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http://www.fcw.com/online/news/151806-1.html



By Ben Bain

FCW.com

February 29, 2008



The Homeland Security Department is getting ready to lead foreign

governments, corporations, states and federal agencies on a second round

of cyber war games.



During the second week of March, nine states, four foreign governments,

18 federal agencies and 40 private companies will participate in Cyber

Storm II a weeklong simulation designed to better prepare the players

for cyberattacks. DHS, FBI and the Defense Department are among the

federal agencies that will participate.



The exercise will be the culmination of more than 18 months of planning,

led by DHS National Cyber Security Division, to design a series of

simulations that will test the players abilities to respond to

cyberattacks on information technology, communications, chemical and

transportation infrastructure. The first Cyber Storm exercise, in 2006,

focused on air transportation.



Cyber Storm II participants have been broken into two teams: planners

and players. The players have not seen any of the scenarios they will

have to mitigate.



A source familiar with the planning of the exercise said that this years

simulation exercises could include elements of organized crime,

terrorism or a hacking attempt driven by political goals.



We are looking at a more sophisticated scenario this time around, he

said. Its going to be quite an event.



The exercise will take place in Washington, but will also be played out

virtually by thousands of people worldwide. Australia, along with the

United Kingdom, New Zealand, Canada and the United States, is planning a

simultaneous cyber simulation exercise that will include its military.



Its going to be quite an event, the source said.



Each of Cyber Storm IIs participants will have their own goals and

challenges designed to bolster their own abilities. The private-sector

participant list includes giants such as Dow Chemical, Microsoft,

McAfee, Cisco and Nova Chemicals, among others, the source said.



The exercise is very much deliberately intended to overload people, the

source said. We dont do these things to pat ourselves on the back.



The exercise stresses confidentiality and afterward DHS will hold an

after-session and produce a general lessons-learned document.

Participants are encouraged but not required to do the same.



President Bush requested an additional $83.1 million for the U.S.

Computer Emergency Readiness Team for fiscal 2009 and has recently made

headlines with the issuance of its classified cyber initiative.



Lawmakers have grown increasingly concerned with the job DHS is doing in

thwarting cyberattacks, which have increased exponentially in recent

years. Congressional staff will be observing the event.





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