Assessing Cyber Power

Authors
Publication date 2016
Host editors
  • N. Pissanidis
  • H. Rõigas
  • M. Veenendaal
Book title 2016 8th International Conference on Cyber Conflict
Book subtitle Cyber Power : 30 May-03 June 2016, Tallinn, Estonia
ISBN
  • 9789949954483
  • 9781509007158
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9789949954490
Event 2016 8th International Conference on Cyber Conflict : Cyber Power
Pages (from-to) 7-22
Publisher Tallinn: NATO CCD COE Publications
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Amsterdam Center for International Law (ACIL)
Abstract
This paper aims to contribute to the debate regarding quantitative and qualitative appreciation of cyber power. It will do so by: (1) deriving a thorough foundation for the cyber power discussion from the 20th century power debate; (2) presenting a comprehensive framework for analysing (cyber) power; and (3) positioning cyber capacities within this framework. Revamping the 20th century power discussion is necessary as the current cyber power debate focuses much on the `means' component of power (e.g. DDoS capacity, network infrastructure spending, malware acquisition budgets, etc.). This view of power is very similar to the pre-World War II approach to assessing power. The power theorists, however, have shied away from this approach as it proved to be too narrow. Primarily because it failed to capture why a more resourceful actor sometimes fails to ascertain its objectives or preferred outcomes vis-à-vis a smaller actor (e.g. the United States' experience in Vietnam). In order to fill this lacuna, this paper offers a more comprehensive approach to power, including all dimensions of (cyber) power, being: scope, domain, weight, costs and means.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1109/CYCON.2016.7529423
Published at https://ccdcoe.org/cycon/2016/proceedings/01_vanhaaster.pdf
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