U.S. government undermanned when it comes to cybersecurity, Army War College academic says.

AuthorMagnuson, Stew
PositionHomeland Security News

The federal government does not have enough cyber-experts on its payroll, policies are ill-defined, and there has been a lack of leadership from the Obama administration.

So says William Waddell, director of the Command, Control and Cyberspace Operations Group at the Army War College in Carlisle, Pa.

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"The [Obama] administration is not leaning forward," he said, noting that the views he expressed were his own. "It does not appear that this has continued to be a front burner item." But there is a "lot on the administration's plate right now," he conceded.

President Obama with much fanfare at the beginning of his administration announced several Internet security initiatives, including the creation of a "cyberczar." But that position "has no power," Waddell noted.

Interagency roles are still being defined. The military has the .mil domain, the Department of Homeland Security oversees .gov and the FBI has responsibility for "everyone else."

"What's going to happen if we have a cyber Pearl Harbor?" he asked at the GovSec conference.

Everyone is going to look to the Defense Department for leadership even though it does not have authority over the Internet. The National Security Agency lines up under the Defense Department, so it is...

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