[ISN] Ex-cybersecurity czar blasts Bush's efforts

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Tue May 18 2004 - 03:14:36 PDT

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    http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0504/051704tdpm1.htm
    
    [ http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0743260244/c4iorg  - WK]
    
    By William New
    National Journal's Technology Daily
    May 17, 2004 
    
    Richard Clarke became a national celebrity in recent months for his
    criticisms of the Bush administration's handling of the 2001 terrorist
    attacks. Now the former White House official is extending that
    criticism to the administration's handling of cybersecurity.
    
    Clarke, who moved in spring 2001 from his job as White House
    counter-terrorism chief to head a new White House cybersecurity office
    created on his recommendation, said the administration has made
    cybersecurity too low a priority.
    
    Clarke shared his criticisms about administration anti-terrorism
    policy with the independent panel investigating intelligence
    activities before the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.  
    Administration witnesses -- including National Security Adviser
    Condoleeza Rice -- also testified to rebut those charges and defend
    administration policy, although cybersecurity issues were not a major
    focus of those discussions.
    
    In his best-selling book Against All Enemies, Clarke said
    cybersecurity needs more attention. In an interview last week with
    National Journal's Technology Daily, he detailed what he thinks has
    gone wrong since his office completed a national cybersecurity plan
    early in 2003.
    
    "I think the national strategy fell essentially on deaf ears," he
    said. "The president signed it, the president issued it, there was the
    usual amount of lip service to it, but then nothing ever happened for
    the better part of a year."
    
    Under criticism from him and people outside government, the
    administration agreed to create the national cybersecurity division in
    the Homeland Security Department, he said. "They bought some time from
    criticism by announcing they were going to do it, but then they didn't
    appoint anyone to run it for the longest period of time."
    
    When the administration did name someone, he said, it was too
    low-level a position to have governmentwide impact. That might change,
    however, Clarke said, as House Republicans are interested in elevating
    the position to the assistant-secretary level and legislatively giving
    that person authority over cyber security in other departments.
    
    He also criticized the administration for cutting overall funding for
    cybersecurity research and for not creating a federal government that
    is a model of how to do cybersecurity. "Most of the departments are
    still in bad shape," he said.
    
    Clarke said that in January 2001, Rice and her deputy, Steve Hadley,
    asked him to look for ways to spin off portions of his portfolio. He
    proposed a separate White House cybersecurity office.
    
    "I surprised them by proposing myself to run it, since they thought I
    was obsessed with terrorism and would never want to leave that issue,"  
    Clarke said. "But at the time, I thought they were not obsessed with
    terrorism, and if they were not going to treat terrorism with the
    importance it deserved I didn't want to work on it for them."
    
    He also saw cybersecurity as "a future area of threat" that was
    unappreciated. "One of the things I've been able to do in my career is
    to find emerging issues and help them emerge," he said.
    
    Clarke left for the private sector shortly after the release of the
    National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace, following 30 years of federal
    service.
    
    
    
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