Cybersecurity Act fails to pass in the Senate
Aug 2 - Ken Dilanian Los Angeles Times
Despite warnings from intelligence officials that the U.S. is
ill-prepared to stop a growing wave of cyber attacks against its
critical national infrastructure, the Senate on Thursday failed
to pass a watered-down bill that would have set voluntary
standards to harden the network defenses of electric utilities,
chemical plants and other privately-owned facilities.
Most Republicans and a few Democrats voted to block the
measure even after its sponsors agreed to scale back its
regulatory mandates. TheU.S. Chamber of Commerce and other
business groups continued to oppose it, and the legislation
failed to reach the 60-vote threshold needed to end debate in a
mostly party line vote. Fifty-two senators voted to end debate,
and 46 voted against it.
"Rarely have I been so disappointed in the Senate's failure
to come to grips with a threat to our country," said Sen. Susan
Collins (R-Maine), the ranking member on the homeland security
committee and one of the bill's chief sponsors.
Barring an unexpected compromise, the defeat makes it less
likely that Congress will pass a cyber security bill this year.
In April, the GOP-controlled House passed a bill the White House
opposes that calls for information sharing about cyber attacks
between companies and the government, but no security standards.
The Senate bill also included information-sharing provisions,
which intelligence officials say would have allowed them to
better detect incoming cyber attacks.
Analysts say the Senate measure ran into a wall of
anti-regulatory sentiment among Republicans that has proven
resistant even to dire warnings from top security officials that
the nation's critical infrastructure is woefully under-defended
against the cyber threat. The voluntary standards were condemned
by Republicans as too much government interference in the free
market.
"No sane person has ever said that the private sector can
carry the burden of national security," said James Lewis of the
Center for Strategic and International Studies, who frequently
advises the government on cyber issues. "The fate of the cyber
security bills is a part of a larger and damaging political
debate on the role of government."
The Senate bill -- whose earliest sponsors were the leaders
of the homeland security committee, Joseph Lieberman,
I-Connecticut, and Collins -- initially called for mandatory
minimum security standards to shore up computer networks to be
crafted in close concert with industry representatives. Those
standards were designed to spur private companies that own
life-sustaining equipment, including electric utilities and
water systems, to improve security. Many have not been prepared
to do that, arguing that the threats are speculative.
But the Chamber of Commerce, a major lobbying force in
Washington, strongly opposed mandatory standards. In recent
weeks, a group of Senate Republicans, including John McCain
(R-Ariz.), made it clear they would block the bill. In an effort
to save it, proponents scaled it back. The version that came up
for a vote called for a system of voluntary security standards
and offered from lawsuits to companies that participate.
Those changes weren't enough to mollify the Chamber and its
Republican allies.
"The Chamber believes (the bill) could actually impede U.S.
cyber security by shifting businesses' resources away from
implementing robust and effective security measures and toward
meeting government mandates," wrote Bruce Josten, the Chamber's
chief lobbyist, in a letter to senators Tuesday.
"It's incomprehensible why they are opposing it," John
Brennan, the White House counterterrorism advisor, told
reporters Wednesday. "It's not grounded in facts nor in national
security concerns."
The opposition frustrated intelligence officials, who have
been warning for years that cyber attacks --the most destructive
of which could tamper with nuclear, chemical, water and electric
plants -- pose an increasing threat to national security.
Gen. Keith Alexander, head of the National Security Agency
and U.S. Cyber Command, said last week that it was only a matter
of time before the United States is hit by a cyber attack that
damages critical infrastructure. He cited a June report that the
number of cyber incidents reported to DHS by companies that own
vital equipment rose 22-fold from nine in 2009 to 198 in 2011.
On a scale of 1 to 10, Alexander rated U.S. cyber defenses at
a 3.
In June, four former senior security officials, all of them
Republican appointees, signed a letter to Senate leaders calling
for government-imposed performance standards for companies that
operate important infrastructure. The letter was signed by
former CIA Director Michael Hayden, former homeland security
director Michael Chertoff, former director of national
intelligence Mike McConnell and former assistant defense
secretary Paul Wolfowitz. Hayden and Chertoff are advising GOP
presidential candidate Mitt Romney on intelligence issues.
"We're not talking about mom and pop stores here -- we're
talking about nationally significant infrastructure," Chertoff
said in an interview. "What (opponents) are not focused on is
that a failure would not merely have a business impact, but it
could cause a huge amount of collateral damage. Look at (the
recent power failure in) India. Half the country is shut down."
The cyber bill also faced skepticism from some privacy
activists, although several major activist organizations, such
as the American Civil Liberties Union and the Center for
Democracy and Technology, were satisfied with the latest version
of the bill.
At issue are provisions which would allow companies to share
customer information with the government, and would allow the
government to share classified cyber threat information with
companies. Alexander said such sharing would help the government
stop attacks, instead of watch them happen.
The ACLU and other activists won changes to insure that the
shared information be "reasonably necessary" to describe a
cyber-security threat and that it can only be used for
cyber-security purposes and to prosecute cyber crimes, protect
people from imminent threat of death or physical harm, or
protect children from serious threats.
Even if the Senate bill had passed, it would have left the
U.S. vulnerable, according to Lewis and other experts. Many of
them believe it will take a destructive cyber attack to spur the
country into meaningful action.
"I believe something like (9-11) will have to happen in the
cyber world before people truly get it," former FBI cyber
official Shawn Henry told the Black Hat hackers convention in
Las Vegas last week.
ken.dilanian@latimes.com
Twitter: @KenDilanianLAT
www.latimes.com