It’s truly a pleasure to be with you today in one of the
world’s most beautiful and exotic places, Honolulu, Hawaii -
home of the United States Pacific Command and the 25th
Infantry Division. I hail from a more humble locale. I’m a
good ol’ boy from rural Georgia. Growing up, not only could
I never imagine that I would go from enlisted infantryman to
the senior signal officer in the United States Army, it was
difficult to imagine what lay beyond the county line. But I
didn’t have to worry too much about what was in store for
me. I felt comfortable in my family and with the honest
people who lived in the small town were I was raised. They
were - and still are - the kind of people who take care of
one another. My parents instilled lessons. More than
anything else, I was taught right from wrong. And I was
taught the value of patriotism - along with an appreciation
of football, the ultimate team sport - and, of course, a
love of country music.
I’ve lived the American dream in the service of our country,
and I could not be more thankful. I’m thankful America
affords her citizens with boundless opportunities to
succeed. If you’re lucky enough to be an American or live in
a freedom-loving nation, you might say it’s the most sublime
lottery you actually won - because you just can’t put a
dollar sign on freedom. Freedom is priceless.
Thank you for attending. How to think about command and
control of cyberspace in the Asia-Pacific theater ... I must
confess that I’m always a little uncomfortable giving such a
speech to a room full of technical experts. It would be a
bold person to do what I’m charged with doing, which is
trying to enlighten a group so knowledgeable. But I propose
to be for about 20 minutes as bold as the little
first-grader named Suzie who was in a class where the
teacher said “I want all of you children to draw a picture.”
And all the children set about doing it, and the teacher
walked around the room and she came to little Suzie and said
“Suzie, of what are you drawing a picture?” And Suzie said
“I’m drawing a picture of God.” The teacher said “Well,
Suzie no one knows what God looks like.” And Suzie said
“They will in a few minutes.”
In my few minutes I want put a finer point on the fairly
broad theme of this conference. What DISA does within the
Pacific Rim - and globally - is important, but it’s more
meaningful for our purposes here to consider DISA from the
perspective of the warfighter. I don’t care that we have the
latest and greatest technologies in place - because what
matters is how they translate to the battlefield - or
potential battlefield - through our service partners. As you
might imagine, warfighters are the most demanding consumers
of technology because the stakes are much higher than in
civilian life. So I’m not here today to elaborate too much
on what DISA does generally. I’m here to touch on what the
warfighter does with DISA, and how others in the Department
of Defense support our warfighters using DISA assets. I want
to paint the picture from the point-of-view of the soldier,
sailor, airman, and Marine. Warfighters on the edge of the
network, in harm’s way, executing their missions with
enterprise applications. Warfighters ‘leveraging the edge’ -
the realm of net-centric warfare.
To me, command and control of cyberspace - exploited for
maximum advantage - is the virtual equivalent of holding the
high ground. Command and control of cyberspace is today’s
version of Colonel Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain and the 20th
Maine on Little Round Top.
What the 20th Maine did in the battle of Gettysburg was at
once tactical and strategic. Those soldiers helped win the
battle which helped win the Civil War. Today, in the war on
terror, this scenario is playing out all over the world. The
strategic has collapsed into the tactical. Our networks can
provide information to special operators in Afghanistan that
can result in the termination of high value al Qaeda
terrorists or Taliban fighters. In an age where the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction is a real
threat, the continued success of those special ops teams is
critical for our national security. The action occurs at the
tactical level, but has strategic consequences. At DISA,
we’re networking the warfighting enterprise for tactical and
strategic advantage. We have to own cyberspace because the
challenges America faces are global, instant, unpredictable,
and often asymmetric.
Many of you are already familiar with DISA’s mission - to
engineer and provide command and control capabilities and
enterprise infrastructure to continuously operate and assure
a global net-centric enterprise in direct support of joint
warfighters, national-level leaders, and other coalition
partners across the full spectrum of operations. DISA’s
vision is leaders enabling information dominance in defense
of our nation. Over the decades, DISA has participated in
every mission the Department of Defense has undertaken.
These have become increasingly interagency and
international, and our partnerships have increased to
reflect this.
When one considers the theme of this conference, Command and
Control of Cyberspace, the preposition - of - is key.
Cyberspace is a medium - in - which we deliver command and
control, but it’s also a battlespace. Our enemies will try
to render it useless by destroying the hardware or
corrupting the software. Cyberspace as a battlespace is
largely the concern of CyberCom and StratCom. They defend
the enterprise from external attack. We at DISA assure the
information on the network, and we can mitigate attacks by
building highly redundant and fault-tolerant networks
integrated throughout the enterprise. Cyberspace is a flow
of bits and bytes that reassemble at the edge to become
mission-critical information, but it’s also something that
can get blown up or severed, like the cables in the
Mediterranean not too long ago. It’s a highly-contested
environment characterized by satellite dependence,
persistent conflict, continual engagement, and rapid change.
Providing command and control capabilities through
cyberspace for combined arms forces is complex. That’s where
our partners, the service branches, come in. Effective
command and control requires information sharing, seamless
transparency, and information dominance to meet the
operational challenge. This requires agility - getting the
technical requirements aligned with the operational
requirements. We’re striving to assure information and
intelligence across a global network. Our enterprise is
always on and increasingly protected, robust, standardized,
and flexible. The fundamental goal is to become completely
network-centric and eliminate the last vestiges of the
stovepipe architectures.
The Asia-Pacific theatre is a vast area with many diverse
cultures. The United States Pacific Command encompasses
fifty percent of the world's surface area, more than 100
million square miles, and 36 countries. With the exception
of the Eighth United States Army in Korea, this theatre is
primarily the responsibility of the Navy and Marine Corps.
The Pacific Rim is an area of tremendous economic growth
with numerous countries conducting trade with the United
States.
Of all the countries in the Pacific Rim, one looms large.
China is quickly approaching superpower status economically
and militarily. And this begs the questions: What kind of
China will emerge? Will it be more a friend or a foe? We
hope for the former, but we must prepare for the latter. I
anticipate it won’t be long before the Chinese are
projecting military force beyond the region of the Western
Pacific. They have also made advances in net-centric
warfighting. In 2007, they destroyed one of their own
satellites with an ASAT rocket. Such weapons, if
successfully deployed in a future war, could render us
blind. As I referenced earlier, this is an example of how
cyberspace is becoming a battlespace. And it includes
Earth’s orbit. Star Wars was not a figment of anyone’s
imagination. China also now has anti-aircraft carrier
missiles. The status of Taiwan, just 75 miles from the
mainland of China, is still a thorny diplomatic challenge.
There is disagreement between China and its neighbors and
the United States over how far its territory extends into
international waters. Secretary of Defense Gates was
recently in Vietnam addressing that issue. China’s economic
system has been liberalized - it is no longer a command
economy, but human rights abuses in China continue. The
individual freedoms we take for granted are not found in
China.
The 7th Fleet, based in Japan, conducts operations in the
East China Sea and the Western Pacific in which DISA’s
assets are utilized. The Navy takes advantage of the virtual
high ground to monitor the Chinese Navy and other Chinese
military units. Our aircraft, surface ships, and submarines
gather intelligence information and use the enterprise
network to process and manage the data. The Navy, with
DISA’s help, is implementing a shipboard tactical network
program called CANES that is increasing bandwidth,
connectivity, and network availability. The acronym CANES
stands for Consolidated Afloat Networks and Enterprise
Services. CANES is allowing for a more standardized
computing environment. That means better command, control,
and communication (C3) for the 7th Fleet in the strategic
area of the Western Pacific. Lieutenant Commander David
White, the Lincoln’s combat systems information officer,
said of CANES "In the past, my days were filled with phone
calls telling me which telephone lines were down, the status
of email backlog and slowness of the Internet. This time,
users were never aware when we dropped a satellite shot
because we never lost connectivity. We were truly
operational 24/7." The Navy does not have as many ships as
it once did, but cyberspace can help the Navy do more with
less.
Then, of course, there is North Korea. Six decades have
passed since the outbreak of war on the Korean Peninsula,
and North and South Korea are technically still at war.
North Korea wouldn’t exist without the support of the
Chinese, and although Koreans are one people, their
countries could not be more dissimilar. South Korea is
thriving. North Koreans are starving. Unlike Communist
China, where at lease some reforms have been enacted for the
betterment of the people, North Korea remains a very
repressive regime. Because of the United States’ prosecution
of the war on terror, some resources have been diverted to
Southwest Asia and the American military presence has been
somewhat reduced. DISA is intricately involved in how we
monitor North Korea’s activities on the DMZ, where more than
1 million North Korean soldiers are positioned, and in how
we might determine whether North Korea is exporting its
nuclear or ICBM technology. As you know, the United States
is gravely concerned with terrorists gaining control of
weapons of mass destruction. The recent sinking of a South
Korean naval vessel by a North Korean submarine has only
exacerbated the already elevated tensions. More than 30,000
American military personnel remain stationed in South Korea,
with 80 percent of them positioned in close proximity to the
DMZ. If North Korea were to mass for an attack, U.S.
satellites would sound the alarm, the Eighth Army would
prepare a massive artillery and rocket barrage and
counter-battery fires, several of our carriers would sail
from their home port in Japan to launch airstrikes. The
United States would be involved in another full-scale war on
the Korean Peninsula. Further complicating matters, is that
North Korea has nuclear weapons.
The Eighth United States Army (EUSA) is stationed in South
Korea. Advances in cyberspace communications have made for
improved maneuverability of those troopers. The Warfighter
Information Network - Tactical (WIN-T) provides “on the
move” capability down to the company level. The Army is also
implementing the Future Combat Systems program and
Telecommunications Satellite program. The 7th Fleet is
responsible for overwatch in Korean waters.
Indonesia, the world’s 4th most populous country, is of
significant strategic importance to the United States. 1/3
of the world’s seaborne trade passes through Indonesia’s
territorial waters and 1/2 of the world’s oil passes through
the Malacca Sraights. Malaysia and Singapore are nearby
countries. Throughout history, it has been an important
region for trade. Indonesia has the world’s largest
population of Muslims. After 9/11,there were intelligence
reports of safe havens for Islamic terrorists in the region,
and there was some question of whether U.S. ground forces
would be sent there. In 1997, however, Congress had already
banned American-Indonesian military cooperation when it
enacted the Leahy Law, which prohibits relations with
militaries accused of torture as was Indonesia’s military,
the TNI. Today, it is more likely that joint cooperation
will resume for counterterrorist operations, with the U.S.
military playing a support role. Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton recently made comments to suggest that the United
States was open to resuming open military relations with
Indonesia. This would require Congressional legislation with
language repealing the Leahy Law. The massive relief effort
in response to the 2004 earthquake and sunami demanded
multinational cooperation, which included Indonesia. DISA
played a major role there. Indonesia is a moderate society,
pro-western, recently elected a president who was educated
in the United States.
Carrier Strike Group 9 led by the aircraft carrier USS
Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) recently arrived in nearby Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia to promote peace, cooperation, and
stability in the region. The Lincoln just introduced the
CANES program on board. The Marines on Okinawa could be sent
to Indonesia if the situation warranted. These Marine
battalions are currently being equipped with mobile tactical
Combat Operations Centers (COCs). They will be used to
manage tactical level data and integrate command and
control. The COCs are being administered by General
Dynamics. The Navy is also involved in theatre ballistic
missile defense (TBMD) in the Pacific-at-large and in
military exercises like Cobra Gold in Thailand.
So the United States has significant national security
interests in the Pacific Rim. Trade and lines of
communication must remain open. Sea lanes must remain
secure. Ideally, if China continues to liberalize, the North
Korean regime falls peacefully, and Indonesia partners with
the United States in counterterrorist operations; prospects
for the region will greatly improve. The developing
economies will increase the standard of living and quality
of life for millions of people.
What does the future hold for DISA? We must have the vision
and courage to innovate and adopt technology as it evolves.
To gain information dominance, we must exploit emerging
technologies such as holographic messages, natural language
and neural computing interfaces, hyperspectral imagery,
autonomous mobile networks, augmented reality, and learning
algorithms. Social networks have become a part of the
lifestyle of our users, as well as our adversaries – we must
exploit their power appropriately. We must lead the effort
for a global defense cloud – for our customers and their
partners – so that we will enable a military force to
connect and pull the information it needs for its mission
anytime, anywhere, all in a contested battle space. We are
committed to protected data on protected networks. Teamwork
with our mission and industry partners is essential. We care
about the end user. We recognize that the capabilities and
services we provide cross barriers. We will enable the
warfighter’s ability to connect and pull the information
they need in a contested battlespace. We are positioned to
rapidly leverage future technology and deliver joint
capabilities. We are committed to leading the Department’s
effort to achieve unity of effort in realizing global
collaboration and information sharing – making sure that we
collectively can achieve information dominance and support
the new global warfighter on-the-move.
In closing, I want to tell you about a Marine I met on a
recent trip to Afghanistan. I had just landed in the
vicinity of Now Zad, Helmand Province when one of the
Marines who had been tasked with providing a secure LZ said
to me “Thank you for providing my battalion with good coms,
sir.” A young lance corporal, he moved easily despite his
combat load and wielded his M240 machine gun deftly. I asked
him how he knew coms were good. He said “My company
commander said as much. And I’ve seen first hand the
difference it can make, whether it’s calling up arty or
bringing in a medivac helo.” I asked him why he joined the
Marines. “I want my little sister to grow up not knowing
what terrorism is. I want her to live her life free of
fear.” I asked him how he was making out. “Sir, it ain’t
nothin’ we can’t handle. We’re infantry Marines. And I trust
in the Lord to get me and my buddies through this one way or
another.”
We can get caught up with talk about technology and
architecture, but we should never forget that the men and
women of America’s armed forces are our most precious
national treasure, and the virtual highways of command,
control, and communication we build lead directly to that
young Marine and others like him who put their lives on the
front lines everyday fighting for the cause of freedom.
Thank you.