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Book Review: Cybersecurity and Cyberwar
Cybersecurity and Cyberwar: What Everyone Needs to Know
By P.W. Singer and Allan Friedman Oxford University Press, January 2014 (Brookings)
Access, Not Oil, Fuels China's South China Sea Policy
The focus is on maritime control of a large and growing area of influence.
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National Security Agency Program Fills Critical Cyber Skills Gaps
Centers of excellence educate network warriors.
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Korean Cybersecurity Becomes a Joint Endeavor
A U.S. military cyber center serves as a partnering point with the Republic of Korea.
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U.S. Missile Defense Lags Emerging Threats
Advances in technology and new political conflicts both pose challenges to the current missile system.
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China and Russia Pose an Array of Dangers to the West
Often at odds with one another, they unite against outside involvement in their regions.
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Lone Wolf Terrorists Prowl the Balkans
Jihadi fighters flowing from Syria pose a potential threat.
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Military Evaluates Future Cyberforce
The National Guard is receiving special attention, as experts determine how to optimize its resources.
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Intelligence Generates a Cyber Picture
Seeing is believing for geospatial intelligence products, even for the virtual world.
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It Is Time to Stop the Daily Assaults on the Intelligence Community
The world may be more dangerous today than in any period in history. Threats are widespread and diverse. It no longer is enough to watch nation-states. In this period of asymmetric warfare, with the addition of the cyberthreat, almost anyone can become a threat to national security. In this dangerous world, the value of intelligence has risen, and the tools and means of intelligence must be richer than in the past.