Kristof: To hackers, we're Bambi in the woods

FILE--Bambi the fawn is shown with Thumper the rabbit and Flower the skunk in this scene from the 1942 classic animated Disney film, Bambi. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday, May 20, 1996, that the daughter of Felix Salten, the Austrian author of the 1923 children's tale ``Bambi, A Life in the Woods,'' owned Salten's U.S. copyright and renewed it before it expired in 1954. The ruling allows a book company that now owns the rights to sue the Walt Disney Co. (AP Photo/Walt Disney Co.)
FILE--Bambi the fawn is shown with Thumper the rabbit and Flower the skunk in this scene from the 1942 classic animated Disney film, Bambi. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday, May 20, 1996, that the daughter of Felix Salten, the Austrian author of the 1923 children's tale ``Bambi, A Life in the Woods,'' owned Salten's U.S. copyright and renewed it before it expired in 1954. The ruling allows a book company that now owns the rights to sue the Walt Disney Co. (AP Photo/Walt Disney Co.)

If you're worried about terrorism, here's a bigger threat to lose sleep over: an all-out cyberattack:

The electricity goes out at the office. Cellphone networks and the internet have also gone black, along with subways and trains.

The roads are jammed because traffic lights aren't working. Credit cards are now just worthless bits of plastic, and ATMs are nothing but hunks of metal. Gas stations can't pump gas.

Banks have lost records of depositors' accounts. Dam floodgates mysteriously open. Water and sewage treatment plants stop working.

People can't reach loved ones. Phone systems are down, so 911 is useless. Looters roam the streets. Food and water soon run out in the cities.

And that's just the first week.

Security experts have nightmares like that. Countries like Russia and China have implanted malicious software in the American electrical grid, nuclear power plants and water systems to have the capacity to mount such attacks - and we have done the same to them.

These are some of the issues explored in an important - and deeply sobering - new book about cyberwarfare, "The Perfect Weapon," by my Times colleague David Sanger.

The risks aren't just of a cyber-Pearl Harbor but also of a full spectrum of attacks. The Russian hack of Democratic emails should have been a wake-up call. A senior FBI official told Sanger: "These DNC guys were like Bambi walking in the woods, surrounded by hunters. They had zero chance of surviving an attack. Zero."

Even after the attacks we didn't learn, and much of the U.S. is still like Bambi. The Trump administration has done little to prepare to fight off new hacking.

Hackers are increasingly brazen. When Russian hackers infiltrated State Department and White House computer systems in 2014, National Security Agency specialists tried to uproot them - and the hackers fought back. "It was basically hand-to-hand combat in a network," Rick Ledgett, a senior NSA official, told Sanger.

Cyber is the "perfect weapon," in Sanger's formulation, because attackers typically get off scot-free.

If North Korea had responded to the Sony Pictures movie "The Interview" by blowing up cinemas, it might have faced a strong response. Instead, it hacked into Sony's system, destroyed computers and paralyzed the company. In both the Sony and Democratic Party attacks, the hackers enlisted the American news media to magnify the damage; we in the media were used, and we should reflect on that.

Later, North Korean hackers pilfered $81 million from the Bangladesh Central Bank (they might have gotten away with almost $1 billion, but someone misspelled "foundation"). For all this, North Korea faced no significant punishment.

Sanger writes that U.S. officials debated whether to punish Vladimir Putin for his hacks by exposing his links to oligarchs, or even by making some of his money disappear. But Barack Obama balked, fearful of what Putin might do next, and Donald Trump has also dithered.

Gen. Paul Nakasone, head of the U.S. Cyber Command, was asked in his confirmation hearings this year what our adversaries think will happen if they attack us in cyberspace. "They do not think much will happen," he replied. "They don't fear us."

As Sanger writes, "Deterrence is not working in the cyber realm." Why wouldn't Putin interfere in our 2018 midterms since we're both vulnerable and not serious about responding?

We need to establish a cost to cyberattacks and help establish norms for cyber - a Geneva Convention for hacking. The problem is that the U.S. also uses cyberwarfare (to destroy Iranian centrifuges and, apparently, North Korean missiles), and we don't want to constrain ourselves.

Meanwhile, we are becoming ever more vulnerable, partly because daily life is becoming more dependent on computers, and partly because cyberoffense is far ahead of cyberdefense.

In the 1990s, we were too complacent about the risks of terrorism; it took the twin towers collapsing to galvanize us. In the world of cyberspace, we're still too complacent: Let's stop playing Bambi!

The New York Times

Upcoming Events