How does a nation respond to, deter, or defend against a stealthy, effective, deniable cyberattack? Is it better to threaten an overwhelming cyber counterattack? Or should it be a non-cyber response, ranging from economic sanctions, a conventional military response or even going nuclear? Does a nation “bunker-in” and harden its defenses? (Sanger alleges this is a 10-year task for the United States.) The author takes on all of these questions and more. The panoply of questions that this fact raises makes Sanger’s book fascinating. He describes the perfection of cyber weapons as their almost limitless ability to steal money, pilfer secrets, sabotage critical infrastructure, undermine democracies, and tear societies apart at the seams. Cyber weapons are available to large and small powers, democracies and dictators and they have altered the geopolitical landscape forever. Sanger’s riveting work, The Perfect Weapon: War, Sabotage and Fear in the Cyber Age, explores the quandary of how to use and defend against cyber-attacks.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |