MARCH 23, 2015 Defense Industry Pundits Can Eat Crow
Cyber Armageddon
is a Myth by BILL BLUNDEN
See also: http://worldtraining.net/pathos.htm and http://worldtraining.net/pathos2.htm
Over the past several years mainstream news outlets have conveyed a
litany of cyber doomsday scenarios on behalf of ostensibly credible public
officials. Breathless intimations of the End Times. The stuff of Hollywood screenplays. However a recent
statement by the U.S. intelligence community pours a bucket of cold water over
all of this. Yes, Virginia, It turns out that all the talk of cyber Armageddon
was a load of bunkum. An elaborate propaganda campaign which only serves as a
pretext to sacrifice our civil liberties and channel an ocean of cash to the
defense industry. Looking back the
parade of scare stories is hard to miss. For example, in late 2012 Secretary of
Defense Leon Panetta
warned of a Òcyber-Pearl Harbor.Ó Former White House cybersecurity
official Paul B. Kurtz
likewise spoke of a threat which he referred to as a Òcyber
Katrina.Ó Former NSA director Mike McConnell claimed that a veritable Cyberwar was on and chided
the public Òare we going to wait for the cyber equivalent of the collapse of
the World Trade Centers?Ó Yet another NSA director, Keith
Alexander, described cyberattacks as
constituting Òthe greatest transfer of wealth in history.Ó And finally, Vanity
Fair magazine published a hyperbolic article
entitled ÒA Declaration of CyberwarÓ wherein the NSAÕs Stuxnet attack against
Iranian nuclear enrichment facilities was likened to a cyber ÒHiroshima.Ó Yet
the 2015 Worldwide Threat Assessment of the U.S. intelligence community
submitted recently to the Senate Armed Services Committee has explicitly conceded
that the risk of Òcyber ArmageddonÓ is at best Òremote.Ó In other words, itÕs
entirely safe to ignore the hyperbolic bluster of the Cult of Cyberwar.
Despite what weÕve been told the Emperor is naked.
What society has witnessed is whatÕs known in the public relations
business as threat inflation. ItÕs a messaging tool thatÕs grounded in
human emotion. Faced with ominous prophecies by trusted public servants the
average person seldom pauses to consider the likelihood of ulterior motives or
perform a formal quantitative risk assessment. Most people tacitly cede to the
speakersÕ authority —given that most speakers are, or were, high-ranking
officials— and accept their graphic worst-case scenarios at face value.
The American public saw threat inflation back in the 1950s when American
leadership hyperventilated over the imaginary Missile Gap.
We saw it once again before the invasion of
Iraq when President Bush spoke of a nuclear Òsmoking gun that could
come in the form of a mushroom cloud.Ó And after reading through the various
cyber metaphors described earlier itÕs hard not to recognize the fingerprints
of threat inflation at work.
The goal of threat inflation is to stir up anxiety, to foment a profound
sense of apprehension so that the public is receptive to marketing pitches
emerging from the defense industry. Studies conducted by accredited research
psychologists demonstrate that anxious people will choose to be safe rather
than sorry. In the throes of an alleged crisis, anxious people arenÕt
necessarily particular about the solution as long as itÕs presented as a
remedial measure; they donÕt care much about the ultimate cost or the civil
liberties they relinquish. TheyÕre willing to pay a steep price to feel safe
again.
So it is that American intelligence services have raised a global panopticon and in doing so engaged in clandestine
subversion programs that span entire sectors of the economy. Speaking to the
public our leaders justify
mass surveillance in terms of protecting the American public against
terrorists. Speaking to each other intelligence officers disparage iPhone users as ÔzombiesÕ who pay for their own monitoring.
This sharp contrast underscores an insight provided by whistleblower Ed Snowden
in an open letter
to Brazil. In particular Snowden stated that ÒThese programs were never about
terrorism: theyÕre about economic spying, social control, and diplomatic
manipulation. TheyÕre about power.Ó
This process, of capitalizing on deftly manufactured emotional responses,
has been called securitization and it puts the economic and political
imperatives of corporate
interests before our own. An allegedly existential threat like cyber
Armageddon can presumably justify any cost in the throes of a crisis mentality.
This is exactly what powerful groups are betting on.
But just because there are several types of insurance doesnÕt mean
consumers should go out and buy all of them. Prudent buyers
wonÕt pay any price to be safe, they purchase coverage
strategically. There are prices that clear-headed people wonÕt pay. Something to remember when the term Ònational securityÓ appears in
public debate.
Bill Blunden is an independent investigator whose current
areas of inquiry include information security, anti-forensics, and
institutional analysis. He is the author of several books, including The Rootkit Arsenal ,
and Behold a Pale
Farce: Cyberwar, Threat Inflation, and the
Malware-Industrial Complex. Bill is the lead investigator at Below Gotham
Labs.