Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
May 31, 2011
The Pentagon has announced that computer intrusions from abroad are to be considered acts of war against the United States and will be answered with conventional military force.
Dire cyber threat propaganda.
Infowars.com
May 31, 2011
The Pentagon has announced that computer intrusions from abroad are to be considered acts of war against the United States and will be answered with conventional military force.
“If you shut down our power grid, maybe we will put a missile down one of your smokestacks,” a military official told The Wall Street Journal.
In part, the Pentagon intends its plan as a warning to potential
adversaries of the consequences of attacking the U.S., according to the
Journal.
The Pentagon document is 30 pages in its classified
version and 12 pages in the unclassified one. It concludes that the Laws
of Armed Conflict are applicable in cyberspace as in traditional
warfare.
The Pentagon established a new command last year, headed
by Gen. Keith B. Alexander, director of the NSA, to consolidate
military network security and attack efforts. Alexander told the Washington Post
last November that the new outfit wants maneuvering room to mount what
he called “the full spectrum” of operations in cyberspace.
The NSA announced its ambitious cyber security plan last
year. Dubbed “Perfect Citizen,” it is designed to detect cyber assaults
on private companies and government agencies running such critical
infrastructure as the electricity grid and nuclear-power plants,
according to the New York Times.
According to the Post, offensive actions may include
shutting down part of an opponent’s computer network to head off a
cyber-attack or changing a line of code in an adversary’s computer to
render malicious software harmless. They are operations that destroy,
disrupt or degrade targeted computers or networks, the newspaper
reported.
Alex Jones talked with RT about the Pentagon’s cyber army.
The United States and Israel apparently employed this doctrine when they inserted the Stuxnet worm
on a computer network associated with Iranian nuclear facilities. Iran
had not attacked the United States or Israel, thus demonstrating that
U.S. cyber warfare efforts against official enemies are not limited to
offensive capability.
Since at least 2003, the Pentagon has considered cyberspace a battlefield. A Pentagon document entitled the Information Operation Roadmap was released to the public after a FOIA request by the National Security Archive at George Washington University in 2006.
On October 30, 2003, then Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld signed a secret order for the classified 74-page directive.
“DoD’s ‘Defense in Depth’ strategy should operate on the premise that
the Department will ‘fight the net’ as it would a weapons system,” the report states.
Rumsfeld’s directive notes the importance of
psychological operations. “In the battle of perception management, where
the enemy is clearly using the media to help manage perceptions of the
general public, our job is not perception management but to counter the
enemy’s perception management,’ said the chief Pentagon spokesman, Lawrence Di Rita in December 2004.
The reported attacks on the Pentagon’s computer network
have served to further boost the impression that crafty enemies are at
war in cyberspace with the United States. It provided an impetus to
attack official enemies. “Recent attacks on the Pentagon’s own systems –
as well as the sabotaging of Iran’s nuclear program via the Stuxnet
computer worm – have given new urgency to U.S. efforts to develop a more
formalized approach to cyber attacks,” writes the Journal.
The Pentagon has publicized a number of alleged attacks,
including “the most significant breach of U.S. military computers
ever,” a 2008 episode in which a foreign intelligence agent used a flash
drive to infect computers, including those used by the Central Command
in overseeing combat zones in Iraq and Afghanistan, the New York Times reported last August.
In May of 2010, Richard Clarke,
a former adviser to both Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, warned that
the United States should prepare for a cyber attack that he claims could
cause destruction on the scale of 9/11 in less than 15 minutes.
Prior to the announcement by the Pentagon today, major
defense contractor Lockheed Martin reported over the weekend that its
computer network was infiltrated by shadowy adversaries.
“Officials had no information on the origin on the
attack, but one of the US diplomatic cables released by the WikiLeaks
website suggested that China had jumped ahead of the US when it came to
cyber-espionage,” The Telegraph reported on Saturday, two days before the Pentagon announcement.
The government and the corporate media have hyped the marginal threat of computer attacks over the last few years.
In late February of 2010, CNN rolled out a slick
propaganda presentation called “Cyber Shockwave” that posited a cyber
attack on the United States. The aired scenario was created by former
CIA Director, General Michael Hayden, and the co-chairs of the 9/11
Commission, former Rep. Lee Hamilton (D-IN) and former Gov. Thomas Kean
(R-NJ). Other government insiders and establishment types participated,
including former Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff and
former CIA director John McLaughlin. The scenario sketched out a dire
scenario of knocked out power grids and the prospect of the United
States being pitched into the Dark Ages.
Dire cyber threat propaganda.
“How should the government deal with the threat?” we asked at the time.
“Federalize the National Guard to deal with unruly mobs freaking out
over the loss of electricity. Nationalize utility companies so the NSA
and the government get electricity. The participants also recommended
new powers be granted to the president. Not surprisingly, they declared
the president has the authority to take unprecedented action against the
states and the private sector under the Constitution.”
In April of last year, CIA director Leon Panetta said
that the next “Pearl Harbor” is likely to be an attack on the United
States’ power, financial, military and other internet systems, the Sacramento Press
reported. Panetta said the United States faces thousands of cyber
attacks daily on its internet networks. The attacks are originating in
Russia, China, Iran and from even hackers.
The government and the corporate media are overplaying
the threat of a cyber attack for political reasons. It is a key
component of an effort to install a sprawling surveillance grid.
“It is alarming that so many people have accepted the
White House’s assertions about cyber-security as a key national security
problem without demanding further evidence. Have we learned nothing
from the WMD debacle? The administration’s claims could lead to policies
with serious, long-term, troubling consequences for network openness
and personal privacy,” writes Evgeny Morozov
for the Boston Review. “Much of the data are gathered by
ultra-secretive government agencies — which need to justify their own
existence — and cyber-security companies — which derive commercial
benefits from popular anxiety. Journalists do not help. Gloomy scenarios
and speculations about cyber-Armageddon draw attention, even if they
are relatively short on facts.”
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The supposed cyber threat now hyped by the Pentagon is
not limited to foreign adversaries. Last October, Obama instructed the
Pentagon to attack “cyberthreats” within the United States. “The Obama
administration has adopted new procedures for using the Defense
Department’s vast array of cyberwarfare capabilities in case of an
attack on vital computer networks inside the United States, delicately
navigating historic rules that restrict military action on American
soil,” the New York Times reported.
In short, Obama gave the Pentagon orders to attack a supposed cyber threat within the United States.
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