Military Review English Edition July-August 2016 | Page 37

CYBERSPACE INNOVATION Cyber Institute at West Point, New York, wrote in War on the Rocks that the U.S military needed an open innovation process. They opined the existing military acquisition processes are no match for current and future cyberspace threats, which create the need for the military to rapidly field innovative responses.2 We are in the midst of a sea change in the conduct of warfare. In the past, commanders used information to shape operations. Today, we are witnessing how information and operating environments are overlapping and, in some cases, are one and the same. In Ukraine, Russia dominated the electromagnetic spectrum, disrupting Ukrainian military communications, geolocating Ukrainian battalions with unmanned aerial vehicles, and then destroying those battalions with devastating artillery strikes.3 Russians also shut down Ukrainian power-distributor computers and attacked phone lines to prevent customers from reporting outages.4 Perhaps even more important, adversaries are using social media more effectively than U.S. forces to shape public perceptions and facilitate military operations. For example, the Russian government’s social media dominance has shaped what information is available to Russian citizens and where they are getting information. Similarly, the Islamic State leverages social media as a strategic weapon to shape the public narrative and to recruit and finance. Such growing use of electronic warfare, cyber warfare, and information operations in hybrid war predicates the need for valuing innovation in cyberspace operations. The U.S. Army is losing ground daily by not leveraging the innovations of our adversaries and those of the civilian sector. The Army cyberspace community, like most, is witnessing the need for paradigm shifts in how leaders think about, advantage, and foster innovation. There is a need to relook how the Army innovates internally while leveraging industry in new ways to innovate using external solutions. The old models are outdated, and what one sees in cyberspace makes these paradigm shifts an imperative for the entire military. As Chapman, Hutchinson, and Waage demonstrate, the Army possesses the talent that can provide the pathway to innovation. Leaders must use this internal talent to grow a culture of innovation that will ensure current and future mission success. To address the challenges of complex and continually evolving information and operating environments, we must examine many of our own paradigms for how we address innovation across the force. MILITARY REVIEW  July-August 2016 Innovation Defined In November 2014, then Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel announced the Defense Innovation Initiative to highlight the Department of Defense’s (DOD’s) need to adopt innovative practices and means of operating in increasingly contested environments. Hagel noted, “We are entering an era where American dominance in key warfighting domains is eroding, and we must find new and creative ways to sustain, and in some areas expand, our advantages even as we deal with more limited resources.”5 Current Secretary of Defense Ash Carter has sustained the momentum. DOD continues to expand cooperative efforts with Silicon Valley through initiatives such as Defense Innovation Unit–Experimental (DIUx) that seek to build and strengthen relationships with new and existing innovators.6 In doing so, the secretary highlights that many military innovations can and should come from our industry partners. In many ways, innovation has become a nebulous term that describes all things new from automobiles to mattresses. Innovation is simply anything novel and useful that one implements. Geoffrey A. Moore describes application innovation as “creating differentiation by finding and exploiting a new application or use for an existing technology.”7 Meanwhile, Elaine Dundon speaks of “the profitable implementation of strategic creativity.”8 For cyberspace operations, we offer the following definition of innovation: the implementation and integration of new concepts, processes, and material that enhance mission capability. Organizations can enhance innovation through collaboration, flexibility, creativity, and resourcing. Innovation in Cyberspace The mercurial nature of cyberspace presents a number of novel challenges to the warfighter. A constant influx of emerging technologies, practices, and techniques define the information and operating environments. The time between acquisition and obsolescence adds to this complexity. Threats come from highly capable and resourced nation-state actors, terrorist and criminal organizations and individuals, and hacktivists. The cost barriers to entry continue to decline for adversaries: a successful hack only has to be right once; a capable defense has to be right 100 percent of the time. 35