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Home » Cyber-warfare » The New Cyber General

The New Cyber General

commando-solo.jpg

During a media con­fer­ence on November 2, 2007, Secretary of the Air Force Michael W. Wynne said the 8th Air Force would become the new Air Force Cyber Command. Now this state­ment has become real­ity. A three-​​star gen­eral, Lt. Gen. Robert Elder Jr. is the com­man­der and will lead the Air Force’s (AFCYBER) Cyber Command. AFCYBER will have over 20,000 per­son­nel, and the Air Force is recruit­ing offi­cers and air­men from all over for careers in Cyber War. Thousands of exist­ing air force elec­tronic war­fare spe­cial­ists will be assigned, or offered, jobs in AFCYBER. This will include units oper­at­ing in the full spec­trum of elec­tron­ics and the elec­tro­mag­netic spec­trum to store, mod­ify, and exchange data via net­worked sys­tems and asso­ci­ated phys­i­cal infrastructures.

Compliment of high tech equip­ment includes the following:

U2 — strate­gic recon­nais­sance aircraft

EC-​​135 electronic-​​eavesdropping aircraft

EC-​​130E Commando Solo radio/​TV broad­cast­ing aircraft

EC-​​130H Compass Call radio-​​jamming aircraft

A cyber attack can be launched from any­where and at any­time. A cyber weapon attack requires no phys­i­cal access (land or air) to the tar­get or tar­gets or sig­nif­i­cant skill. Basic cyber weapons are openly shared via the inter­net today. Technolytics con­ducted analy­sis of the evo­lu­tion of cyber weapons and deter­mined we are cur­rently mov­ing from basic weapons like vul­ner­a­bil­ity exploits and tra­di­tional viruses to more advanced classes of weapons such as self-​​morphing mali­cious code.

The U.S. Air Force is cur­rently train­ing 40,000 Cyber Warriors that make up this unique force. The cyber war train­ing pro­gram will take from six to 15 months to com­plete. The first Undergraduate Network Warfare Training Class grad­u­ated Dec. 7, 2007. They are rep­re­sent­ing the Air Force’s expan­sion into the lead role in cyber­space threat man­age­ment. It is esti­mated that it will take over seven years to get the full com­ple­ment of staff trained. The train­ing cou­pled with expe­ri­ence will com­bine to give them what they need to per­form their crit­i­cal mis­sion. Not all of the peo­ple trained as Cyber Warriors will be in the 8th Air Force. Many will be assigned through­out the Air Force to take care of Cyber War needs of their units. We are devel­op­ing a new breed of sol­dier– cyber sol­diers are ones who engage in cyber con­flicts, wars, or espi­onage. They are armed with hack­ers’ skill and knowl­edge and newly devel­oped cyber weapons and stand ready to defend our nation against cyber threats.

Construction of a Cyber Innovation Center (CIC), which would serve as the civil­ian coun­ter­part to the AFCYBER, began in the fourth quar­ter of 2007. The CIC will be built on a 58-​​acre site, near Barksdale Air Force Base. Bossier City, LA has allot­ted $50 mil­lion USD for the con­struc­tion, while the state of Louisiana has matched the financ­ing and approved another $50 mil­lion. While many believe that Barksdale Air Force Base will be the HQ for AFCYBER, other are not so sure.

Officials from six states are com­pet­ing over the head­quar­ters loca­tion of the Air Forces Cyberspace Command, which promises thou­sands of jobs and mil­lions in rev­enue. Lobby efforts have turned into an all out war between sev­eral Air Force towns in recent weeks. This cou­pled with rumors that the Capital Hill is dis­cussing estab­lish­ing a new depart­ment or agency to deal with cyber threats. The final deci­sion about the loca­tion of AFCYBER should be made by the end of February 2008. The new com­mand is expected to meet its ini­tial oper­a­tional late in 2008 and become fully oper­a­tional by October 2009.

While loca­tion of and report­ing respon­si­bil­ity seem a bit uncer­tain, what is cer­tain is the threat we face from the build up of cyber weapons by more that 120 coun­tries is very real.

– Kevin Coleman

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January 2nd, 2008 | Cyber-warfare | 27387 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2008/01/02/the-new-cyber-general/The+New+Cyber+General2008-01-02+14%3A08%3A30Ward You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. ELP says:
    January 2, 2008 at 11:21 am

    40k cyber war­riors. Might as well. USAF is cut­ting fly­ing hours 10% this year. USAF is park­ing more and more air­craft because of age. Unless this coun­try wakes up, USAF will go out of business.

    Reply
  2. Poskiki says:
    January 2, 2008 at 12:31 pm

    Bout time. We already have China attack­ing us and being suc­cess­ful at it. Now if we would stop sell­ing them infor­ma­tion and ways to get it like them buy­ing our tech firms that do sub­stan­cial busi­ness with our military.

    Reply
  3. Spy Guy says:
    January 2, 2008 at 4:59 pm

    North Korea started unit 121 in the late 90s and we answer nearly 10 years later. Better late then never I guess. But what a risk we have taken. Does any­one think we can catch up?

    Reply
  4. Pat says:
    January 4, 2008 at 2:49 pm

    Still writ­ing pro­vok­ing pieces I see. We worked together at CSC on the Lockheed project. As you have clearly artic­u­lated, the U.S. and every other coun­try is at risk of cyber attacks. With nearly 20 years in IT Consulting, I believe that less than 20% of busi­nesses have ade­quate secu­rity pro­grams much less defenses nor response plans in the event of a cyber war. Keep up the great work! Call me sometime

    Reply
  5. Astrazx says:
    February 2, 2008 at 11:01 am

    We can always learn to improve.

    Reply
  6. Anonymous(e) says:
    February 26, 2008 at 2:30 pm

    ELP:
    “40k cyber war­riors. Might as well. USAF is cut­ting fly­ing hours 10% this year. USAF is park­ing more and more air­craft because of age. Unless this coun­try wakes up, USAF will go out of busi­ness.“
    You keep read­ing those press releases and the line item bud­gets they let you see.
    Have you ever won­dered why the Air Force is so quiet?
    Missouri is the “Show Me” state.

    Reply

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