{"id":22440,"date":"2015-09-11T11:00:16","date_gmt":"2015-09-11T01:00:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=22440"},"modified":"2015-09-10T12:43:31","modified_gmt":"2015-09-10T02:43:31","slug":"cyber-sanctions-find-another-way-forward","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/cyber-sanctions-find-another-way-forward\/","title":{"rendered":"Cyber sanctions: find another way forward"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n Recent news<\/a> that the US is considering targeted sanctions against China for economic cyber espionage is unsurprising. However, any sanctions imposed are unlikely to discourage future Chinese cyber espionage, but instead will only serve to burn precious US diplomatic capital in Beijing.<\/p>\n The White House announced<\/a> in April this year that it would impose sanctions on individuals and corporations who gain a financial or commercial advantage from stolen information, or are involved in cyber espionage that affects critical infrastructure, disrupts major computer networks, or steals intellectual property.. It now appears that the US is preparing to implement sanctions in accordance with the Executive Order. Calls for a response to cyber espionage have become increasingly shrill in Washington\u00a0DC, particularly from some of the candidates in the large field of presidential hopefuls<\/a> that have taken a firm anti-China stance. Some suggestions, including proposals to take down China\u2019s Great Firewall<\/a>, make sanctions the more moderate solution.<\/p>\n Imposing sanctions isn\u2019t an unprecedented move. The US imposed sanctions on North Korea<\/a> for the Sony hack, and any sanctions of Chinese firms would be just the next step in a long-running US effort to counter Chinese cyber spies. The US has been pursuing Chinese hackers for several years, and has responded in a variety of ways including public denouncements<\/a>, diplomatic demarches<\/a>, and symbolically indicting<\/a> Chinese military personnel. In addition, the release<\/a> by private cybersecurity companies of detailed information on PLA cyber espionage units has added to the war of words between the two nations on cyber espionage.<\/p>\n The impetus to impose sanctions appears to be driven by frustration that despite previous efforts to \u2018name and shame\u2019 China for economic espionage, there\u2019s been little respite. While the breach at the Office of Personnel Management may have encouraged further thinking on the issue, it\u2019s unlikely that any sanctions would be in direct response to this incident. The US has previously<\/a> made clear that it sees a difference between cyber espionage for commercial ends and such activities for national security intelligence collection purposes, as in the case of the OPM breach.<\/p>\n While not unprecedented, imposing targeted economic sanctions is a bold step, and will likely sate some of the hunger of those demanding a reaction. But it\u2019s likely to cause more harm to the US\u2013China relationship than to stop<\/a> or slow Chinese cyber espionage. Beyond the usual statements<\/a> about irresponsible behaviour and its own victimisation, China is likely to respond practically\u2014in contrast to North Korea, the Chinese have the ability to impose costs on the US. US Treasury and Commerce Department officials have reportedly<\/a> alerted the White House to the many counter-sanctions that China could implement in retaliation. In addition, Chinese president Xi Jinping\u2019s visit to Washington\u00a0DC this month makes the timing difficult for the Obama administration. Announcing sanctions before the visit risks a high-profile cancellation; doing so after will undermine any gains made during the leader\u2019s dialogue.<\/p>\n The US intends to impose a cost on China for its cyber activity to dissuade them from further theft of US trade secrets, but those who benefit from cyber espionage know that the cost\u2013benefit calculation is still in their favour. They receive the results of their competitor\u2019s research and development at low cost, or use the information to undermine their competitors in other ways for their own financial gain. Attempting to stop cyber espionage by punishing a select few is unlikely to convince the larger whole that the cost\u2013benefit calculation has changed. It will, however, make it more difficult for the US and China to deal with other issues that threaten global stability\u2014such as the South China Sea<\/a>.<\/p>\n So how should the US respond? Raising the cost is an obvious answer, but sanctions probably aren\u2019t the solution. A more effective approach is to make commercial and propriety information, as well as Government data<\/a>, more secure<\/a>. An insurance company wouldn\u2019t pay out if your house was robbed because you built it without doors, and neither should the US threaten a critical global relationship for the sake of those who haven\u2019t properly secured their data. Other suggestions include supplying false information or \u2018poisoning the well\u2019<\/a>. While tried and tested, this requires significant levels of coordination, and ignores the issue that many hacking victims haven\u2019t taken adequate cybersecurity precautions. The US and China have already begun a discussion<\/a> about norms of behaviour in cyberspace, and more careful application<\/a> of national power to the problem of cybersecurity would enable this process to achieve a better and sustainable solution than actions that threaten to undermine the bilateral relationship.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Recent news that the US is considering targeted sanctions against China for economic cyber espionage is unsurprising. However, any sanctions imposed are unlikely to discourage future Chinese cyber espionage, but instead will only serve to …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":364,"featured_media":22441,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[52,391,749,31],"class_list":["post-22440","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-china","tag-cyber","tag-cyber-espionage","tag-united-states"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n