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Cybersecurity/DoD/News
For DOD’s David McKeown, 2027 Zero Trust Mandate Should Cover Weapon Platform Support Systems
by Jerry Petersen
Published on April 4, 2024
For DOD’s David McKeown, 2027 Zero Trust Mandate Should Cover Weapon Platform Support Systems

According to Department of Defense Deputy Chief Information Officer for Cybersecurity David McKeown, the agency’s mandate to implement zero trust by 2027 should include the various systems that support weapon platforms, Federal News Network reported Wednesday.

McKeown, a past Wash100 Award winner, said during the DoD Zero Trust Symposium on April 3 that weapon platform support systems “are essentially IT systems just like our normal networks and computers” and so “should be covered because they’re part of the [Non-classified Internet Protocol Router] and [Secret Internet Protocol Router] landscape.”

As long as such systems “are network-based, application-based” then the mandate should cover them, the DOD official went on to explain.

Regarding the weapon platforms themselves, DOD Chief Information Officer John Sherman acknowledged the challenge of incorporating zero trust into them.

“Zero trust on weapons systems is going to be a heavy lift. We’re going have to figure out how to do that,” Sherman, a 2024 Wash100 Award winner, said.

For his part, McKeown said, “The actual weapon system platform — we’re going to continue to work on how we might employ that.”

For DOD's David McKeown, 2027 Zero Trust Mandate Should Cover Weapon Platform Support Systems

David McKeown will be a keynote speaker at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2024 Cyber Summit, which will take place in June. Register now to attend this important event!

Industry News/News
Bipartisan Senate Bill Seeks to Extend DHS’ Use of Other Transaction Authority for 7 Years
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 4, 2024
Bipartisan Senate Bill Seeks to Extend DHS’ Use of Other Transaction Authority for 7 Years

Sens. Gary Peters, D-Mich., and Steve Daines, R-Mont., have introduced a bipartisan bill that would authorize the Department of Homeland Security to extend through fiscal year 2031 its use of the other transaction authority as a tool to procure advanced technologies to meet border security, supply chain security and other critical homeland security requirements.

OTA, which is set to expire by the end of September, reportedly provides DHS the flexibility to collaborate with innovative companies, including vendors that have not previously worked with the federal government, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee said Tuesday.

“Agencies like the Department of Homeland Security can better protect our nation from a wide range of threats by staying at the forefront of cutting-edge technologies,” said Peters, chairman of the Senate panel.

The Better Enabling Secure and Trustworthy Technology for the Homeland Act “will ensure DHS has the ability to keep pace with global competitors and procure the latest technologies to effectively secure our nation,” he added.

The OTA was last extended as part of a bill in the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2023.

Cybersecurity/News
NIST Requests Comments on Draft Guidance for Incorporating Incident Response in Risk Management
by Naomi Cooper
Published on April 4, 2024
NIST Requests Comments on Draft Guidance for Incorporating Incident Response in Risk Management

The National Institute of Standards and Technology has begun seeking industry feedback on the third revision of a draft special publication designed to guide organizations to incorporate cybersecurity incident response recommendations and considerations into their risk management activities.

The initial public draft of Special Publication 800-61 highlights the importance of integrating incident response measures in cybersecurity risk management practices and policies to reduce impact of incidents and enhance the effectiveness of organizations’ incident detection, response and recovery efforts.

Incident response is one of the key areas of focus of the revised version of NIST’s Cybersecurity Framework released in February to help organizations manage and mitigate cybersecurity risks.

The updated framework’s six main functions — identify, protect, detect, respond, recover and govern — all support the implementation of incident response plans.

Comments on the draft publication are due May 20.

POC - 2024 Cyber Summit

The Potomac Officers Club will host the 2024 Cyber Summit on June 6 to hear from government and industry experts about the dynamic and ever-evolving role of cyber in the public sector. Register here!

Acquisition & Procurement/News
State Department Needs Providers of Records Management, Operational Services in Support of Upcoming RSC Move
by Jerry Petersen
Published on April 4, 2024
State Department Needs Providers of Records Management, Operational Services in Support of Upcoming RSC Move

The Department of State seeks to determine the availability of contractors with the ability to meet the records management and operational services requirements of the agency’s Office of Information Programs and Services, which oversees the Records Service Center and the department’s eRecords archive system under the Federal Records Program.

The State Department is looking into small businesses that are also General Services Administration Federal Supply Schedule holders, according to a sources sought notice posted Tuesday on SAM.gov.

The contractor will work to support the Office of Information Programs and Services when it relocates the Records Service Center, or RSC, from its current facility to an as yet undetermined location by 2026 at the latest. This relocation is part of the State Department’s response to directives by the National Archives and Records Administration mandating the transition of government agencies to electronic records and the cessation of hard copy accessioning by June 30.

The work that the contractor would have to support includes project management, RSC operations maintenance, records management, electronic records processing, training, customer service and facility support and security.

Interested parties have until April 9 to respond.

Contract Awards/News
IntelliBridge Secures FBI Counterterrorism Intelligence Support Contract; Jesse Levine Quoted
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 4, 2024
IntelliBridge Secures FBI Counterterrorism Intelligence Support Contract; Jesse Levine Quoted

IntelliBridge, a portfolio company of private investment firm Enlightenment Capital, will provide operational response and intelligence support services for the FBI’s counterterrorism division under a five-year contract.

The McLean, Virginia-based company said Tuesday its intelligence analysts will produce intelligence reports, develop analytic products and perform quality assurance, outreach, coordination and assessments to help the bureau’s counterterrorism division improve its capability to identify and counter national security threats.

Jesse Levine, senior vice president and general manager of the federal law enforcement and intelligence division at IntelliBridge, said the company has been supporting the FBI’s counterterrorism efforts for eight years and is humbled to continue to support the bureau’s critical mission through the contract.

“We recognize that terrorism threats are at unprecedented levels, both domestically and internationally. The pivotal nature of these types of investigations are directly saving lives and safeguarding our national security,” Levine commented.

The contract is worth approximately $23 million.

News/Wash100
NGA’s Frank Whitworth & Raymond James’ Sam Maness Spotlighted as 2024 Wash100 Winners
by reynolitoresoor
Published on April 4, 2024
NGA’s Frank Whitworth & Raymond James’ Sam Maness Spotlighted as 2024 Wash100 Winners

On Thursday, Executive Mosaic highlighted the accomplishments of two 2024 Wash100 Award winners: National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency Director Vice Adm. Frank Whitworth and Sam Maness, managing director of the Defense and Government Services group at Raymond James.

Frank Whitworth and Sam Maness are contestants in the 2024 Wash100 popular vote competition! Cast your votes now at Wash100.com. Voting is open until April 30, and the winner will be announced in May.

Each year, the executives named to the Wash100 list represent the most influential and impactful figures in the GovCon landscape. These individuals are selected because of their demonstrated leadership, innovation, reliability, vision and achievement within their respective fields in support of government missions.

VADM Whitworth earned his third consecutive Wash100 Award this year for his leadership in the increasingly critical geospatial intelligence field. Whitworth is the fourth consecutive NGA director to grace the annual Wash100 list. Read more about why Whitworth was chosen to the Wash100 list yet again here.

Maness made his debut on the Wash100 list this year. He is recognized for his work guiding government contractors’ corporate consolidations as a leader of Raymond James’ defense and government group. Click here to read more about Maness’ accomplishments.

Executive Mosaic congratulates VADM Frank Whitworth and Sam Maness on their 2024 Wash100 wins.

News/Space
OSTP Taps NASA to Create Unified Time Standard for Moon, Celestial Bodies
by Naomi Cooper
Published on April 3, 2024
OSTP Taps NASA to Create Unified Time Standard for Moon, Celestial Bodies

The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy has released a memorandum directing NASA to establish a unified time standard for the moon and other celestial bodies to advance the Biden administration’s National Cislunar Science and Technology Strategy.

Under the memorandum, NASA will work with departments of Commerce, Defense, State and Transportation to create a plan by December 2026 for the implementation of the Coordinated Lunar Time, the White House said Tuesday.

“A consistent definition of time among operators in space is critical to successful space situational awareness capabilities, navigation, and communications, all of which are foundational to enable interoperability across the U.S. government and with international partners,” said Steve Welby, deputy director for national security at OSTP.

According to the memorandum, a unified standard of time will be foundational to the U.S. government’s efforts to establish a sustainable Cislunar ecosystem with scalable position, navigation and timing infrastructure.

“Knowledge of time in distant operating regimes is fundamental to the scientific discovery, economic development, and international collaboration that form the basis of U.S. leadership in space,” the memo reads.

Time standardization will also theoretically enable the U.S. to boost interoperability with international partners, promote safe and sustainable operations and simplify space situational awareness for flight operations and safety.

News/Space
Pentagon Unveils Commercial Space Integration Strategy
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 3, 2024
Pentagon Unveils Commercial Space Integration Strategy

The Department of Defense has introduced a strategy aimed at aligning DOD’s efforts to integrate commercial space platforms into the national security space architecture.

The 2024 Commercial Space Integration Strategy outlines four priorities that DOD will advance to maximize the potential benefits of integrating commercial space platforms, the department said Tuesday.

The priorities are ensuring access to commercial solutions across the spectrum of conflict; achieving integration prior to crisis; establishing the security conditions to integrate commercial space solutions; and supporting the development of new commercial space solutions for use by the joint force.

Under the first priority, for instance, DOD will use contracts and other agreements as ways to ensure access to commercial platforms across the spectrum of conflict and mission areas.

“Contracts and other agreements will address the cyber, data, and supply chain security requirements that commercial entities will need to meet to work with the Department. As necessary, contracts will enable prioritization of Department requirements and capability needs over other commercial clients in specific situations,” the document reads.

The strategy also lists four foundational principles — balance, interoperability, resilience and responsible conduct — that DOD intends to use to guide its decision-making process to ensure that commercial offerings are integrated into national security space architectures.

Artificial Intelligence/Cloud/News
Digital Engineering, AI, Cloud, Open Integration Keys to Army Modernization, SAIC’s Josh Jackson Says
by Jerry Petersen
Published on April 3, 2024
Digital Engineering, AI, Cloud, Open Integration Keys to Army Modernization, SAIC’s Josh Jackson Says

Artificial intelligence and multi-cloud environments can enhance digital engineering, a method that the U.S. Army is adopting to modernize its various capabilities, according to Science Applications International Corporation’s Josh Jackson.

Through automation, AI can hasten decision-making and development across the digital engineering process while the use of multiple clouds provides access to the best cloud computing capabilities without the risk of vendor lock-in, Jackson, the executive vice president of the Army business group at SAIC and a 2024 Wash100 winner, said in an opinion column DefenseScoop published Tuesday.

Also complementing digital engineering practices is the Army’s adoption of technology-agnostic open integration. As with multi-cloud environments, open integration helps the service avoid being tied to specific vendors and their proprietary solutions, Jackson explained.

Open integration promotes flexibility and choice while promoting innovation and competition among vendors, the SAIC executive said.

Digital Engineering, AI, Cloud, Open Integration Keys to Army Modernization, SAIC's Josh Jackson Says

Army officials, government leaders and industry executives will discuss priorities, strategies and solutions to challenges at the Potomac Officers Club’s 9th Annual Army Summit, which will take place in June. Register now to be part of this important conversation!

Cybersecurity/DHS/News
Microsoft Exchange Successfully Hacked Due to Weak Security Culture, Cyber Safety Review Board Says
by Jerry Petersen
Published on April 3, 2024
Microsoft Exchange Successfully Hacked Due to Weak Security Culture, Cyber Safety Review Board Says

The intrusion by a hacking group affiliated with the People’s Republic of China called Storm-0558 into the Microsoft Exchange Online service during the summer of 2023 could have been prevented, according to a report released by the Cyber Safety Review Board in late March.

The findings and recommendations within the report are based on a seven-month independent review conducted by the CSRB, which saw participation and cooperation from various stakeholders, including law enforcement organizations, cybersecurity companies, organizations that were impacted by the attack and Microsoft itself, the Department of Homeland Security said Tuesday.

The report attributes the success of Storm-0558’s hacking campaign to the inadequacy of the security culture within Microsoft as illustrated by a number of failures, including the company’s inability to detect the compromised status of an employee’s laptop, through which, it is believed, Storm-0558 managed to obtain Microsoft cryptographic signing keys.

With these keys, the hackers gained access to and exfiltrated information from Microsoft’s email service, compromising the accounts of numerous U.S. government officials, including that of Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, Rep. Don Bacon and U.S. Ambassador to the People’s Republic of China R. Nicholas Baum.

Illegal access to the email accounts is believed to have begun in May 15 but Microsoft would not initiate response efforts until June 16, after the Department of State notified the company of anomalous service activity.

To bring about change in Microsoft’s security culture, the report recommends that the company formulate and publicly disclose a plan on how it would reform its security practices, an effort to which senior officers would be held accountable. The report also recommends that, in the meantime, the company divert personnel to focus on product security improvements rather than feature development.

As for the broader industry, the report recommends, among other things, that cloud service providers implement modern control mechanisms as well as emerging digital identity standards. The report also calls for the adoption of a minimum standard for cloud service audit logging to facilitate the detection and investigation of intrusions.

Microsoft Exchange Successfully Hacked Due to Weak Security Culture, Cyber Safety Review Board Says

Cyber experts, government leaders and industry visionaries will speak about the dynamic and evolving role of cyber in the public sector at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2024 Cyber Summit, which will take place in June. Register now to attend this important event!

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