Recording: The Cyber Operations Series: Cyber Conflict as an Intelligence Contest
Leading academics Robert Chesney and Max Smeets discuss why reframing cyber conflict as an intelligence contest allows us to better understand the realities of inter-state cyber operations and develop policies that reflect states’ existing experiences in this field.
Overview
The idea of ‘cyber war’ has played a dominant role in both academic and popular discourse concerning the nature of statecraft in the cyber domain. However, overemphasising cyberspace as a ‘warfighting’ domain where conflict is measured against expectations of death and destruction may distort rather than help clarify the nature of cyber competition and conflict. Are cyber activities perhaps more like an intelligence contest, where both states and non-state actors grapple for information advantage below the threshold of war?
In their new edited volume Deter, Disrupt, or Deceive, Robert Chesney and Max Smeets convene an array of authors to explore this debate.
The discussion is moderated by Louise Marie Hurel, RUSI Research Fellow.
About the speakers
Max Smeets is a senior researcher at the Center for Security Studies at ETH Zurich; Director of the European Cyber Conflict Research Initiative, and RUSI Associate Fellow
Robert Chesney is the Dean of the University of Texas School of Law, where he also holds the James A Baker III Chair in the Rule of Law and World Affairs. He is also a co-founder of and contributor to the blog Lawfare and co-host of the National Security Law Podcast.
Conrad Prince CB is a Distinguished Fellow and RUSI’s senior adviser on cyber security, offensive cyber, and related intelligence and security issues. He was formerly the Director General for Operations and deputy head of the UK Government’s signals intelligence and cyber security agency, GCHQ.