Q.What are the key findings of CNA report on
Russia’s approach to Cyber Warfare?
Answer:
Russia views cyber very differently than its western
counterparts. The paper examines the Russian approach to cyber
warfare, addressing both its theoretical and its practical
underpinnings. The following is a summary of its key findings:
- Russian officials are convinced that Moscow is locked in an
ongoing, existential struggle with internal and external forces
that are searching to challenge its security in the information
realm. The internet, and the free flow of information it engenders,
is viewed as both a threat and an opportunity in this regard.
- Russian military theorists generally do not use the terms cyber
or cyberwarfare. Instead, they conceptualize cyber operations
within the broader framework of information warfare, a holistic
concept that includes computer network operations, electronic
warfare, psychological operations, and information operations.
- In keeping with traditional Soviet notions of battling constant
threats from abroad and within, Moscow perceives the struggle
within “information space” to be more or less constant and
unending. This suggests that the Kremlin will have a relatively low
bar for employing cyber in ways that U.S. decision makers are
likely to view as offensive and escalatory in nature.
- Offensive cyber is playing a greater role in conventional
Russian military operations and may potentially play a role in the
future in Russia's strategic deterrence framework. Although the
Russian military has been slow to embrace cyber for both structural
and doctrinal reasons, the Kremlin has signaled that it intends to
bolster the offensive as well as the defensive cyber capabilities
of its armed forces. During the contingencies in Georgia and
Ukraine, Russia appeared to employ cyber as a conventional force
enabler.
- The Georgia and Ukraine conflicts also provided opportunities
for Russia to refine their cyberwarfare techniques and procedures
and to demonstrate their capabilities on the world stage. These
demonstrations may later serve as a basis to signal or deter
Russia's adversaries.
- Hacktivists and cyber-criminal syndicates have been a central
feature of Russian offensive cyber operations, because of the
anonymity they afford and the ease with which they can be
mobilized. However, the crowd-sourced approach that has typified
how the Kremlin has utilized hackers and criminal networks in the
past is likely to be replaced by more tailored approaches, with the
FSB and other government agencies playing a more central role.