A change to the Unified Command Plan
will transfer the Computer Network Defense (CND) mission to US Space
Command on Oct. 1. One year after that, Space Command will also pick
up the Computer Network Attack (CNA) mission.
The implementing step is relatively small. The Joint Task Force for
CND, created last December to coordinate the protection of the defense
information infrastructure, will move from the Defense Information Systems
Agency to Space Command.
No comparable organization exists for the highly classified Computer
Network Attack mission. Even those with the appropriate clearances are
uncertain of what CNA portends.
The significance of the changes may become clearer as a series of developments
plays out over the next year, defining more precisely the military role
in space and the relationship between space and Information Operations.
In May, the defense authorization bills from both the House and Senate
Armed Services Committees asked for a fundamental review of how the Department
of Defense is conducting the space mission.
Both raised questions about creating a new military service for space
or appointing an assistant secretary of defense for space. The House
bill called for a report by the Secretary of Defense. The Senate prescribed
a study by an independent commission.
The Senate bill was critical of the Department of Defense for treating
space operations as a subset of information superiority rather than "the
strategic high ground from which to project power." It urged "the
full range of power applications, from missile defense and space control
to force application." Congress may be about to weigh in heavily
on organizational and mission issues.
Meanwhile the Air Force, which supplies about 90 percent of the people, systems,
and money for the military space program, is coming to grips with several issues
of its own.
Its forthcoming white paper on aerospace integration is expected to
emphasize that air and space are inextricably linked and complementary,
not competitive. This will aggravate those who want space power to strike
out on its own, separate from airpower.
The Air Force is also thinking about moving the Air Intelligence Agency--now
a field unit of Headquarters USAF--to Air Force Space Command. This would
put AIA's formidable capabilities for Information Operations into a major
command and take advantage of the similarities between the space and
intelligence missions.
The decision will depend on, among other things, where the joint service
community decides to go with CND/CNA and with Information Operations.
More about that may be revealed when the Office of the Secretary of Defense
produces its strategic plan on Information Operations this fall.
It will be a while before we can see these developments in full context, but
several conclusions are possible.
- The Congressional activity is well-meant but is
not headed in a productive direction. The arguments
about missile defense and force application from
space are well-founded. However, they are matters
of national policy, needing to be settled between
the Administration and Congress rather than by organizational
and management changes to the armed forces.
If emphasis on space is insufficient, that is a budgetary issue. The
Air Force continues to provide most of the space support for all of the
services without any compensating increase to its budget. Congress can
and should help with this.
- This change to the Unified Command Plan solves
a problem that popped up in Joint Exercise Eligible
Receiver in 1997, an element of which was an attack
on the defense computer network. In the simulation,
the Joint Staff took charge by default--which it
could not legally do in actual conflict--because
such an attack was not covered by the missions of
any of the unified combat commands, in which the
nation's powers to fight are vested by law.
- The CND/CNA mission is in its infancy. There is
no doubt about the seriousness of the problem. Defense
officials say the military information networks are
under constant assault. The emphasis so far has been
on detection and warning of attack, firewalls, and
various emergency response measures. Most of the
work has concentrated on the force in home garrison.
Protecting the networks of deployed forces is more
difficult. Defense of the nation's non-military infrastructures
is not an assigned mission and still lies far beyond
the horizon.
- The assignment of the CND/CNA mission to Space
Command confirms that information is a weapon and
that Space Command is a combat command. That does
not diminish or conflict with the responsibility
to provide intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance,
and other support for the theater commands. In addition
to its long-familiar role of enhancing force, Space
Command may also apply force.
It will be some years yet before the capability is mature to employ
directed laser energy from space, assuming that national policy permits
it. At the same time, space will become increasingly important to the
projection of power by the use of information, in support of conventional
military operations as well as in the emerging domain of information
warfare, in which information itself is a target and a weapon.
The Information Operations mission is moving inexorably toward space,
and the linkage between space and information superiority is growing
steadily closer. For the near-term future at least, the military space
program will be defined, in one way or another, by information.