March 05, 2024

Indo-Pacific nations need to put more focus on cybersecurity

Recent developments point to a troubling reality: China is increasingly embracing cyberattacks as a geopolitical weapon.

Last month, Japanese officials disclosed that Chinese hackers had intercepted confidential diplomatic cables through cyberattacks on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Ahead of Taiwan's election the previous month, the island experienced a huge surge in Chinese cyberattacks. U.S. FBI Director Christopher Wray, meanwhile, testified in Congress that Chinese hackers were preparing to "wreak havoc and cause real-world harm" by infiltrating critical American infrastructure.

Regional cyber insecurity could also limit the economic gains of digital connectivity.

Combined with ongoing Russian and North Korean cyberaggression and new artificial intelligence-powered threats, the cybersecurity landscape of the Indo-Pacific region appears increasingly ominous.

At stake is not just data security, but the depth of regional ties. Governments and businesses can only connect and cooperate to the extent they trust their counterparts' network security.

American ambitions to strengthen ties across the Indo-Pacific region cannot escape the reality of growing cyber threats and vulnerabilities. Viewed this way, regional cyber insecurity could benefit China, Russia and North Korea simply by hindering U.S. cooperation.

Read the full article from Nikkei Asia.

  • Commentary
    • TIME
    • February 20, 2025
    As Trump Reshapes AI Policy, Here’s How He Could Protect America’s AI Advantage

    The nation that solidifies its AI advantage will shape the trajectory of the most transformative technology of our era....

    By Janet Egan, Paul Scharre & Vivek Chilukuri

  • Commentary
    • Lieber Institute
    • February 19, 2025
    Ukraine Symposium – The Continuing Autonomous Arms Race

    This war-powered technology race does not appear to be losing steam, and what happens on the battlefields of Ukraine can potentially define how belligerents use military auton...

    By Samuel Bendett

  • Commentary
    • Lawfare
    • February 14, 2025
    Beyond DeepSeek: How China’s AI Ecosystem Fuels Breakthroughs

    While the United States should not mimic China’s state-backed funding model, it also can’t leave AI’s future to the market alone....

    By Ruby Scanlon

  • Reports
    • February 13, 2025
    Averting AI Armageddon

    In recent years, the previous bipolar nuclear order led by the United States and Russia has given way to a more volatile tripolar one, as China has quantitatively and qualitat...

    By Jacob Stokes, Colin H. Kahl, Andrea Kendall-Taylor & Nicholas Lokker

View All Reports View All Articles & Multimedia