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March 6, 2002
New Task Force Aims to Protect Nation with Better Information
and Technology
The Markle Foundation in alliance with CSIS and The
Brookings Institution launches information and technology working group to improve
national security
New York, NY and Washington, DC -- An independent, multi-sector task force
to determine how information and technology can enhance national security was
announced today by the Markle Foundation in alliance with the Center for
Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and the Brookings Institution.
The Task Force on National Security in the Information Age is co-chaired by
Markle Foundation president Zoë Baird and former Netscape Communications chairman
James Barksdale. It will include leaders from industry, government and the civil
liberties community. Participants include EdVenture Holdings chairman Esther
Dyson; Sun Microsystems chief researcher John Gage Governor Mike Leavitt of Utah
and former National Security Agency deputy director Bill Crowell among many others.
In the months since September 11, military, intelligence and law enforcement
experts and the public at large have increasingly recognized the critical role
that information plays in national security. However, experts agree that efforts
to enable better collection and sharing of information require clearer definition
of the roles of government agencies, better assessment of new technologies for
improved information handling and careful consideration of how to expand the use
of information while safeguarding civil liberties. The group will allow thought
leaders from a wide variety of relevant fields to address these matters together.
"Information is the key to a more secure society. As we expand the role of
information collection and sharing, let's be sure we also protect the democratic
freedoms that make our society worth securing," said Ms. Baird. "This task force
is the kind of broad, multi-sectoral effort needed to address these imperatives
and create a viable framework for moving forward."
The task force will make recommendations regarding:
- Technologies that enable the more effective collection and sharing of
information in response to new security threats
- Aligning governmental structures and rules with the more information-intensive
approach needed to counteract new security threats
- Balancing the expansion of information's role in national security with
safeguards for civil liberties - particularly in the privacy realm
- Strategies for deploying information more effectively for law enforcement,
intelligence and homeland defense
- The role of the private sector in designing and implementing an
information-based national security response, and the level of collaboration
between private and public sectors
"New technologies, applied appropriately, can effectively transform our
ability to meet the security challenges of the twenty-first century," said
John Hamre, president, CSIS. "This task force will develop the comprehensive
conceptual framework that is needed to identify the information gaps and drive a
strategy for remedying them."
Over the next year, the group will release policy and briefing papers, provide
information on promising technologies, and inform government officials. The ultimate
goal is to produce a broad and coherent strategic vision that will enable the
U.S. government, in collaboration with industry and civil society, to meet the
challenge of the new security environment in an information age.
Current participants in the Task Force on National Security
in the Information Age
- Alex Aleinikoff, Georgetown Law School
- Robert Atkinson, Progressive Policy Institute
- Stewart A. Baker, Lawyer, Steptoe & Johnson
- Eric Benhamou, CEO, 3COM
- Jerry Berman, Executive Director, Center For Democracy & Technology
- Robert M. Bryant, President & CEO, The National Insurance Crime Bureau
- Ashton B. Carter, Ford Foundation Professor of Science & International
Affairs, Harvard University
- Wesley Clark, Stephens Group, Inc.
- G. Wayne Clough, President, Georgie Institute of Technology
- William P. Crowell, President & CEO, CyLink Corporation
- Sidney D. Drell, Professor Emeritus, Stanford University
- Esther Dyson, Chairman, EDventure Holdings
- Amitai Etzioni, The Communitarian Network and George Washington University
- David J. Farber, Professor of Telecommunication Systems, Universi
ty of Pennsylvania School of Engineering
- John Gage, Chief Researcher, Sun Microsystems
- Slade Gorton, Preston Gates & Ellis
- Morton H. Halperin, Director, Center for Democracy and Free Markets
and Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations
- Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg, M.D., VP, Biological Programs, Nuclear
Threat Initiative
- John J. Hamre, President, Center for Strategic and International
Studies
- Eric H. Holder, Jr., Partner, Covington & Burling
- Arnold Kanter, Principal, The Scowcroft Group
- Robert M. Kimmitt, Executive Vice President of Global and Strategic
Policy, AOL Time Warner, Inc.
- Dr. Richard D. Klausner, M.D., National Academy of Sciences
- Michael O. Leavitt, Governor of Utah
- Tara Lemmey, Founding Partner & CEO, Project LENS
- Judith A. Miller, Lawyer, Williams & Connolly
- James Morris, Dean, Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science
- Craig Mundie, Chief Technical Officer, Microsoft
- Jeffrey H. Smith, Partner, Arnold & Porter
- Abraham D. Sofaer, Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford
University
- James Steinberg, Vice President and Director of the Foreign Policy
Studies, the Brookings Institution
- Paul S. Stevens, Partner, Financial Services, Privacy Law, Dechert
- Rick White, President & CEO, TechNet
- Philip Zelikow (ex officio), Miller Center of Public Affairs,
University of Virginia
About the Markle Foundation
The Markle Foundation works to realize the potential of emerging communications
media and information technology to improve people's lives, through its own
programs of grants, investments, research and public education. Markle recently
committed $100 million to its efforts in public policy, healthcare and children's
learning.
About the Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS)
For four decades, CSIS has been dedicated to providing world leaders with strategic
insights on-solutions to-current and emerging global issues. CSIS maintains
resident experts on all the world's major geographical regions and is committed
to helping develop new methods of governance for the global age. Its audiences
include public and private policymakers in the United States and around the world.
For more information, see www.csis.org.
About The Brookings Institution
The Brookings Institution is an independent, nonpartisan research organization,
which seeks to improve the performance and quality of U.S. public policies. It
addresses current and emerging policy challenges and offers practical recommendations
for dealing with them, expressed in language that is accessible to policymakers and
the general public alike. For more information, see www.brookings.edu.
Joel L. Fleishman - Board of Directors
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