Mike Flynn

Trump’s national security pick is a cybersecurity hawk

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Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn. Image: IDGNS

21 November 2016

Michael Flynn, the man President-elect Donald Trump plans to name as US national security advisor, believes the government is falling behind on cybersecurity.

Trump named Flynn to his cabinet on Friday after the former military intelligence leader acted as the top military advisor to Trump’s presidential campaign. Flynn previously was director of the Defense Intelligence Agency and has served in US intelligence operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Flynn holds strong views on cybersecurity. He’s called US cyber capabilities “underwhelming”.

“We have competitors out there that are rapidly catching up with us,” he said in a speech posted online last year. In 2014, after retiring as a general, he started a consulting firm called Flynn Intel Group that specialises in preventing cyber threats for clients.

“It is stunning how often nation-states such as China, Russian or Iran, or transnational criminal organisations, attack our networks,” he said in an interview last December. “It’s something we are frankly not prepared for.”

On the campaign trail, Trump said the US government needs to be ready to use offensive cyberweapons in response to hacking attempts from other nations.

Flynn said he agreed with that position during a separate interview with the Security Ledger last month. Experts have said a key challenge in retaliatory cyber attacks is attribution. Accurately pinning down the true culprit in any hacking attempt is often difficult.

“We cannot win playing on one side of the playing field, on the defensive end,” Flynn said. “You only are going to win if you go on the offensive once in a while.”

To do so, the US needs to have a technological edge over the enemy, he said. “In order to win, you want to have an unfair advantage.”

The outgoing Obama administration has also considered cyber retaliation. This became an issue in October when US intelligence agencies blamed Russia for trying to meddle in this year’s presidential election by hacking high-profile political targets.

During the presidential campaign, Trump said he was sceptical that Russia was involved. However, Flynn said it made sense that the country would have tried to tamper with a political campaign.

“We should not be surprised that a communist state run by a totalitarian dictator wants to expose the weaknesses of capitalism,” he said.

In that same interview, Flynn also discussed overhauling the way the US approaches cybersecurity, given the rapid changes to the IT industry. He called for a “storyteller-in-chief” who can explain to the public complicated cyber matters in way everyone can understand.

He also advocates a task force that would meet frequently to discuss new legislation and policies on technology. Leaders from the private sector as well as federal and state government would participate in the task force.

“There has to be some means to speed up how the government functions in this world,” he said. “There has to be an acknowledgement that we are falling behind.”

IDG News Service

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