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Keeping Canada safe

Canada’s current military procurement models and levels of industry-government co-operation have not kept pace with the unprecedented ‘speed of cyber’ and could compromise national security if left unaddressed, is the conclusion of a new report from the Canadian Association of Defence and Security Industries (CADSI). The report, entitled From Bullets to Bytes: Industry’s Role in Preparing Canada for the Future of Cyber Defence, outlines some of the challenges associated with preparing and equipping the Canadian Armed Forces for a modern battlefield where the physical and digital are seamlessly merged.

“Warfare has changed,” said CADSI president Christyn Cianfarani. “Our military is moving rapidly into a future where cyberdefence will be essential for protecting Canada and Canadian military missions abroad.

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“How industry and government work together and get decisive cyber technologies into the hands of Canadian soldiers and intelligence agencies must change, too.”

Based on a yearof research and 70 interviews with government, military and industry leaders in the field, the report confirms that there

are dozens of Canadian firms with cyber-defence expertise that could be leveraged by the Department of National Defence (DND) as it invests billions in cyber-defence programmes and procurements over the next decade. The report notes, however, that government

and industry still lack formal mechanisms to communicate, collaborate and build trust – and procurement cycles can take years.

“Our adversaries can deploy new cyber capabilities in a matter of months, or even days,” said Cianfarani. “For Canada to win on the cyber-enabled battlefield, Canadian government and industry must collaborate intentionally, the way our allies do. Now is the time to lean on Canada’s national security innovation base and overhaul the procurement process to work at cyber-speed.” CADSI’s report outlines a path forward, offering five core recommendations that the association believes will move Canada’s military towards cyber-readiness. These include setting up a secure Canadian cyberdefence network to facilitate collaboration, increasing the pool of available experts to be used as cyber reservists, and overhauling the government’s classification system and capabilities database.

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