Information warfare

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

War
Military history
Eras
Prehistoric · Ancient · Medieval
Gunpowder · Industrial · Modern
Battlespace
Air · Information · Land · Sea · Space
Theaters
Arctic · Cyberspace · Desert
Jungle · Mountain · Urban
Weapons
Armoured · Artillery · Biological · Cavalry
Chemical · Electronic · Infantry ·
Mechanized · Nuclear · Psychological
Radiological · Ski · Submarine
Tactics

Amphibious · Asymmetric · Attrition
Cavalry · Conventional · Fortification
Guerrilla · Hand to hand · Invasion
Joint · Maneuver · Siege · Total
Trench · Unconventional

Strategy

Economic · Grand · Operational

Organization

Chain of command · Formations
Ranks · Units

Logistics

Equipment · Materiel · Supply line

Law

Court-martial · Laws of war · Occupation
Tribunal · War crime

Government and politics

Conscription · Coup d'état
Military dictatorship · Martial law
Militarism · Military rule

Military studies

Military academy · Military science
Polemology · Philosophy of war
Peace and conflict studies

Lists
Authors · Battles · Civil wars
Commanders · Invasions · Operations
Sieges · Raids · Tactics · Theorists
Wars · War crimes · War criminals
Weapons · Writers

Information warfare is the use and management of information in pursuit of a competitive advantage over an opponent. Information warfare may involve collection of tactical information, assurance that one's own information is valid, spreading of propaganda or disinformation among the enemy, undermining the quality of opposing force information and denial of information collection opportunities to opposing forces.

Contents

[edit] Overview

Information warfare can take many forms:

  • Television and radio transmission can be jammed.
  • Television and radio transmission can be hijacked for a disinformation campaign
  • Logistics networks can be disabled.
  • Stock exchanges transactions can be sabotaged either with electronic intervention, leaking sensitive information or placing disinformation.

During the 1991 Gulf War, Dutch crackers stole information about U.S. troop movements from U.S. Defense Department computers and tried to sell it to the Iraqis, who thought it was a hoax and turned it down [1]. In January 1999, U.S. Air Intelligence computers were hit by a coordinated attack, part of which appeared to come from Russian cracking [2].

[edit] Origins

Information about own forces, allied forces and opposing forces has always been a key feature of military operations, discussed in Sun Tzu's The Art of War:

If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle.

Nations, corporations, and individuals each seek to increase, protect and exploit their own information while trying to limit and penetrate the adversary's. Methods to collect, store, analyse and exploit information cover the whole range of both military and commercial activities and whilst this discussion is related to the military application of the discipline these methods legitimately apply in the commercial environment.

Since the 1960s, there have been extraordinary improvements in the technical means of transmission, protection, collection, storage and analysis which have allowed significant improvements in the exploitation of the information domain.

[edit] Information Operations

Information Operations (Info Ops) is an evolving discipline within the military. It has emerged from earlier concepts such as "Command & Control Warfare" and "Information Warfare" - mainly US dominated, originating in the 1990s and considering lessons learned from the Gulf War(s), phenomenons like the so-called "CNN Effect", and the enormous advance in Information Technology.

Today Germany leads a multinational effort on developing Info Ops as an integrating function / joint mission area within the military, called the "Multinational Information Operations Experiment" (MNIOE). The current 20 MNIOE partners define Info Ops as "The advice to and co-ordination of military activities affecting information and information systems – including system behaviour and capabilities – in order to create desired effects." This definition - and its related context - differs from extant national views (e.g., the USA or GBR) and provides an advanced approach to multinational and interagency information activities in support of crisis management and effects-based operations.

Designing and implementing guidance for Coalition actions to affect information and information systems (information activities) is a challenge; it applies to the whole scope of civil-military efforts from pre-crisis situations to post-conflict reconstruction, and spans all levels of involvement.

Ongoing initiatives for Info Ops Concept Development and Experimentation (CD&E) are derived from the following problem statement:

Joint and combined warfighters lack integrated processes and organisation to plan, execute and assess effects-based information activities in a multinational and interagency context based on a comprehensive and systemic understanding of the operational environment using all available and appropriate means. In particular:

  • commanders and their staff lack the means, methods and training to gain and maintain appropriate situational awareness and understanding of the information environment;
  • commanders are often unaware of the scope and scale of options to affect information and/or information systems;
  • relevant co-ordination processes are not institutionalised, but rather depend on the personality of actors, occur by chance and/or erratically;
  • extant organisational structures often limit the flexibility of the force to adapt to mission and situation requirements;
  • commanders often do not realise the full scope of opportunities as well as risk associated with mainstream military actions and their potential to create effects on information and information systems;
  • military plans and operations are often inadequately integrated with civil information activities; the overall consistency of comprehensive Coalition efforts needs to be improved in this respect.

The MNIOE project will develop solutions to answer the following questions (CD&E issues):

  • How do we describe the characteristics of the information environment to support focused systemic analysis?
  • What means, methods and training do we need to gain a comprehensive and systemic understanding of the information environment?
  • How do we incorporate comprehensive, clear, and achievable guidance for Coalition information activities (Coalition Information Strategy) in the multinational interagency strategic planning process?
  • How do we translate and implement the Coalition Information Strategy for coordinated civil and military action at the operational level of command?
  • How can we identify, rate, and exploit the full spectrum of effects in the information environment and military information activities within a comprehensive approach?
  • How do we appropriately consider the opportunities and risks associated with effects in the information environment and mainstream military and civil actions?
  • How do we design and implement efficient and effective advice and co-ordination for planning, execution and assessment of military information activities?
  • How do we coordinate effects and activities related to the information environment amongst military and civil actors within a comprehensive approach?
  • How do we share information to enable efficient and effective multinational interagency planning for Coalition information activities?
  • How do we share information to enable efficient and effective execution and assessment of military and civil information activities?

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

[edit] Resources

[edit] Key papers

[edit] News item

[edit] United States Department of Defense IO Doctrine

[edit] Counterterrorism