announced that the head of
ISAF's intelligence operations, Maj. Gen. Robert Ashley, Jr., will be
replaced by Maj. Gen. Gregg Potter. Potter will leave his post at the Army's
Intelligence Center of Excellence and Fort Huachuca, Ariz. and head to Kabul;
Ashley will leave Kabul and head to Fort Huachuca. Intel historian Matthew
Aid writes that Potter doesn't have any recent battlefield experience.
*/DoD announcement: /*/http://1.usa.gov/Qg6SDp/ [8]
*/Matthew Aid: /*http://bit.ly/VOLqe6 [9]
*One of the scariest moments in history just got scarier. *Unbeknownst to the
U.S. in 1962, the Soviets had brought about 100 tactical nuclear weapons to
Cuba, including 80 nuclear-armed front cruise missiles, 12 nuclear warheads
for dual-use Luna short range rockets, and six nuclear bombs for IL-28
bombers -- and they were still there in November, long after the Cuban
missile crisis was thought to have ended. "Even with the pullout of the
strategic missiles, the tacticals would stay, and Soviet documentation
reveals the intention of training the Cubans to use them," Svetlana
Savranskaya reveals today on FP in documentation that is being published for
the first time. http://bit.ly/R9RVSC [10]
*"Old Iron Jaw" takes his last breath. *U.S. Army Command Sergeant Major
Basil Plumley died yesterday at a hospice in Georgia of cancer, a battle one
news report said, "he simply could not win." Plumley, of course, was
portrayed in 2002's "We Were Soldiers," which depicted one of the first
ground battles of the Vietnam War, with Mel Gibson playing Lt. Col. Hal Moore
and Sam Elliot as Plumley, based on "We Were Soldiers Once... and Young"
written by Moore and Joe Galloway.
"While I never knew CSM Plumley personally, I am terribly saddened and feel
like I lost a true mentor," wrote Kerry Patton, combat disabled veteran, in
the Examiner. "He was such a heroic man that many of us veterans aspired to
one day be like him. He pushed his troops, loved his family and believed in
America's greatness. He was the epitome of the American soldier."
http://exm.nr/RfVcn3 [11]
Spilling Over
* BBC: Syrian plane leaves Turkey after inspections. http://bit.ly/SSphLp
[12]
* WaPo: Russia denounces Turkish seizure of plane. http://wapo.st/SNqpOo
[13]
* CNN: U.S. sends military personnel to Jordan to monitor chemical weapons.
http://bit.ly/QTBlcK [14]
* Reuters: Oil tops $115 a barrel over Syrian tensions.
http://reut.rs/QTlDhH [15]
The Girl Child
* Press Trust of India: UN to focus on "International Day of Girl Child."
http://bit.ly/Rz960Y [16]
* The Guardian: Why we must debate the age of consent. http://bit.ly/TAfsl1
[17]
* HuffPo (blog): A day for all girls, a day for Malala.
http://huff.to/Q0VVUO [18]
* CBC News: The Pakistani girl who is taking on the Taliban.
http://bit.ly/TAcltk [19]
Noting
* UPI: Yemen seizes Iranian arms slated for rebels. http://bit.ly/OVNOOF
[20]
* AP: French terror cell planned Syria trip. http://bit.ly/Ql6bsq [21]
* National Review: The crying need for a bigger military.
http://bit.ly/WVfvXz [22]
Reading Pincus
* WaPo: Romney's Syria plan is easier said than done. http://wapo.st/QXkUKZ
[23]
The Latest National Security coverage from FP
* Panetta divulges secrets to make cyber-security come alive [24]
* Cuba Almost Became a Nuclear Power in 1962 [25]
* Never Mind about Those Jobs Cuts [26]
* Failing History [27]
* The refugee problem in Jordan is worse than you think [28]
* Don't Just 'Do Something' [29]
* The Enemy Within [30]
* Missiles Away! [31]
* Panetta argues for staying the course in Afghanistan [32]
* Rocket Science 101 [33]
FP's complete national security coverage: National Security Channel [34] |
The Best Defense [35] | The E-Ring [36] | Killer Apps [37] | See the Full
NatSec Archive [38] | Sign Up for all of FP's Newsletters [39] | Twitter [40]
| Facebook [41] |
[1] http://bit.ly/OSwCE7
[2] mailto:gordon.lubold@foreignpolicy.com
[3] http://bit.ly/NCN9uN
[4] http://bit.ly/RPYuwK
[5] http://bit.ly/URKNLT
[6] http://reut.rs/PpoMrb
[7] http://bit.ly/SQzLuE
[8] http://1.usa.gov/Qg6SDp
[9] http://bit.ly/VOLqe6
[10] http://bit.ly/R9RVSC
[11] http://exm.nr/RfVcn3
[12] http://bit.ly/SSphLp
[13] http://wapo.st/SNqpOo
[14] http://bit.ly/QTBlcK
[15] http://reut.rs/QTlDhH
[16] http://bit.ly/Rz960Y
[17] http://bit.ly/TAfsl1
[18] http://huff.to/Q0VVUO
[19] http://bit.ly/TAcltk
[20] http://bit.ly/OVNOOF
[21] http://bit.ly/Ql6bsq
[22] http://bit.ly/WVfvXz
[23] http://wapo.st/QXkUKZ
[24] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/11/panetta_divulges_secrets_to_make_cyber_security_come_alive
[25] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/10/cuba_almost_became_a_nuclear_power_in_1962
[26] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/10/never_mind_about_those_jobs_cuts
[27] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/10/failing_history
[28] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/10/the_refugee_problem_in_jordan_is_worse_than_you_think
[29] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/09/dont_just_do_something
[30] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/09/the_enemy_within
[31] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/09/missiles_away
[32] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/09/panetta_argues_for_staying_the_course_in_afghanistan
[33] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/08/rocket_science_101
[34] http://nationalsecurity.foreignpolicy.com/
[35] http://ricks.foreignpolicy.com/
[36] http://e-ring.foreignpolicy.com/
[37] http://killerapps.foreignpolicy.com/
[38] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/archive/taxonomy/National%20Security
[39] http://www.foreignpolicy.com/newsletters
[40] https://twitter.com/fpnatsec
[41] http://www.facebook.com/pages/FP-National-Security/511081565572207
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