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Air chief says UK can learn benefits of cyber warfare from Israel | The chief of the Royal Air Force, Air Chief Marshal Sir Stephen Dalton, has said that Britain should take lessons from the Israeli military in the Gaza in using YouTube and tweets to engage in 21st-century cyber-warfare. "Accurate and timely information has always been critical to the
military but its importance is increasing as societies become more networked.
This is intimately linked to developments in space and cyber-space; as we saw
in the conflict in Gaza in early 2009," The Independent quoted Air Chief Marshal
Dalton, as saying. "Operations on the ground were paralleled by operations in
cyber-space and an 'info ops' campaign that was fought across the internet: the
Israeli Air Force downloaded sensor imagery onto YouTube, tweets warned of
rocket
attacks and the 'help-us-win.com' blog was used to mobilise public support," he
added. The Israeli attack on Gaza, with its large number of civilian casualties,
led to widespread international criticism. However, the use of the internet by
the Israeli forces attempting to show Hamas fighters employing local people as
cover and the supposedly "surgical" nature of some of the bombing is thought to
have countered some of the adverse publicity. The emotive impact of civilian
casualties
has been graphically shown during the current offensive in Afghanistan to capture
the Marjah region from Taliban forces. Twelve civilians, 10 of them from one family,
were killed when two Nato missiles overshot their targets and hit a family home.
General Stanley McChrystal, the US commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan,
immediately
issued a public apology and the use of the missile system involved in the deaths
has been suspended. As well as the propaganda campaign, cyber-warfare can be
used
to target vital strategic communications and defence systems. In a keynote speech
at the International Institute for Strategic Defences, Sir Stephen urged military
planners to focus on the "operational environment that is increasingly becoming
the 'vital ground' in 21st-century conflict". The Air Chief Marshal's address
was one of a series by the heads of the three services as they make their pitch
for resources before the impending Strategic Defence Review. |
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