Network Would Link Defense Functions, People 
<http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=63686>  
Mon, 25 Apr 2011 14:40:00 -0500 



Network Would Link Defense Functions, People 


By Terri Moon Cronk 
American Forces Press Service 

WASHINGTON, April 25, 2011 - To optimize U.S. cybersecurity using a new 
information-sharing enterprise network in a reduced-budget era, a top Defense 
Department official gave industry leaders a challenge: "We need your 
innovation." 

Robert J. Carey, deputy assistant secretary of defense for information 
management integration and technology and the Pentagon's chief information 
officer, outlined the department's "enterprise strategy and roadmap" for 
members of the Armed Forces Communications and Electronic Association here 
April 22. 

Carey said the plan would bring all branches of the military together on the 
same information-sharing network system. 

"It's not about consolidation as much as it is about raising security, while 
keeping enterprise in view," he said. "Improving cybersecurity is what this is 
about." 

Making sure firewalls get trusted information and driving costs down while 
raising the security bar form the nexus of the effort, Carey said. 

"When a service member is downrange, he doesn't care where the information 
comes from –- only that it's at hand and he can do something with it," Carey 
said. "Enterprise is actionable, timely, relevant, trusted information." 

And while it seems simple to provide, he said, the existence of many networks 
makes it difficult. 

Defense budget cuts have become the catalyst for change, Carey told the 
industry leaders, and finding efficiencies to run the department has become 
essential. 

"If we keep doing what we've done [with past funding], we're not going to get 
there," he said. 

The enterprise network, however, would cost little, because the system's 
architecture would result from a "bottom-up" approach, Carey said, with DOD 
making new uses out of existing network equipment from all military branches. 

"It's really hard to defend [the department's] 15,000-ish networks and 10,000 
applications and systems," he acknowledged. But even with a substantial amount 
of details yet to be ironed out –- including network optimization, data center 
consolidation, data tagging and others -- Carey said some efficiency 
initiatives already are paying off after six to eight months of work, such as 
in tracking identity on classified networks. 

"It's actually starting to happen," he said. 

Email is another challenge. "There are a lot of email systems out there," he 
told the group. "We've got to buy what we have better, and use what we have 
better." 

Carey said all branches of the military bought email systems and set them up 
command by command, ship by ship, with no tightly knit communications system. 
But now, he added, enterprise system purchases for hardware and software will 
be viewed with a critical eye. 

"We need to look at: 'Is it applicable at the enterprise level? If it is, how 
can I buy it better than I'm buying it now? How can I use my money more wisely 
for the taxpayer?'" Carey said. 

The challenges of the new enterprise system will be many, Carey said, but he 
added that he believes it is a proven system that is both cost-effective and 
essential for improved cybersecurity. 

"We are starting this pump with the water we already have," he said, noting the 
drop in funding for the enterprise network system. "And the defense leadership 
recognizes that factor." 

Launching the system will take more time with less funding, Carey said, "but 
we're still going forward, because this can be done on its own gravity." 
  


Related Sites: 
Armed Forces Communications and Electronic Association  <http://www.afcea.org/> 



 



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