Japan's New Cybersecurity Strategy - Implications for the Alliance?
( Warfare have gone to new ;level. Indian should explore the opportunity with Japan and ask them to open High tech labor Market)
n June 10, the Japanese government adopted the Cybersecurity Strategy to replace the Information Security Strategy for Protecting the Nation, which was crafted in May 2010 and expires in March 2014. This is the first time for Tokyo to employ the word, “cybersecurity,” in its strategy to deal with information security issues and cyber threats to its national interests. Japan is planning on creating an action plan based on this strategy by the end of June.A series of cyber espionage incidents against the Japanese government and defense industry were revealed recently which has served to elevate the issue of cyber security for Japan. Indeed there have been notable espionage attacks on Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and the Japanese Diet in 2011.
The Cybersecurity Strategy refers to the survey result regarding the shortage of cybersecurity experts, but focuses on technical expertise only. According to the Information-technology Promotion Agency, Japan is short of 80,000 technical experts, whereas the country has about 265,000 experts and 160,000 of them need further education or training. Still, because cyber threats can affect any aspect of human activities, cybersecurity efforts also demand anthropological, defense, geopolitics, legal, linguistic, and technical expertise. This wide variety of skill collaboration calls forcareful selection of trustworthy partners to work together in the academia, government, and industry — most likely not only within Japan but also outside the country. Japan has no domestic anti-virus software manufacturer known in the international market.Japan has interpreted that the constitution does not allow the country to execute the right of collective self-defense. Under the 2nd Shinzo Abe administration, his national security advisory panel started studying if the execution of this right should cover cyberspace. Because attribution is difficult and there is no internationally-agreed definition of “armed attack” or “use of force” in cyberspace, this makes collective self-defense in the domain challenging. Still, Washington is pursuing collective cybersecurity with allies and this may have a symbolic meaning for the alliances to show the strong will to counter cyber threats collaboratively.