NSA Chief Seeks Better Communication With Industry, Calls Encryption 'Positive'
Americans should have confidence in the NSA, Director and U.S. Cyber Commander Michael Rogers said Thursday at the National Press Club. “The nation is counting on us to generate the insights,” said Rogers. “So we’ve got to ask ourselves, how do you do that in a world in which resources are declining and … the technical challenges … are just getting more and more complex?” NSA professionals “believe in their missions, they believe in doing the right thing the right way and they are committed to doing it within a legal framework,” he said. “We always obey the rule of law. If we make a mistake, we acknowledge that mistake and we own it. We don’t take shortcuts.” Seeking better dialog between the government and technology companies, Rogers supported a model in which cyber professionals can move back and forth between the public and private sectors. “The two cultures at times talk past each other,” he said. Some in the government think the private sector is interested only in money, but Rogers said both sectors fight for something bigger than themselves. “If you’re out in the Valley, your view is that you’re harnessing the power of technology to change the world for the better,” he said. Better dialogue could crack how to deal with encryption, which Rogers said can be used for good and evil. “Encryption is a positive thing,” he stressed. “I don’t know what the answer is,” but there should be a conversation about what’s possible, he said. Neither a company nor an intelligence agency should decide alone, but rather there should be “a broader dialogue as a society about what are we comfortable with here and what makes sense for us.” Rogers said the U.S. Cyber Command is halfway through building “a dedicated cyber-mission force,” which will be a 6,200-person army of cyber professionals divided into 133 specialized teams. The mission force will reach initial operating capabilities by Sept. 30, and is expected to be fully operational by the same day in 2018, he said. The nature of cyber required that phased approach, he said. “Because demand at the moment exceeds capacity, this is the one mission set that I’ve been involved in as a military professional for 35 years [where] we’re not even waiting until the team is fully constructed. As soon as we get a cadre, we’re putting teams on targets.”