Cyberattacks amid the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine have pushed the European Commission to propose a new cybersecurity policy urging member states to "significantly increase" collaborative modern military cyber defense capabilities, as well as bolster its ties with NATO, reports The Record, a news site by cybersecurity firm Recorded Future.
Member states have been called upon not only to increase cyber defense coordination at a national and military level but also to bolster the region's cyber defenses through the formation of military computer emergency response teams and EU cyber defense exercises.
"The EU needs to take on more responsibility for its own security. This requires modern and interoperable European armed forces... Whilst remaining fully committed to international law and norms in cyberspace, the EU should signal its willingness to use these capabilities in a coordinated way in case of a cyberattack on a Member State," said the Commission in its Joint Communication with the High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy.
Active cyber defense has been pushed by Thierry Breton, the French commissioner for the Internal Market, a concept which European Cyber Conflict Research Initiative Director Max Smeets notes is less common in the EU than in the U.S.
Minimum cybersecurity standards are critical in ensuring the defenses of U.S. pipelines and ports against cyber threat actors, according to Neuberger, who also stressed the importance of gauging regulatory compliance among such organizations while noting the challenges brought upon by the recent reversal of the Chevron ruling.
Mounting digitization and subpar security practices have prompted Moody's Rating to give the "very high" cyber risk designation to the telecommunications, airline, and power generation utility sectors, which have collectively incurred $7.1 trillion of debt.