Direct Link: https://www.captechu.edu/node/2906
Want to serve your country and protect against dangerous adversaries?
Increasingly, acquiring cybersecurity expertise is of pivotal
importance.
The US Army drove that point home on Wednesday (December 13) when it announced plans to deploy teams of cyber warriors in order to intercept enemy intelligence or thwart planned attacks.
Today’s
warfighter has to think out of the box and ask questions such as “how
can I influence by non-kinetic means? How can I reach up and create
confusion and gain control?” Colonel William Hartman of the U.S Cyber
Command in comments to reporters Wednesday.
The U.S. military has
used cyberwarfare to hinder ISIS networks, including by altering
messages sent by ISIS commanders with the result that militants are sent
into the path of drone or plane strikes, according to New York Times
article quoted by the AFP. Denial of service attacks are also used
against adversaries, AFP said.
The Coast Guard, meanwhile, has
placed cybersecurity capability on the same level of importance as
procuring new vessels or aircraft. “We’re going to operate in cyberspace
just like we have in the maritime domain for over 227 years,” American
Security Today quoted the Guard’s cyber commander, Rear Adm. Kevin Lunday, as saying.
At
Capitol Technology University, home of the nation’s first doctoral
program in cybersecurity, students are carrying out innovative research
into the military implications of computer networks and the possible use
of cyber tools on the battlefield.
In 2013, Capitol doctoral
student Dr. Warren D. Lerner conducted a study on using artificial
neural networks to determine the location of improvised explosive
devices (IEDs). More recently, a 2016 dissertation by Kui Zeng focused
on cybersecurity requirements in the defense acquisition process.
“The
strategic and military implications of cybersecurity are a central
concern at Capitol,” Dr. Helen G. Barker, chief academic officer, said.
“Many of our faculty, including program chair Dr. William Butler, come
to us with a military background, and we get quite a few doctoral
students who come here specifically to address research problems related
to defense or national security challenges.”
In addition to
doctoral research, Capitol is helping to meet the need for cybersecurity
expertise through programs at the undergraduate and master’s level. The
university actively seeks to make these programs available and
affordable to military personnel through a tuition discount program.
Under
the program, tuition is $250 per credit for all active duty service
members pursuing undergraduate degree programs, and $350 for all active
duty service members pursuing master’s degree programs.
“Meeting
the career and educational needs of our country’s servicemen and
servicewomen has long been part of our mandate as an institution,” said
Capitol’s senior vice president for enrollment and marketing, Dianne
O’Neill. “Military personnel who have received cybersecurity training as
part of their service may well find that Capitol is an ideal
opportunity to build on that training as they transition into civilian
life.”
For more information on cybersecurity programs at Capitol, contact program chair Dr. William Butler at wmbutler@captechu.edu.
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