GovWire

Defence Secretary announces major cyber investment

Ministry of Defence

October 20
16:10 2016

Michael Fallon said the investment, which supports the new Cyber Vulnerability Investigations (CVI) programme, will help the MOD better understand cyber risks.

Speaking at the second International Cyber Symposium Mr Fallon said it will also help the MOD ensure that resilience to cyber-attack is built-in when buying equipment in future.

Defence Secretary Michael Fallon said:

Cyber-attack is one of the greatest challenges to our security. Its crucial we use our increasing defence budget to stay ahead and investing in this programme will help us protect against these threats.

The programme will complement the work of the Cyber Security Operations Centre (CSOC), the 40 million facility announced in April to use state-of-the-art cyber capabilities to protect the MODs cyberspace from malicious actors.

The programme has also benefited from detailed analysis across the full range of potential cyber-attacks, meaning it is dynamic and can be applied to all aspects of MOD digital systems.

Defence Secretary Michael Fallon spoke at the second RUSI Cyber Symposium. Crown Copyright.
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon spoke at the second RUSI Cyber Symposium. Crown Copyright.

The funding follows the UK and US signing a Memorandum Of Understanding to work more closely together to overcome the growing cyber risk.

Separately the UK and France confirmed greater co-operation to defeat this threat under the Lancaster House Agreement.

Todays announcement comes on the same day that Minister for Defence Procurement Harriett Baldwin launched the next phase of a 150 million joint Maritime Mine Counter Measures (MMCM) programme alongside her French counterpart, Laurent Collet-Billon.

Working with French allies, the programme will develop cutting edge maritime mine warfare capability to keep the UK and France at the forefront of autonomous systems technology. The development and deployment of unmanned mine clearance drones will help keep our personnel safe in challenging maritime environments.

As part of our 178 billion equipment plan, the programme will be supported by a defence budget that will rise every year until the end of the decade, meeting the NATO commitment to spend two per cent of GDP on defence.

Related Articles

Comments

  1. We don't have any comments for this article yet. Why not join in and start a discussion.

Write a Comment

Your name:
Your email:
Comments:

Post my comment

Recent Comments

Follow Us on Twitter

Share This


Enjoyed this? Why not share it with others if you've found it useful by using one of the tools below: