Canadian and U.S. military equipment vulnerable to cyberattacks, top officials say
OTTAWA — Canada and the United States are working together to make their high-tech military equipment less hackable, top defence officials said in Ottawa Thursday, but they have a lot of work to do.
Speaking to the Ottawa Conference on Security and Defence, Ellen Lord, the U.S. undersecretary of defence for acquisition and sustainment, suggested American military officials have long made excuses for not addressing the vulnerabilities in their equipment.
“That is no longer acceptable,” Lord said. “We are going to start shutting equipment down if they are not brought up to standards because every day we see the intel, we see how much has been compromised in what we do.”
Lord’s comments follow a growing recognition about the extent to which cyberattacks threaten not only targets such as computer networks, but all manner of devices — including fighter jets and warships — in an increasingly connected world.