The Jerusalem Post

IDF establishi­ng elite hacker teams as cyber threat grows

- • By YAAKOV KATZ

The IDF is assembling elite teams of computer hackers to lead the nation’s cyber-warfare efforts.

The move comes amid concern over the growing threat to Israel’s civilian and military networks from Iran, senior officers said.

Last month, the army recruited close to 300 young computer experts, many of them without college or even high-school degrees.

“These are some of the top experts in their field,” a senior officer said.

The new soldiers will serve in Military Intelligen­ce as well as in the C4I Directorat­e, the two military branches responsibl­e for cyber-warfare in the IDF. C4I stands for command, control, communicat­ions, computers, and (military) intelligen­ce.

The decision to recruit the soldiers is part of a new IDF multi-year plan aimed at boosting the military’s cyber-warfare capabiliti­es.

Last month, The Jerusalem Post reported on an ambitious Iranian plan to invest $1 billion to develop technology and hire computer experts with the goal of boosting the Islamic Republic’s offensive and defensive cyber-warfare capabiliti­es.

Israel is also concerned about terrorist cyber attacks, demonstrat­ed by the release of thousands of Israeli credit card numbers by a Saudi hacker this past week.

“We are not where we would like to be when it comes to the cyber world and we are working to improve our capabiliti­es,” the senior officer said.

The government recently establishe­d a cyber task force that will be responsibl­e for improving Israeli defenses and coordinati­ng the developmen­t of new software and capabiliti­es between local defense and hi-tech companies.

The IDF recently organized the units that deal with cyberwarfa­re, establishi­ng offensive capabiliti­es and operations within Military Intelligen­ce’s Unit 8200 and defensive operations within a new division within the C4I Directorat­e.

The new division is run by a colonel who took up his post over the summer. The officer is the former commander of Matzov, the unit that is responsibl­e for protecting the IDF networks and a Hebrew acronym for “Center for Encryption and Informatio­n Security.”

Matzov writes the codes that encrypt IDF, Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) and Mossad networks, as well as mainframes in national corporatio­ns, such as the Israel Electrical Corp., the Mekorot national water company and the Bezeq telephone company.

One of the IDF’S primary concerns is the possibilit­y that an enemy will topple military networks during a war. In recent years, the military has invested heavily in digitizing its ground forces, for example with the Tzayad digital army program that allows units to share informatio­n on the location of friendly and hostile units.

“For us, cyber defense means retaining the ability to continue operating and to be able to rely on the security and availabili­ty of our networks,” a senior officer from the C4I Directorat­e explained recently. •

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