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“NATIONAL DEFENSE MAGAZINE” By James Curtis
“The challenge to the Pentagon in building an effective defense against the Triad of Disruption is more complex and unique than any it has confronted. Building a new weapon system is not the answer.
It is imperative to understand that the Defense Department cannot counter this threat by itself. It requires all levels of government, private industry and academia.”
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“The very ‘rules of war’ have changed. The role of nonmilitary means of achieving political and strategic goals has grown, and, in many cases, they have exceeded the power of force of weapons in their effectiveness.” — Gen. Valery Gerasimov, Russia’s chief of the general staff, Military-Industrial Kurier, February 2013 “Russia is waging the most amazing information warfare blitzkrieg we have ever seen in the history of information warfare.” — Gen. Philip Breedlove, NATO Wales Summit, September 2014 Seven years later, America faces a more skillful Russia experienced in modern information warfare leveraging three elements: social media, propaganda/fake news and digital social engineering — the “triad of disruption.”
The advanced persistent threat of the triad is a clear and present danger to national security because nation-states and terrorist organizations have learned to apply the ubiquitous power of social media technology, and “message” propaganda and fake news utilizing professional information warriors to manipulate the masses via the art of digital social engineering.
The U.S. government, and the Defense Department specifically, faces unprecedented challenges from this information weapon.
In his book, “Messing with the Enemy,” national security expert Clint Watts bluntly states that “America sucks at information warfare, absolutely sucks.” While the nation expends tremendous effort to develop kinetic weapon systems, it is clear it has yet to develop a comprehensive defense plan for its adversary’s Triad of Disruption strategy.
Figure one reveals how the three elements interact to produce the Triad of Disruption. It is the merged power of the overlapping elements used in the battle of influence, destabilization and intimidation that manifests as a weapon of mass destruction leading to the ultimate goal — the decline of American society into chaos. To appreciate the power of the Triad of Disruption, one needs to understand each element’s role in developing the weapon.
The weapon’s message delivery element, social media, continues to morph itself across every aspect of society. To date, relying upon social media sites to self-police propaganda and fake news has been ineffective.
Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act has but 26 words. Section 230 reads, “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.” It is a blanket protection for social media providers from legal action as a result of the use of their media platform.
It is a flawed law requiring change; specifically, bipartisan legislation is required to find the balance between freedom of speech and responsible online social engagement. Without addressing this issue, the continued use of social media platforms as an attack vector seems to have no boundaries for the foreseeable future.
Next is propaganda and fake news. The spreading of rumors, ideas, information and lies in order to cause harm to nations, organizations or an individual is propaganda and is the “information manipulation” element. It has been used successfully for hundreds of years for purposes of evil. To support Adolf Hitler’s ascendance, the Nazis honed propaganda to an art form as they instilled their evil into every aspect of German society.
As dangerous and effective as propaganda has been throughout history, the introduction of social media amplifies the threat many-fold.
Writing in a Strategic Studies Quarterly article, “Commanding the Trend: Social Media as Information Warfare,” Air Force Lt. Col. Jarred Prier addressed this growing threat of unchecked propaganda and related attributes which contribute to its spread in the digital environment.
Figure 2 reflects this lethal combination and how the different technology tools, players and messaging combine to give propaganda a lifespan with amazing stamina using the representative social media platform, Twitter.
The primary sinister partner to propaganda is fake news. Fake news serves as the energy source to complete this new weapon’s ability to sow discord, enable lies and motivate believers. Fake news is not a new term; and its recently mutated use is not the original meaning.
Unfortunately, fake news has become a cottage industry to itself. It is now a favorite technique of some prominent politicians as a method to discount any news they don’t like. Issues that are factually provable are often tagged as fake news because the source is not considered credible solely based upon the receiver’s political persuasion.
Another factor is the rise of digital social engineering.
Social engineer Christopher Hadnagy defines his field as “the act of manipulating a person to take an action that may or may not be in the target’s best interest.” Social engineering is simply the art of manipulating others to get them to do what you want. However, combining that skill with online technology produces the power of digital social engineering — the “pretext planning strategy” element. And, while the art of social engineering has been around as long as humans, the advent of the digital era provides the attacker the ability to reach a more expansive target set with rapid results. Russian social engineers are representative of this final piece of the weapon built to attack the United States in a manner unimaginable just a decade ago.
The 2017 Director of National Intelligence and the 2020 U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee reports outlined the unprecedented success of the Russian Internet Research Agency (IRA) in its use of the Triad of Disruption during the 2016 U.S. presidential election campaign.
Without a doubt, Russia’s attack had an impact on U.S. national security. Additionally, the IRA’s low investment costs/high-yield return strategy to cause political chaos, weaken international alliances and sow discord among U.S. citizens may be one of the most successful long-term return on investment attacks in the annals of military history.
After 2016, Russia continued to reap benefits as it flaunted an alarmingly open Triad of Disruption strategy. Georgia, Ukraine, France, Great Britain and other nations have been targets of the IRA attack strategy. And yet, after years of “digital” bombardment by Russia, America and its allies have yet to find a counter-balance strategy to defeat this weapon.
As other adversaries have recognized the successes of Russia, almost without meaningful penalty, they too are applying the Triad of Disruption against their rivals. China, North Korea and Iran are increasing their information warfare activities. On the terrorism front, ISIS was already known for its sophisticated use of social media, and there can be no doubt they have studied the IRA’s strategies and are honing their battle plans for future information warfare attacks.
How can the nation defend itself against the Triad of Disruption?
The challenge to the Pentagon in building an effective defense against the Triad of Disruption is more complex and unique than any it has confronted. Building a new weapon system is not the answer — the fact is that the best defense against this weapon is education, good policy, effective laws, public-private partnerships, and international alliances and treaties.
It is imperative to understand that the Defense Department cannot counter this threat by itself. It requires all levels of government, private industry and academia.
As such, the following defensive plan requires an “all-in” government-wide commitment.
First, the Defense Department should partner with other agencies to fund and support a government-wide commitment to a cybersecurity education program for all Americans as early as the first days of school and continuing throughout adulthood.
Government should revisit the efficacy of laws and policy regarding private industry standards for social media, especially in regard to Section 230.
Next, private military contractor and academic communities should team with the government via public-private partnerships to develop technical processes which identify and counter attacks such as deep fakes and other emerging digital social engineering methods.
The Pentagon should dedicate more resources toward detection, identification and authentication of online information warfare techniques.
This cannot be done by technology alone. It also requires a change in how the community conceptualizes this evolving weapon culturally and socially.
All levels of government should develop and commit to every American’s understanding of the elements of the Triad of Disruption. This includes establishing a national awareness campaign similar in scope and breadth to the anti-smoking campaign begun in the 1970s.
Americans need to understand this weapon so they too can play a role in the nation’s combined defense.
Finally, the Defense Department should support an international cybersecurity treaty similar in concept to the U.S.-Russia nuclear treaties.
The result would be an international cybersecurity convention applying to all nations.
To enforce such a treaty, the United States should support the establishment of a United Nations cybersecurity agency with the legal authority for independent monitoring, forensic investigation and identification, and the ability to impart punitive actions against countries guilty of wielding the Triad of Disruption weapon.
The elements of the Triad of Disruption merge to form an extraordinarily powerful weapon providing nation-states and terrorist groups with the capability to execute information warfare against a target on a massive scale, at low risk or cost. The Russian attack against the United States’ 2016 presidential election was the most effective attack using the triad in history, but it won’t be for long. U.S. adversaries are capable of propagating damaging propaganda and fake news, utilizing the technologies of the internet’s social media, and then leveraging professional digital social engineers to attack the nation with devastating results.
The Triad of Disruption is a clear and present danger to America. It requires an entire nation to mobilize in defense.”
Dr. James Curtis is the cybersecurity program director and assistant professor of information technology at Webster University in St. Louis. He is a retired Air Force officer who also served as a presidential communications officer in the White House under Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton.
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