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INFORMATION WARFARE

INFORMATION WARFARE. Information is not a new component to conflict. The Information Age, however, has ushered in extraordinary improvements in collection, storage, analysis, and transmission of information. Presentation Courtesy of Chris Shar, PhD Student, PSU. Defining Information Warfare.

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INFORMATION WARFARE

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  1. INFORMATION WARFARE Information is not a new component to conflict. The Information Age, however, has ushered in extraordinary improvements in collection, storage, analysis, and transmission of information. Presentation Courtesy of Chris Shar, PhD Student, PSU

  2. Defining Information Warfare Information Warfare: Any action to deny, exploit, corrupt, or destroy the enemy’s information and its functions; protecting ourselves against those actions; and exploiting our own military information functions.

  3. Direct and Indirect Information Warfare Direct Information Warfare changes the adversary’s information without involving the intervening perceptive and analytical functions. Indirect Information Warfare changes the adversary’s information by creating phenomena that the adversary must then observe and analyze.

  4. Information Warfare: Past and Present Information warfare is not a new phenomenon. For centuries, cryptography has been used to conceal and reveal messages. The word cipher is derived from the seventh century Arabic word sifr, meaning “nothing.”

  5. Two of the more famous information warfare examples include the German Enigma machine and the use of Native American “codetalkers.” Since the 1970s, extraordinary improvements in the technical means of collecting, storing, analyzing, and transmitting information have contributed to codemaking and codebreaking as well as begun the shift toward a“Revolution in Military Affairs.”

  6. USS Gearing, DD710during WWII

  7. USS Gearing, DD710in the late 1960s

  8. USS Gary, FFG 51

  9. Technology and the Revolution in Military Affairs From optical to electrical telegraphy, from telegraphy over radio to satellite links, warfare over the last two centuries has evolved exponentially. Not without reason are delay times also called dead times in technical-military jargon. He who knows a few seconds too late is punished by a hostile first strike.

  10. Telecommunications technologies have the ability in the civilian realm to transform cultures. Switching from a print-based culture to one encompassing radio, television, telephones, and the Internet has a profound effect. Likewise, the mindset of military affairs must also adapt to incredible changes in the technology of communications.

  11. Information Age Warfare Information technology is a tool to impart combat operations with unprecedented economies of time and force. Information Warfare Information warfare views information itself as a separate realm, potent weapon, and lucrative target. Information Age Warfare Vs. Information Warfare

  12. What Constitutes Information Warfare? Traditional forms of Information Warfare • Psychological Operations • Electronic Warfare • Physical Destruction • Security Measures • Information Attack

  13. Psychological Ops Psychological operations use information to affect the enemy’s reasoning. “We can be sure that the global battlefield of the 21st century will be over information -- the dissemination or withholding of facts, the interpretation of events, the presentation or distortion of ideas and ideologies, and the communication of messages and symbols carefully prepared to provoke a particular reaction, either conscious or unconscious, from a target audience.”

  14. Electronic Warfare Electronic Warfare denies accurate information to the enemy. Any military action involving the use of electromagnetic energy to determine, exploit, reduce, or prevent hostile use of the electromagnetic spectrum and the action which retains friendly use of the electromagnetic spectrum. The three divisions within EW include electronic countermeasures, electronic counter-countermeasures, and electronic warfare support measures.

  15. Military Deception Military deception misleads the enemy about our capabilities or intentions. Successful deception causes enemies to derive and accept desired appreciations of military capabilities, intentions, operations, or other activities that evoke foreign actions that contribute to the originator’s objectives.

  16. Physical Destruction Physical destruction can assist information warfare by affecting information system elements through destructive power. The means of physical attack range from conventional bombs to electromagnetic pulse weapons. This is one of the most important areas where the United States may be vulnerable to attack.

  17. Security Measures Security measures seek to keep the adversary from learning about our military capabilities and intentions.

  18. Cyberterrorism and Other Potenial Attacks What types of information are at risk? • Power delivery • Communications • Aviation • Financial services • Medical records • Criminal records • Business plans

  19. The Clash of Civilizations There will be an increase of non-state actors participating on the world stage of events. This makes any nation concerned with cyberterroism consider an entire host of new options when it comes to threats to national security.

  20. New Ways of Conceiving the Global World • Incredibly powerful and vastly expanding communications technologies have forced us to consider the world as a smaller environment. • Multinational corporations and communications networks have also helped to diminish the importance of national borders.

  21. Economic Success Breeds Resentment • As Westernized nations permeate the global communications markets, questions of cultural imperialism raise the potential for other nations to challenge the encroaching influence that the United States and similar nations have on politics, economics, and communications.

  22. Beyond Peace • All four branches of the military as well as intelligence agencies are increasingly recognizing the importance of information as an asset and weapon. • Communications scholars and researchers should assume a role as participants in the discussion and execution of Information Warfare practice.

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