The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has completed the first full-scale government-led cyber attack simulation,
and officials there called the exercise a "significant milestone."
DHS officials declined to talk about the results of Cyber Storm, saying they were still evaluating the exercise. But the largest
ever U.S. government cybersecurity attack simulation was a "significant accomplishment" for DHS, said George Foresman, DHS
undersecretary of preparedness.
The exercise was part of the DHS goal of preparing "so that we are ready to meet any type of threat at any time," Foresman
said.
A public report of the results and lessons learned will be released mid-year, said Andy Purdy, acting director of the DHS
National Cyber Security Division. DHS will release the results as broadly as possible, with the exception of information deemed
too sensitive, Foresman added.
"At the end of the day, we're not going to get any stronger, we're not going to get any better, unless we capture the lessons
learned, share them among the broadest possible audience, and make a full commitment to pushing improvement down the road,"
he said.
Cyber Storm, a simulation conducted this month of what DHS called a "sophisticated" cyber attack, involved 115 organizations
in the U.S., Canada, the U.K., Australia and New Zealand. Public agencies and private companies participated, DHS said.
U.S. government agencies participating in Cyber Storm included the Department of Defense, the Department of Justice, the State
Department and the National Security Agency. Among the private companies that volunteered to participate were Microsoft Corp.,
VeriSign Inc., and Symantec Corp.
"The way it's best described is DHS is the conductor of an orchestra," Foresman said. "All of these partners ... are the various
musicians playing beautiful music together creating a symphony of preparedness. We've made great progress."
One of the scenarios involved a simulated attack on the computer systems at an electric utility, causing widespread power
outages, DHS officials said. In that type of scenario, part of DHS' job was to notify other utilities of potential threats,
Purdy said. The simulations were done on closed networks, so the public Internet and other systems weren't affected, DHS officials
said.
IT industry participants in the exercise praised DHS for putting the simulation together. "What we're going to take away is
a lot of lessons learned," said Jerry Cochran, a senior security strategist for Microsoft. "The more we can exercise, the
more we can test things, the better we're all going to get."
Cybersecurity vendors, working together, have already begun their own review of the exercise and will share the results with
each other, said Michael Aisenberg, director of government relations at VeriSign. "That will help us do a better job," Aisenberg
said.
DHS should get a "lot of credit" for reaching out to the private sector during the exercise, added John Sabo, director of
security and privacy initiatives at CA Inc. "This is really just the first step," Sabo said. "We need ongoing exercises, ongoing
communication and information."