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4 St. John's J. Int'l & Comp. L. 1 (2013)

handle is hein.journals/sjjicl4 and id is 1 raw text is: 




NATO,   CYBER DEFENSE, AND INTERNATIONAL LAW


                         David P. Fidler*
                         Richard Pregent**
                       Alex  Vandurme*  * *


                          INTRODUCTION

       Cybersecurity   threats  pose  challenges  to  individuals,
corporations, states, and intergovernmental   organizations.      The
emergence   of these threats also presents international cooperation
on  security  with  difficult tasks.  This   essay  analyzes  how
cybersecurity threats affect the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO),   which  is arguably the most important collective defense
alliance in the world.' NATO   has responded to the cyber threat in
policy and operational terms (Part I), but approaches and shifts in
cybersecurity policies create problems for NATO-problems that
NATO principles,   practices, and politics exacerbate in ways that
will force NATO   to address cyber threats more aggressively than it
has done  so far (Part II). Whether NATO can adapt its   approach
before a major cybersecurity crisis affects the Alliance's ability to
carry out its missions effectively remains, at the present time, in
doubt.




* James Louis Calamaras Professor of Law, Indiana University Maurer School
of Law; and Senior Fellow, Indiana University Center on Applied Cybersecurity
Research.
** Legal Advisor, NATO Allied Command Counterintelligence.
*** Head, Technical Center Engineering, NATO Computer Incident Response
Capability.
1 This essay integrates the three panel presentations focused on NATO at the St.
John's University School of Law Symposium on Cyberconflict: Threats,
Responses, and the Role of Law held April 12, 2013, namely: NATO Cyber
Defence: An Operational Perspective (Alex Vandurme), Cyber Operations
and Collective Self-Defense (Richard Pregent), and NATO, Cybersecurity,
and International Law (David P. Fidler). The analysis and views in this essay
are individual perspectives and opinions only and do not represent the official
policies or positions of NATO or any NATO member.

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