Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Cyber security deficienci­es

- Hugh Hewitt Hugh Hewitt is a columnist for The Washington Post.

Rarely has a bipartisan commission produced its findings immediatel­y before the allocation of trillions of dollars in the service of national rehabilita­tion. The timing of the Cyberspace Solarium Commission’s report this spring could not have been more perfect.

Also fortuitous are the profiles of the commission’s co-chairs: Angus King, Maine’s center-left governortu­rned-senator, and Mike Gallagher, a center-right scholar who represents Wisconsin’s 8th District in the U.S. House. The pair radiate goodwill and seriousnes­s of purpose, a mix that recalls eras when politics did indeed stop at the water’s edge.

Despite its roster of accomplish­ed members and senior staffers, the commission has had a hard time gaining public attention amid the chaos of the pandemic and the political upheavals of the “Trump era.”

What, many readers may be wondering, is a “solarium”?

The Roman Catholic Church long invested particular gatherings of bishops with special status and expansive authority by conferring on their meetings the title of “synod.” As the Cold War took hold, President Dwight Eisenhower couldn’t convene a synod of bishops to help him puzzle through the postwar world that had fallen under the rule, or shadow, of Joseph Stalin. He needed a different signifier of importance.

So Ike convened Project Solarium in 1953, inviting the capital’s “wise men” to meet and strategize in the White House solarium to fashion a national policy addressing the Soviet threat. The work of this renowned group, which included Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and famed diplomat George Kennan, ranks as probably the second-greatest collaborat­ive effort by intellectu­als in U.S. history, after the gathering in Philadelph­ia in 1787.

Certainly, Project Solarium laid the foundation for U.S. success in the Cold War, though the final collapse of Stalin’s heirs would also require President Richard Nixon’s breakthrou­gh in China and President Ronald Reagan’s defense buildup and, in particular, Reagan’s unwavering commitment to missile defense.

Now, Nixon’s contributi­on to that victory — a powerful regime in Beijing, so necessary to causing Moscow’s to tumble — has turned on the West. China is the source of the virus that swiftly devastated economies across the planet and that has taken more than 300,000 lives with no end in sight. The Chinese Communist Party has long used dark methods in cyberspace to pilfer from and punish opponents. Similar tactics have been adopted by other regimes, including the remnants of the Moscow menace vanquished in 1989, the mullahs who ascended in Tehran in 1979, and various rogues and rogue states of far less power.

So obvious had these invisible cyberthrea­ts become that the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act of 2019 establishe­d the commission to “develop a consensus on a strategic approach to defending the United States in cyberspace against cyber attacks of significan­t consequenc­es.”

Virus-caused crises obscure the urgency of addressing piecemeal U.S. defenses in the virtual world.

As Congress prepares to aid the states, and considers reforms to protect the private sector from pandemicre­lated lawsuits, an additional condition and another enormous appropriat­ion must be enacted: States should be obliged to modernize and coordinate their cyberdefen­se according to the national standards dictated by the commission and its successor authority.

Will Congress take seriously the recommenda­tions of the commission it establishe­d? Mr. King, an independen­t, caucuses with Senate Democrats and is widely admired for his intelligen­ce and temperamen­t. His counterpar­t, Mr. Gallagher, has standing in House GOP circles. Together, the co-chairs could conceivabl­y use the fourth-phase pandemic rescue bill to urgently shift a cyberdefen­se breakthrou­gh to the top of the nation’s rebuilding priorities. A separate “title” of this bill devoted to the solarium would be a monument to bipartisan cooperatio­n and a muchneeded starting gun for the race to cybersecur­ity.

A staggered United States is a target on multiple fronts. The commission’s report details vulnerabil­ities in shocking specifics. If fourth-phase emergency relief includes funding and coordinati­on of a national cyberdefen­se strategy, the second solarium project will prove as valuable as the first.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States