House NDAA expands cyber ops

Congress

Defense bill raises questions about future of DIUx

A defense bill moving through the House of Representatives would give the Department of Defense more authority to recover from a cyberattack, replace clearance systems run out of the Office of Personnel Management and restrict funding for the Pentagon's Silicon Valley acquisition outreach program dubbed.

The Subcommittee for Emerging Threats and Capabilities of the House Armed Services Committee   released the bill on April 19.

The proposed National Defense Authorization Act includes a "Special Emergency Procurement Authority" to help DOD respond to and recover from cyberattacks. The committee stressed that the Pentagon should provide more ongoing training activities at the cyber combatant commands to better prepare for cyberattacks. The bill also seeks a Government Accountability Office report on Defense Department network protection, and whether it makes sense to continue to have a single leader heading both the National Security Agency and Cyber Command.

The bill also provides for ongoing plans to have DOD lead the development and management of an IT system to handle security clearance investigations on behalf of the Office of Personnel Management. The new system is scheduled to be in place at the beginning of fiscal year 2020, per the bill report.

The committee also wants to ride herd on the Pentagon's Defense Innovation Unit Experimental (DIUx) outreach program in Silicon Valley. Lawmakers are "concerned by the pinpoint focus on one geographic region, as well as the dedication of significant funding at such a nascent period in the development of this organization and the concept on which it was founded," according to a summary of the bill.

The Defense Department already is planning DIUx offices outside Silicon Valley, however. A Boston office is promised for June 2016, and Austin, Seattle and Cincinnati have been mentioned by officials as other possible locations.

About the Author

Aisha Chowdhry is a staff writer covering Congress, the State Department, the Department of Veteran Affairs and the Department of Homeland Security.

Prior to joining FCW, Chowdhry covered foreign policy for CQ Roll Call. Her overseas work prior to that took her to Pakistan and Afghanistan. She has worked as a correspondent for Reuters based out of Islamabad. Chowdhry has also worked at the CBS affiliate in Washington as a multimedia journalist. She began her career as a freelance reporter for USA Today and covered stories from conflict zones. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Foreign Policy, and Voice of America, among others.

Chowdhry received her masters in broadcast journalism from American University in Washington, D.C.

Click here for previous articles by Chowdhry, or connect with her on Twitter: @aishach

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