US military ready for war in cyberspace


WASHINGTON, (Reuters)
– The U.S. military’s new Cyber  Command, responsible for shielding 15,000 military computer  networks from intruders, has become fully operational, the  Defense Department said yesterday.

More than 100 foreign intelligence organizations are trying  to break into U.S. networks, Deputy Defense Secretary William  Lynn wrote in the September/October issue of the journal  Foreign Affairs. Some already have the capacity to disrupt U.S.  information infrastructure, he said.

Gates ordered the new unit’s creation in June 2009 to  address the growing threat of cyber-attack.
It consolidates offensive and defensive operations under  Army General Keith Alexander, who also heads the National  Security Agency, the Defense Department’s intelligence arm that  protects national security information and intercepts foreign  communications.

“Cyberspace is essential to our way of life and U.S. Cyber  Command synchronizes our efforts in the defense of (Defense  Department) networks,” Alexander said in the Pentagon  announcement.

Lynn declared the unit, based at Fort Meade, Maryland,  fully up and running in a memorandum dated Oct. 31, said  Colonel Rivers Johnson, a Cyber Command spokesman.

The new unit began work in May, establishing a joint  operations center and transitioning personnel and functions  from the old structures.

It is part of the Offutt Air Force, Nebraska-based  Strategic Command, the organization responsible for U.S.  nuclear and space operations as well as information warfare and  global military intelligence.