From:TheBahamasWeekly.com
     
     OAS Assistant Secretary General Opens Cyber Security Crisis Management Exercise
       By OAS
 
     Jun 24, 2013 - 2:45:03 PM
	    
         
The
 Assistant Secretary General of the Organization of American States 
(OAS), Albert Ramdin, noted that cyber attacks are taking place in the 
region with “frightening frequency, sometimes with far reaching and 
disastrous consequences,” in his remarks during the inauguration of a 
sub regional cyber security management exercise taking place at the 
headquarters of the OAS in Washington DC, in which Anne Witkowsky, the 
Acting principal Deputy Coordinator for the Bureau of Counterterrorism 
of the United States Department of State, also took part. 
	
	
	
	Upon 
opening the exercise, organized by the Inter-American Committee against 
Terrorism (CICTE) of the OAS, Assistant Secretary General Ramdin said 
“the timing of this event is critical,” as there has been an increase in
 cyber attacks in most OAS member states. “It is important to remember,”
 he said, “that these attacks do not discriminate between nations big or
 small, powerful or not, and can threaten the infrastructure of our 
nations in unpredictable and undesirable ways. Cyber incidents target 
all kinds of public and private entities regardless of political social 
or economic factors. Therefore being unprepared for an attack leaves our
 societies vulnerable.”
	
	
	
	The exercise in responding to cyber security crises, which takes advantage of the OAS mobile crisis simulation laboratory,
 has three objectives, explained the Assistant Secretary General. First,
 it “will test officials’ abilities to analyze and mitigate the effects 
of a well organized cyber incident targeting various types of critical 
infrastructure.” Secondly, the exercise “will test communication 
mechanisms between countries when responding to cyber incidents,” and 
finally, it will “foster an exchange of best practices and 
lessons-learned in responding to cyber threats, both technically and at 
the policy-level.” 
	
	
	
	Since the first Crisis Management Exercise 
(CME), which was organized by the OAS in Miami in 2011, there have been 
seven more, in various countries throughout the Americas, noted 
Ambassador Ramdin. Today, he added, “the world is much different, much 
more complex, and our exercise has evolved to match those changing 
realities.” Among the adjustments made, said the Assistant Secretary 
General, are an upgrade of the infrastructure of the mobile lab and the 
inclusion of policymakers in the exercises, to avoid “disconnect” 
between policy and technical personnel during crises.
	
	
	
	“Cyber 
threats will continue in this Hemisphere,” said Assistant Secretary 
General Ramdin in his conclusion. “That is a reality which we can 
accept. The other reality which we have to establish is how we protect 
ourselves, how we prepare ourselves for that situation.” The senior OAS 
official expressed in particular his gratitude to the United States for 
its support of the program, which he said had made the mobile lab “a 
meaningful reality.”
	
	
	
	
         
For her part, Anne Witkowsky, Acting 
Principal Deputy Coordinator for the Bureau of Counterterrorism of the 
United States Department of State, said that “while the United States 
has seen earlier demonstrations of the cyber security mobile lab, this 
will be the first opportunity to gain for ourselves some hands on 
experience with it as exercise participants with you.”
	
	
	
	“Partnering
 with other OAS member states in this first ever regional exercise will 
be an excellent opportunity for us to explore our own policies and 
procedures for responding to cyber threats as well as our abilities to 
collaborate and coordinate responses with our partners in the Hemisphere
 during a cyber incident,” said Witkowsky, who noted that her country is
 the target of an ever-increasing number of cyber attacks. 
	
	
	
	The 
State Department official commended the OAS and CICTE “for playing such a
 critical role in the coordination of cyber security initiatives, 
including capacity building and facilitating regional cooperation,” and 
said the cyber security program of the Organization “has become a key 
forum in the Americas for debate and the exchange of ideas about current
 and future cyber security trends as well as providing practical 
training. The United States will continue to support this important 
program and we welcome the commitment of the OAS to support it as well.”
	
	
	
	The
 event brings together nearly 50 participants from 19 OAS member states 
to take part in not only the crisis management exercises, but also 
country updates and the sharing of best practices. Participants come 
from diverse sectors, including Computer Security Incident Response Team
 (CSIRT) members, policymakers, communications officers, and security 
specialists, among others. The event will conclude on 
	
	
		
		Tuesday, June 25. 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	For more information, please visit the OAS Website at www.oas.org
	    
    
     
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