[ISN] Wanted: NCSD Head

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Mon Jul 14 2003 - 22:57:09 PDT

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    Forwarded from: William Knowles <wkat_private>
    
    http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,1191690,00.asp
    
    By Dennis Fisher
    July 14, 2003 
    
    The government is looking for one good person: someone with years of
    operational security experience with a solid track record of leading a
    talented group of people performing vital, sensitive tasks for a
    public-sector salary in complete anonymity.
    
    The candidate must be willing to work long hours, be comfortable with
    getting no credit for his or her successes and take a public thrashing
    for the smallest failures. And do it all on a limited budget while
    trying to get personnel from a half-dozen agencies to work together
    and cooperate.
    
    Interested parties should contact the Department of Homeland
    Security's Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection
    directorate. Immediately.
    
    Nearly six months after the DHS formally began operations, officials
    are still searching for someone to head the department's
    cyber-security operations. A nationwide search has turned up few real
    candidates, and the prospects for the process coming to an end any
    time soon are slim. The National Cyber Security Division is barely a
    month old, but if a strong leader doesn't sign on soon, it runs the
    risk of becoming an orphan within the massive DHS.
    
    NCSD is designed to handle the government's incident response and
    early-warning duties and includes personnel from a variety of
    agencies, including the FBI, Federal Computer Incident Response
    Center, Critical Infrastructure Assurance Office and National
    Communications System. As those factions begin to work together,
    they're naturally somewhat hampered by the lack of a permanent
    department head giving them a clear sense of purpose and direction.
    
    "The search is still ongoing for someone. These things take time,"  
    said Bill Murray, a DHS spokesman, in Washington. "We're not rushing
    to fill the position. We're looking for the right person."
    
    Murray said he's not sure whether the department has narrowed its list
    of candidates or is still casting a wide net.
    
    Either way, the problem isn't a lack of qualified candidates—quite the
    opposite, in fact. There are any number of people, in the government
    and the private sector, who have all the requisite credentials and
    skills to handle the job. However, none of them seems to be
    interested.
    
    When Richard Clarke, the former chairman of the President's Critical
    Infrastructure Protection Board, decided to leave the government after
    30 years, he said it was something he had planned to do for years.  
    However, Clarke was known to be frustrated with the way the DHS was
    being organized, particularly the fact that the cyber-security
    division would be taking over the functions that the PCIPB handled. He
    left for the lucrative speaking circuit rather than take a diminished
    role inside DHS.
    
    Clarke's right-hand man and successor, Howard Schmidt, was seen as a
    natural for the DHS job. With a background in law enforcement and
    information security, including a stint as the chief security officer
    at Microsoft Corp., Schmidt knows his way around Washington as well as
    Silicon Valley. Schmidt is considered one of the most respected and
    level-headed security experts in the country, and his unique
    experience would have been invaluable.
    
    But, Schmidt quickly grew unhappy with the way DHS officials were
    dragging their feet in setting up the NCSD. He left the government in
    April for a job as chief security officer at eBay Inc.
    
    A big part of the problem in finding someone to run the NCSD is that
    the position is not a very senior one and is several layers down in
    the department's hierarchy. The NCSD's head will report to Robert
    Liscouski, the assistant secretary for infrastructure protection, who,
    in turn, reports to Frank Libutti, the under secretary for information
    analysis and infrastructure protection. That gives the NCSD chief no
    meaningful access to the top decision makers in the White House or
    other parts of the national security apparatus.
    
    "Would I be interested? I haven't been asked. But I wouldn't take a
    job without the authority," Mary Ann Davidson, chief security officer
    at Oracle Corp., in Redwood City, Calif., said of the NCSD position.  
    "Who you report to is important, especially in Washington."
    
    
     
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