... concerns about the details of
The New York Times
’ reporting.” At the 10th International Meeting of High Representatives for Security Issues, Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service of the Russian Federation Sergei Naryshkin
said
that the Russian security services were aware of planned cyberattacks and informed the relevant authorities in a timely manner. The question of the likelihood of cyberattacks being carried out on critical infrastructure was even put to President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin during a live Q&A on ...
... should identify cooperative actions and identify norms and rules of the road—for example, agreement to refrain from using cyberattacks against nuclear weapons systems—as well as confidence building and verification measures that could enhance confidence ... ... Nunn, and their respective organizations—the European Leadership Network (
ELN
), the Munich Security Conference (
MSC
), the Russian International Affairs Council (
RIAC
), and the Nuclear Threat Initiative (
NTI
)—have been working with former and ...
... “Living in (Digital) Denial: Russia’s Approach to Cyber Deterrence”
European Leadership Network has recently issued a new
report
analyzing the concept of Russia’s cyber deterrence. The document offers quite picturesque description and analysis of Russia’s policy of denial when it comes to cyber deterrence. One may claim that the country’s recent policy has been to deny anything related to cyberattacks, and this may, in part, be right. But what draws attention in this document is something much more peculiar: in trying to prove and analyze the differences between Russian and Western approaches to cyber, it becomes clear that stances are ...