Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston –
Lt. Gen. Kenneth Dahl, commanding general of U.S. Army
Installation Management Command and Maj. Gen. Lawarren Patterson recently
co-chaired the sixth Cyber Installation Support Summit at IMCOM headquarters at
Fort Sam Houston.
Cyber and communication protocols have become integrated
into nearly every thread of modern society – commerce, communications, energy,
water, and facilities – to the point that a cybersecurity breach, depending
upon severity, has the potential to disrupt life as we know it.
Patterson, IMCOM deputy commanding general for operations
and chief of staff, helped stand up the initial cyber summit in late 2014 and
has been a stalwart throughout the process.
“A few years ago it became apparent that the growth of cyber
within the Army and the Department of Defense was going to become a very large,
complex mission, particularly from the standpoint of building out facilities to
support cyber training and operations,”
Patterson said. “The anticipated growth will take years in
some instances because the dollars that have to be planned for and allocated
will take a concerted effort and the teamwork of many organizations and
agencies.”
The team has more than doubled in number and involves far
more entities than just the U.S. Army.
“What started as the first summit of about 40 people
representing various elements of the Army has grown and expanded to include the
National Security Agency, U.S. Cyber Command, sister services and Reserve
components. Today you see participation of around 100 people,” Patterson said.
Originally, the focus was on facilities and growth primarily
in three locations for which the Army is responsible: Fort Gordon, Ga.; Fort
Meade, Md.; and Fort Belvoir, Va. Some growth at West Point, N.Y., was also part
of the original intent.
“Since then, we’ve expanded,” Patterson said. “From day one
we always wanted to be inclusive, not exclusive – so we invited all the
stakeholders to be a part of the process.”
Dahl, who co-chaired his first cyber summit, said he probably
learned more than anyone as the “rookie” in the room.
“What I took away is there is a tremendous amount of talent
that comes together for this event from all the various organizations that have
some stake in cyber defense, cybersecurity or the support of standing up that
capability,” Dahl said. “I’m much more comfortable with all this now than I was
before. I got to interact and see the quality of the leadership, the quality of
the intellect, and the seriousness with which they are approaching this complex
set of challenges.”
The summits have been scheduled quarterly and held at Forts
Belvoir, Gordon and Meade until Headquarters IMCOM joined the rotation. This
rotating approach is designed to allow participants to spend time on the ground
at the location to gain first-hand appreciation of the challenges.
“We do it quarterly to make sure we’re all on the same sheet
of music, we all understand what’s going on through transparency, cross-talk,
sharing best practices and success stories,” Patterson said. “We look at
facility growth and planned facility growth to determine what priorities are
urgent and what can wait. We all work in concert to define the requirements for
the appropriate leadership to make decisions.”
Determining who would fund what was the universal question
in the room during the morning session in San Antonio.
“That’s what part of this is all about,” Patterson said.
“Given the multiple stakeholders, we want to make sure there is a clear
understanding of who’s responsible for funding which aspect of the myriad
projects. This clarification is number one. Next is determining the cost, and
then the priority. If we do decide to fund something under the name of cyber,
we need to fully understand what other projects will go by the wayside or fall
below the cut line. Those are the kinds of discussions we’re having.”
Dahl pointed out that the cyber summits reach beyond the
realm of the Army.
“The Army National Guard and the Army Reserve have a very
important component of this,” Dahl said. “Fort Meade, where we’re standing up a
great deal of this capability, has 53,000 people on it every day, mainly
civilians. The Army runs the base, but the NSA is there with 25,000 or so.
You’ve also got several joint and civilian organizations there, so it’s not
just an Army thing. This is really a whole of government thing.”
Army IMCOM provides direction and oversight to 73
installations that protect national interests worldwide and require a line of
defense in cyber security.
“It is a core IMCOM function,” Dahl said. “IMCOM should be
looking to pull together all service providers, all the people who have a stake
or an equity involved, and then integrate that. That’s what we do.”
“We’re in a very challenging environment resource-wise,”
Dahl added. “I knew that coming in. It did not get better during the
conference. It may even be more challenging than I imagined. But that’s where
the hard work has to be done with the senior leadership, to prioritize to
ensure we’re spending every dime on the right things at the right time, so we
can generate as much capability and capacity as possible.”