Former top US intelligence officials will become cyberwarriors on Tuesday in a simulation of how the US government would respond to a massive cyberattack on the United States. "The scenario itself is secret," said Eileen McMenamin, vice president of communications for the Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC), which is hosting the event dubbed "Cyber ShockWave."
"The participants don't even know what it is," McMenamin told AFP. "None of them know what's going to transpire." For Cyber ShockWave, a room at the Mandarin Hotel here is being transformed into the White House Situation Room, where the president and his top advisers typically meet to address national emergencies.
"We'll have all of these different screens with different information coming in," McMenamin said. "The members of the cabinet are going to have to react in real time as they would in real life." "We'll see how they co-ordinate with the private sector as well," she said, as they sift through intelligence and news reports to mount a response to the "large-scale cyber crisis" and provide advise to the chief executive.
The Cyber ShockWave simulation has been drawn up by Michael Hayden, a former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, and members of the BPC's National Security Preparedness Group. Former president George W. Bush's Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff will play the role of National Security Advisor to the president while former Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte will be Secretary of State.
Fran Townsend, George W. Bush's Homeland Security advisor, will be promoted to Homeland Security secretary while former deputy CIA director John McLaughlin will be bumped up to Director of National Intelligence.
Joe Lockhart, former president Bill Clinton's press secretary, will serve as a counsellor to the president. Other participants include retired general Charles Wald, the former deputy commander of US European Command, who will be Secretary of Defence, and former deputy attorney general Jamie Gorelick who will move up to Attorney General.
"It's a great group of people," McMenamin said. "They'll be playing different roles than they actually played in government." She said Cyber ShockWave, which will be open to the media and will be filmed and broadcast by the CNN television news network at a later date, was intended to "educate the public about our vulnerabilities" to cyberattack.
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