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President Obama Friday laid out his strategy to secure U.S. computer networks, creating another White House czar and linking cyber security to the broader priority of restoring the nation's prosperity that has dominated his administration's first months.
"America's economic prosperity in the 21st century will depend on cyber security," Mr. Obama said.
In keeping with a pledge he made during last year's campaign - during which, he acknowledged, his own Web site was hacked - he said the issue would be a top priority for his administration.
He said he would name a "cyber-security coordinator" to manage U.S. policy across all departments of government. While he did not announce his selection, Mr. Obama singled out the official who led the cyber-security review, Melissa Hathaway, for particular praise, noting that the review had been "open and transparent."
By making the new czar a member of both the National Economic Council and the National Security Council, the president signaled his determination to treat cyber security as an economic imperative as well as a security priority.
"From now on, our digital infrastructure - the networks and computers we depend on every day - will be treated as they should be: as a strategic national asset," Mr. Obama said. "We will ensure that these networks are secure, trustworthy and resilient. We will deter, prevent, detect and defend against attacks and recover quickly from any disruptions or damage."
Paul Kurtz, a cyber-security official in both the George W. Bush and Bill Clinton White Houses, said this declaration was the key news in the president's speech.
"These are assets that are vital to our economic well-being as well as to our national security," he told The Washington Times.
He defended the decision to give the cyber czar a dual reporting chain through both the deputy national security adviser for homeland security, John Brennan, and top economic aide Lawrence H. Summers, pointing out that cyber-security issues quickly become economic ones.
"You very quickly get to the question of whether or not to regulate to improve cyber security," Mr. Kurtz said. "It is very appropriate that the [National Economic Council] be involved."









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