Reshaping Intelligence Operations in the Cyberspace Domain
By Major General (Ret.) George Franz, Lieutenant Colonel Galen Kane, Lieutenant Colonel Jeff Fair
| April 30, 2019
Cyberspace has become the most active, contested, and congested of the warfighting domains. Both the new National Cyber Strategy and recent Department of Defense (DoD) Cyber Strategy describe an environment wrought with adversaries attempting to gain a military, political, and economic advantage over the United States (US). [1] Given the pace of operations and the rate of change in the environment, new ways of operating develop at a rapid pace. Although DoD has published Joint Publication (JP) 3-12 (Cyberspace Operations) that provides a foundation for understanding cyberspace and operations therein, the Army and Joint Force have a great opportunity (and requirement) to reflect the complexity and fluidity in this new domain and to more fully describe the level of conceptual and practical convergence between the land (physical), human, and cyberspace domains. The Army and Joint Force have the capacity to understand and detail these changes in the land and cyber domains and have the innovative leadership we need to integrate this convergence into our discussions, debates, concepts, and doctrine. The changes involved with the technology and the extent to which cyberspace is impacting the land and human terrain are significant even today. DoD must be bold and innovative to stay ahead of the threat and to take advantage of the potential that exists.
Reshaping Intelligence Operations in the Cyberspace Domain