New US cyber centre will co-ordinate response to computer attacks

Published Friday October 30th, 2009

WASHINGTON - The United States is well behind the curve in the fight against computer criminals, Sen. Joe Lieberman said Friday, as Homeland Security officials opened a $9 million operations centre to co-ordinate better the government's response to cyberattacks.

Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, said legislation being drafted by his committee will require federal agencies and private companies to set up a system to share information on cyber threats.

Lieberman, an independent, said the Homeland Security Department must identify weaknesses in the systems that run power plants and other critical infrastructure.

As Lieberman laid out his proposal to Chamber of Commerce executives, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano opened the new National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center in northern Virginia, near Washington.

Standing in front of a wall of broad video screens, that displayed vivid charts and maps of possible cyber threats and suspicious internet traffic, Napolitano said the watch centre will allow the high-tech teams that monitor government networks to work together better.

With 61 computer stations spread across the room, the centre will merge the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team and the National Coordinating Center for Telecommunications.

U.S. officials have said that government computer systems are probed or scanned millions of times a day, and face an increasing threat from hackers, cyber criminals looking to steal money or information and nation-states aimed at espionage or the destruction of networks that run vital services.

Officials have urged a more co-ordinated effort by the federal government to monitor and protect U.S. systems and work with the private sector to insure that transportation systems, energy plants and other sensitive networks are equally protected.

Napolitano told a crowd of federal workers and others at the new watch centre that consolidating the cyber efforts will improve the government's ability to counter threats. Over time, the centre, which will operate 24 hours a day, also will include the National Cybersecurity Center, which co-ordinates operations among the six largest federal cyber centres; the DHS Office of Intelligence and Analysis; and representatives from the private sector.

President Barack Obama has declared computer security a priority, but he has been struggling for several months to appoint a new cyber co-ordinator. Several executives have turned it down, and critics and cyber experts say it is a nearly impossible job to fill.

White House spokesman Nick Shapiro said Obama is "personally committed to finding the right person for this job, and a rigorous selection process is well under way."

 
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