U.S. Releases Global Cyberspace Strategy
The Obama administration last month released its international strategy for cyberspace, calling on “like-minded states” to come together to establish acceptable rules and norms for responsible state behavior in cyberspace.
At a May 16 press conference announcing the release of the strategy, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism John Brennan said the report “is the first major policy document issued by this government that articulates
The strategy calls for partner states to create rules and norms that support a cyberspace where “fundamental freedoms, privacy, and the free flow of information” are unimpeded. Such ideas have been obstacles in bringing
The strategy also says that existing norms and international laws governing state conduct in times of peace and conflict should apply to cyberspace. The right to self-defense, found within the UN Charter, “may be triggered by certain aggressive acts in cyberspace,” the report says.
The strategy does not specify the kinds of cyberattacks that would be considered acts of war, but does state that the
My Account
ACA: Four Decades of Accomplishment
ACA In The News
The Hill
June 17, 2011
U.S. arms makers look overseas as domestic demand shrinks
LA Times
June 15, 2011
US Defense Sales to Bahrain Rose Before Crackdown
USA Today
June 11, 2011
Iran accelerates uranium enrichment: Danger or bluff?
Christian Science Monitor
June 11, 2011
UN Nuke Agency Sends Syria to Security Council
Bloomberg
June 9, 2011
Military Attack on Iran Recedes, but Tensions Remain High
Inter Press Service
June 8, 2011
Former Diplomat, Admiral See U.S. Strike Against Iran as Unlikely
Global Security Newswire
June 8, 2011






