2009 Cyberspace
Symposium
Remarks by Gen. Kevin Chilton,
U.S. Strategic Command commander
Omaha, Neb.
April 7, 2009
I play that tape (command
video) every morning on the way to work. [laughter]. Thanks Ray. How
about a round of applause for the tape [applause]. It's hard not to
get fired up in this job, I'll tell you that ladies and gentlemen.
It’s great having the Lieutenant Governor here. Mr.
Schneider (President and CEO, AFCEA International), what a great
partnership with AFCEA. Thank you for being here. I want to
recognize Lieutenant General John [Dubia], who’s worked so closely
with the STRATCOM staff to make this historic first Cyberspace
Symposium here in Omaha hosted by US Strategic Command and AFCEA
what it is already, which is a resounding success with this
oustanding turnout here.
Flag officers from all around the
world are here. Military members from every staff of every combatant
command, from every service are present here today. We have friends
and allies here from around the world that are participating. Great
community sponsorship and support from the local community. And of
course our industry partners from the great contract community that
is so vital to this mission set are also here today, along with our
STRATCOM men and women. Thank you all for coming and being a part of
this conference today.
These are indeed exciting times at US
Strategic Command, and in fact exciting times in US history.
Particularly when we start thinking about what’s going on in
cyberspace.
So what’s the origin of this first ever
conference here at STRATCOM in Omaha? Quite frankly, it goes back to
the videotape here. When I arrived back in 2007 and we started
focusing on what was most important day in and day out in the
command, and those are, as demonstrated in the tape, our three lines
of operations.
Of those three, certainly a mission set of
deterrence is one that we well understand and have been involved in
for many years in this command. Although I would point out it’s
going to be a new game and it is a new game in the 21st Century,
obviously, as compared to the Cold War.
Space, we’ve been
working that line of operation for quite a long time as well.
Certainly the least mature of our lines of operations and
arguably one of the most important is the line of operation in
cyberspace. When you look at what the President of the United States
has asked US Strategic Command to do -- to direct the operations
every day of the Global Information Grid that supports our combatant
commands and services all around the world every day, to operate it,
to defend it, both in peacetime and at war; to be prepared to plan
and when directed conduct offensive operations through this medium
for this domain; to synchronize operations between combatant
commanders in the regions and across the globe; and to be the
principal advocate for the capabilities and needs for the
warfighters in this domain -- it made perfect sense to bring you all
together here in Omaha to help us get our heads around this great
mission set that we’ve been given, this daunting mission set we’ve
been given.
I’ll tell you what, we know we don’t have all
the answers, and often times don’t even know what the right
questions are to ask. That’s why it’s so important, if I could echo
Mr. Schneider, for you to be a participant in this conference and
not just a note taker. I’m going to encourage controversy here. I
want to hear both sides of the arguments. And if there are three
sides I want to hear the third side as well. I want you to challenge
the speakers, challenge the panels, be involved. There’s a lot we
can learn and there’s a lot we must learn.
You’ve heard in
the film, and you’ve heard Kevin Williams (GISC Director) talk about
cyberspace as a domain. That’s the way I think about it. In fact I
try to break things down pretty simply for myself, just so I can get
my head around it. We have the air domain, we have the land domain,
we have the maritime domain, we have the space domain, and we have
the cyberspace domain. The first three can be pretty much defined by
geography or range of operation. The last two are absolutely global
in nature. In fact they are agnostic to the artificial lines that we
may draw on a map. They can care less about the location of
continents and oceans. Space and cyberspace are cross-cutting
domains, but they’re every bit as much like air, land and sea --
warfighting domains, domains that we can expect to be challenged in,
domains that we need to and depend on to conduct full military
operations as well as commerce that supports the economy. They
demand freedom of action, each one of those domains, and so does
cyberspace.
For the seas, the maritime domain, demands
freedom of action for commerce and in wartime for logistic resupply
and movement of troops and ammunition and equipment forward to
far-off theaters.
The global cyberspace domain is how we
move information. It’s how we move orders. It’s how we move thought.
We need that to be secure and available to us to freely operate in,
both in peacetime and at war.
I’d like to give a little
perspective on where I feel like we are in this great venture of
taking on the mission set in cyberspace. I’m going to flash back,
use my time in the military and set it back in the same period of
time or the same length of time back in history.
I’ve been
in the Air Force, commissioned for 33 years now, so I’m going to
take us back to 1893 and I’m going to commission 2nd Lieutenant
Chilton, graduating from the US Military Academy at West Point where
I probably spent a lot of time studying land warfare. I probably
spent a lot of time studying lessons learned from the Civil War and
increased firepower and the power of defensive positions versus
frontal assault. I probably learned a few things about what happened
to Custer in 1876 and operations in the west. I probably didn’t
think or was not educated one iota about the thoughts of how one
might use a new domain for warfare called air beyond maybe balloons
for artillery spotting.
1893. Why did I pick that year?
Because 10 years later, in 1903, the Wright Brothers flew. Suddenly
there was a new domain available. It was nascent, but it was there.
And 33 years later, after being commissioned 2nd Lieutenant Chilton
found himself in 1926. And not only had they had added manned flight
to that thought in that domain in World War I, he was thinking about
how he was going to fight the next fight in that domain and how
important it was to protect that domain, and the growing importance
of that domain to commerce and freedom and transportation and the
development of this country.
In 1976 when I entered the Air
Force as a commissioned Air Force officer I was one year past having
turned in my slide rule and buying my first HP-35 handheld
calculator for $275. [Laughter]. The concept of a laptop or a
desktop computer was not taught at the Air Force Academy when I was
there. Yet 10 years later, in 1986, when I arrived at NASA someone
came in and put this thing on my credenza, moved my files out of the
way and moved some books out of the way and set this screen on my
credenza and a keyboard and shoved something under my desk and said
here is your computer. It was a Wright Brothers moment, if you will,
in cyberspace for me. [Laughter].
Now, 33 years later, in
2009, I am dependent on cyberspace. I’m dependent on it in my
personal life. This country’s dependent on it for commerce and its
economy. And warfighters around the world are dependent on it to
conduct operations not just in cyberspace, but in every other
domain. Thirty-three years this happened. Faster than the revolution
of flight.
Just think about it. In 1981 there was this
really bright young man named Bill Gates who said you know, I think
640K of memory is about enough for anybody to use. I can’t imagine
ever needing more than that. Bill Gates, 1981. Talk about change.
In 1991, I remember in NASA we upgraded the space shuttle
main computer. We doubled its computing capacity from 128K to 256K.
[Laughter]. That’s the computer we still use today to go to and from
orbit in the space shuttle -- 256K. The pace of change in this
domain has been absolutely outstanding.
If I could continue
on with the airplane metaphor and take us back to World War I, I
think there may be some analogies there as well. In the early days
of World War I the German aviators would be up and the French
aviators would be up on the other side of the line, and really they
were kind of looked at as non-combatants. Mostly what they were
doing was observing or spying, collecting information from that
domain. They were even known on occasion to pass close enough to see
each other in cockpits and wave to each other as they went by -- a
rather gentlemanly approach to this new domain. We were enemies,
they said, but we should not forget the civilities.
Now
there’s a legend told about one fateful day when a German and French
pilot passed each other, and the German pilot must have had a bad
morning because he shook his fist at the French pilot as he went by,
as the Frenchman said in a rather blustery and caddish way. Well,
the next day when the German approached he hurled some sort of
missile at the French pilot as he rode by, and the French pilot was
so incensed that he dove at the enemy, and I love this part, drew a
small flask of port wine from his pocket -- [Laughter] -- and
bounced it off the exhaust manifold of his boorish antagonist. I
love it. Flying with a bottle of wine. [Laughter].
As the
legend goes, that marked the end of courtesy in the air domain and
the beginning of hostilities. What followed, though, was a dramatic
change in three areas, in my view. There was a change in culture, in
the warfighting culture, and how we thought about using this new
domain. There was a change in conduct, in rules of engagement, on
how we valued and treated this new domain of air. And there was a
dramatic and measurable change in the capabilities and the treasure
we would invest to develop those capabilities in this domain.
We have moved past the civilities in the cyber domain. US forces
and those of our adversaries now rely heavily on their computer
networks for command and control, for intelligence, for planning,
for communications, for conducting operations. But these
architectures are vulnerable. In fact for more than 15 years the US
government and DoD networks have come under increasing pressure to
attacks and probes from adversaries, as diverse as nation states, to
the disgruntled individual or bored teenage hacker. And while we
have detected illicit activity on our networks for more than 15
years and employ resources to offer a comprehensive
multi-disciplinary approach to protecting our networks, we need to
do more.
All of us, all of us -- me included -- are making
it too easy for our adversaries to exploit our networks today. Like
the World War I aviators we need a change in our culture, our
conduct, and in our capabilities if we’re going to advance the state
of art and provide the protection and freedom of action we need in
this domain.
Let me begin first with culture.
Cyberspace really grew up as a confluence of technologies that
evolved in today’s globally connected networks. In fact I reflected
on my experience at NASA, I remember after they put that computer on
my desk I successfully ignored it for about a month. I’d have to
dust it on occasion and I would gripe about it being in the way of
my in-box on occasion, but inevitably one day I missed a meeting. I
asked the person who had organized the meeting, I said why didn’t
you tell me the meeting was happening? They said well, I sent you an
electronic message. I said why didn’t you just call me? Why didn’t
you just holler at me? We shared a desk in the same office. This
person had moved on and I had not begun the cultural shift into
cyberspace. And in fact what happened then, in my view, is the
culture that we developed because of the way it grew was one of
cyberspace as a convenience. It wasn’t convenient for this person to
call me, and they couldn’t be interrupted long enough or thought I
was too busy to be interrupted as I worked at my desk so they sent
me an electronic message. We didn’t call them e-mails in those days.
Think about it. When there was a problem with your computer,
who did you call? The smart young technician, the information
assurance person that works in your office. Or do you call the J6 or
the A6, N6, G6, and say get down here and fix my darn computer --
it’s not working. And they did. And they do. And they come and fix
those machines. And we developed this culture, in my view, that the
cyber domain, the computers on our desks are there just for
convenience. They are not part of a warfighting domain. But in fact,
they are. And they are not just J6 problems. It is commanders’
business.
And this is a cultural shift that we must make. We
must think about this domain and the tools in this domain and the
readiness of this domain as commanders, as essential to successful
operations.
When I was a wing commander of the U-2 (Beale
AFB, CA) I reviewed the maintenance statistics on my airplanes every
day. Why? Because I couldn’t fly them if they weren’t maintained
properly and if they weren’t prepared to operate. We need to review
the maintenance statistics and the readiness of our cyber networks
-- we’re commanders and we depend on them -- and I challenge anyone
to claim they’re not -- every day. That’s a mindset change.
It’s not a convenience any more, it’s a dependency. We need to
recognize that we need this domain and we need these systems to
conduct our fight today and tomorrow. We need to recognize that we
can fight in this domain just as an air-to-air fighter can fight in
the air domain; and we can fight through this domain and affect
other domains just as an airplane can drop a bomb on a land domain
and create affects across a domain. And as commanders we must
appreciate the vulnerability of this domain, not just its
importance. We have to transition from a culture of convenience to a
culture of responsibility. We must recognize vulnerability -- the
vulnerability that one system can create here on the other side of
the world, not just locally.
Every Soldier, Sailor, Airman,
Marine in the military is on the front line of cyber warfare every
day. If you think about the guards who guard your bases, who stand
there at the gate and make sure only the right people come in and
keep the wrong people out -- that’s everybody who has a computer on
their desk in these domains today. They are part of the front line
of defense and in fact they’re engaged in cyber operations that
matter every day, whether they know it or not.
Changing this
culture is absolutely important and it’s going to take, I believe,
the longest period of time.
Conduct. How do we conduct
ourselves?
If you look at every other domain and every other
system, one of the first principles, one of the first things we
focus on is our people and their training. Correct? Land warfare,
sea warfare, air warfare, special operations. We think about the
training of our people because we know, tools aside, that’s our
leverage point in any conflict.
I’m required to train on
cyberspace security by my service, by my command, every year. I get
a little thing that blinks up on my computer that says you are due
for information assurance training, General Chilton. Get it done by
this date. Once a year. Once a year! And I get to read and study
year-old adversary tactics, techniques and procedures against an
adversary who’s changing those every day. Perhaps every hour.
We’re not training right. We need to adjust that.
Inspections. As the commander of an aircraft wing I expect my higher
headquarters to come down and give me an annual operational
readiness inspection to make sure I can do the mission I’ve been
given. So what did I pay attention to in the way of that machine? I
paid attention to maintenance, logistics, the readiness of my air
crews, their ability to fly the mission and do the job and get back.
What didn’t I pay attention to? The cyberspace tools that I
needed to get them off the ground. Where are all the tech orders now
that our people use to maintain our airplanes? Are they on paper any
more? Are they on classified networks? No, they’re on unclassified
networks and they’re on laptop computers or handheld devices that
are vulnerable. Change the tech orders on your maintenance manuals
on the flight line and watch what happens.
Is cyberspace
essential to operations today? Should we be inspecting the readiness
of every organization that relies on cyberspace to conduct their
operations? Should commanders care about that? Should they be graded
about that? I believe they should.
When an airplane crashes,
when a ship runs aground, if a tank goes off the road and rolls
inverted in a ditch, what’s one of the very first thing commanders
do? They stand up an investigation board, a mishap board, because
they want to get to the root cause, they want to fix the root cause.
They study that, they take lessons learned, they promulgate it
through training, and they make sure the force learns from those
mistakes or learns from those tragedies. Then they also go down and
find out why it happened and if there was any culpability involved
in that.
Do we do that today in cyberspace? Do we have the
tools to hold people accountable for not following rules and
regulations? We do. We do. It’s called the UCMJ. We’ve got all the
authority we need to do that, but we can’t get this backwards. We
can’t hold people accountable if we haven’t properly trained and
equipped them. We need to do that. Properly train, properly equip,
properly educate, conduct mishap investigations when they happen,
and then hold people ultimately accountable for their behavior.
There are lots of violations that occur today in cyberspace and
on our military networks. It happens today. People think the rules
don’t apply to them, for whatever reason. Operational necessity is
viewed in their minds, laziness, whatever. But I’ll tell you what,
when we do that there are adversaries out there who are today taking
advantage of that misbehavior and that lack of discipline.
Another point on conduct. When we think about how we’re going to
conduct operations and ensure the defense of the network. This is
anathema to many many folks. It’s the concept of centralized command
and decentralized control. It’s absolutely necessary in my view in
this global domain that requires people to be compliant, requires
hardware to be upgraded quickly, and requires defensive systems that
are going to operate and work properly.
When I asked last
year how many SIPRNET and NIPRNET machines were on the DoD network
it took over 45 days to get the answer. I’m not sure I got the right
answer after 45 days, ladies and gentlemen.
Now if I asked
General Casey how many M-16s there were in the Army he could tell
me, I’ll bet, within 48 hours. I know Chief Schwartz could tell you
how many M-9s there are in the Air Force because every one of them
is signed in and signed out; there’s 100 percent accountability for
those weapons, that if we lose control of might be used to hurt
somebody within the ballistic range of that weapon. And yet we have
computers out there that we don’t know the configuration of, we
don’t know the location of, we don’t know who’s on them, who if
misused can affect operations on the other side of the world, not
just in the room you’re sitting in. Culture change, conduct change,
and the way we address this.
I shouldn’t have to ask how
many computers are out there. We should know and we have the
technology today. We need to deploy it so that we know every day
what’s on our network, what’s plugged in, what its configuration is.
Does it have the latest anti-virus injected in it and updated in it?
Have the latest orders gone out? How’s our training? Et cetera. That
should be machine to machine and it should be automated. We can do
it. We need to get on with it.
Changes to culture, conduct,
capabilities. Our people need better tools out there today,
particularly at the command and control level, at the operational
level of war, at JTF GNO, at JFCCNW, our operational component
commanders who operate, defend and do the missions in this domain.
They need the tools that allow them to better manage the operation
of and the defense of this network at network speeds. As long as
we’re depending on the human element, which we can never forget, but
as long as that’s our principal dependence is on the human element
and we operate at human speeds we will be outside the turning circle
of our adversary.
We need to operate at machine to machine
speeds. We need to operate as near to real time as we can in this
domain. We need to be able to push software upgrades automatically.
AOL does that on my home computer, why can’t we? We need to have our
computers scanned remotely with the last anti-virus software. We
need the host base security system deployed this year, not five
years from now when we can afford it, because we can ill afford not
to have these technologies available for us today.
We need
common operating pictures, just like commanders in every other
domain demand. Today if you look at our common operating picture in
cyberspace, as General Pollett’s command and control center, you
will find places in the United States of America that are black
holes. Black holes. Why? Because we don’t know what’s going on
there. And you know what’s around those black holes typically? The
fences of one of our military installations, because we have put up
artificial barriers to keep the centralized command and control
authority -- the mission assigned by the President to operate and
defend, outside our perimeter. They say it’s "my network." No, it’s
not. And a vulnerability in "your network" is a vulnerability to the
entire GIG.
This concept of centralized command and control,
decentralized execution I believe is absolutely necessary for our
operations in this command.
But you know, at the end of the
day I believe we ultimately have to be even faster than network
speed if we’re going to defend this network appropriately. How do
you do that? I’m not defying the laws of physics here. You do it by
focused high-tech intelligence. You do it by focused high-tech
intelligence, focused all-source intelligence, that tries to get you
out and anticipate threats before they arrive. You have to be able
to anticipate them and when you can preempt those threats and
preempt those attacks before they arrive at your base, post, camp or
station, or at your laptop on your desk.
Finally, what we
need in the capabilities area is more people. More people dedicated
and focused in this mission area. The services are great at
organizing, training and equipping air, land, sea and space domain
forces. We need to move forward in organizing, training and
equipping cyber forces to conduct these critical operations for the
Department of Defense.
Ladies and gentlemen, today as you
heard the Lieutenant Governor say, leaders in government, business
and academia have moved from ruminating about threats in cyberspace
to treating them as real and present dangers. We know we must make
this transition. We have seen government networks probed in the
past, and I firmly believe these intrusions will only continue to
increase as we move forward.
The cost has been in the
hundreds of millions of dollars. We do a poor job of quantifying it,
but they are real dollars and real costs. The cost has been in lost
and exploited information that can be used against us in future
conflicts to interdict our operations, to inhibit our operations, or
put us in a position to be less effective in the other domains as
well as in cyberspace.
Our challenge will be to prevent
attacks on our networks and cross-domain servers by coming through
our networks. Our challenge will be to find ways to interdict
attacks when they’ve been launched. And when they are successful our
challenge will be to make the adversary stop the attack.
I
think the most difficult challenge that we have today will be the
challenge of continuing to operate our networks when we come under
attack.
Think about any other domain. I think about my
training in the Air Force. When we went to Condition 4 at the base
incoming ballistic missiles with chem/bio gear, chem/bio attack
potential. Yeah, we got it for the initial explosion, but then we
went out into that hostile environment with our MOPP gear on and we
fixed airplanes and we loaded airplanes and we got in airplanes, we
took off and flew, we conducted operations in a hostile environment.
That’s what cyberspace is going to be, and the hardest thing is
going to be to fight through attacks in the future and ensure that
the domain continues to operate in at least an adequate fashion so
we can continue operations in every other warfighting domain.
Ladies and gentlemen, this conference I believe provides a
unique opportunity for all of us to get at the latest cutting edge
ideas from a cross section of cyberspace stakeholders. From the
technologists to the warfighters to the operators to the
intelligence community to the wire pullers to folks in other domains
who don’t think much about cyber day in and day out but understand
and know in the back of their minds they are dependent on this
domain. You all are here today and we have a great opportunity as we
move forward for the next couple of days to share ideas and
challenge paradigms and look for the problems we need to solve and
the potential solutions to solve them as we move forward.
Folks, I want to really particularly thank Mr. Kevin Williams and
his [GISC] staff for the great work that they have done in putting
this conference together and giving us this opportunity to get
together; AFCEA for all the great partnership we have with you; for
government, industry and academia partners who are here today, who
have taken so much time from their busy schedules, to get us ready
and go forward.
We’ve got an all star lineup of speakers and
panelists that are going to entertain you, but hopefully more
importantly challenge you, and I look forward to hearing your
thoughts and questions over the next couple of days.
We must
leave no stone unturned. The mission we have today in the US
Strategic Command is focused on DoD networks. But let’s not fool
ourselves. The threat to America goes beyond that. The threat to
cyberspace entities in America that can affect our economy, our
industrial base, our power and telecommunications, our banking, our
finance systems, the threat is real today. We need to be thinking
about how that is going to be protected in the future.
Remember, all of our DoD networks run on the same wires so there’s
synergy there in thought when we think about how we’re going to move
forward in both the DoD and the broader Department of Homeland
Security effort to secure America against pending threats.
Finally, I particularly want to challenge everybody that’s come from
out of state, from around the country and indeed around the world,
to take home what you’ve learned, what you will learn here in the
next few days; to challenge people back home; share the information,
share your ideas. But without you today going home and spreading the
word we cannot begin to change our cyber culture, our cyber conduct
or our cyber capabilities.
Thanks, ladies and gentlemen.
It’s great to be with you here this morning.
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