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NATO defense ministers agree to set-up cyber-defense rapid reaction teams

BC, Riga, 05.06.2013.Print version
NATO defence ministers agreed Tuesday to set up rapid reaction teams to help defend the military alliance against a growing number of cyber-attacks, many of them blamed on China, informs LETA/AFP.

"In the progress report we have adopted today, we agreed to establish rapid reaction teams that can help protect NATO's own systems," alliance head Anders Fogh Rasmussen said.

 

This "cyber-defence capability should be fully operational by the autumn," Rasmussen told a press conference.

 

"This is a first phase. A second phase would be to look into how the alliance can respond to requests from Allies who come under cyber-attack," he said.

 

Rasmussen stressed that cyber-security – the defence of the electronics information systems at the heart of modern warfare – remained the responsibility of its 28 member states.

 

But "this is a serious challenge (which)... can have devastating consequences," he said, adding that NATO suffered more than 2,500 attacks last year. "An attack on one ally, if not dealt quickly, can affect us all."

 

Meanwhile, Latvian Defense Minister Artis Pabriks told LETA in Brussels that Latvia has done quite a lot recently to strengthen cyber-defense capabilities in the country.

 

Latvia has created a Information Technology Security Incident Response Institution (CERT), which is currently operating under the Defense Ministry, furthermore, the defense minister reminds that Latvia is actively involved in the creation of a Home Guard cyber-defense unit.

 

''Thus, we can safely say that we have created a good foundation in this area, but we must continue to move forward and invest in cyber-defense, as this area of defense will only become more important in the future,'' Pabriks said.

 

The cyber-security issue is top of the agenda for a two-day defence ministers' meeting at NATO headquarters in Brussels.

 

U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, attending his first NATO meeting since taking office, on Saturday accused China of waging cyber-espionage against the U.S. after an American report found evidence of a broad Chinese spying campaign against top U.S. defence contractors and government agencies.






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