June 3, 2024

Senator Schmitt, Senator Wyden, Send Letter to Department of Defense Regarding Continued Use of Singular Vendor After Series of Concerning Cybersecurity Lapses

WASHINGTON – Recently, Senator Eric Schmitt and Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) sent a letter to the Department of Defense raising serious concerns about leaked draft guidance that calls for the mandatory use of Microsoft E5 across all DoD components. The letter also presses CIO John Sherman on the DoD’s strategy for ensuring robust cybersecurity that encourages competition and innovation among vendors:

“Although we welcome the Department’s decision to invest in greater cybersecurity, we are deeply concerned that DoD is choosing not to pursue a multi-vendor approach that would result in greater competition, lower long-term costs, and better outcomes related to cybersecurity. Cybersecurity should be a core attribute of software, not a premium feature that companies upsell to deep-pocketed government and corporate customers. The Department of Defense is one of the largest purchasers of cybersecurity services. Through its buying power, DoD’s strategies and standards have the power to shape corporate strategies that result in more resilient cybersecurity services. When the DoD demands sophisticated cybersecurity products, there are not only positive effects across the U.S. government, but also beneficial consequences across the public and private sector. The Department of Defense’s pursuit of an anti-competitive strategy results in wasted taxpayer dollars and promotes a stagnant environment for innovation that has negative spill-over effects far beyond the federal government,” reads the letter.

“The risks associated with the government’s dependence on Microsoft were evident when a hacking group associated with the Chinese government known as Storm-0558 successfully compromised 22 enterprise organizations and over 500 individuals globally due to what the Cyber Safety Review Board (CSRB) described as ‘a cascade of failures’ by Microsoft. According to press reports, in May 2023, Storm-0558 successfully exploited vulnerabilities across email systems used by the U.S. State Department, U.S. Department of Commerce, and the U.S. House of Representatives. Those same press reports reveal that hackers accessed thousands of sensitive emails by high-level officials, including the Secretary of Commerce and high-ranking officials at the Department of State among others,” continues the letter.

“As our national security becomes more intertwined with technology, it is imperative Congress and the DoD work together to ensure robust cybersecurity practices. We appreciate your attentiveness to these concerns, as well as your prompt response to these questions,” concludes the letter.  

BACKGROUND: 

  • Specifically, the offices request responses to the following:
    • The Department of Defense has had 180 days since the enactment of the FY 2024 NDAA to comply with the cybersecurity reporting requirement contained in Section 1553. As Chief Information Officer of the Department, when do you plan to release the required report and provide a briefing to members of Congress and their staff?
    • Please walk us through the DoD’s technical justification process which led to mandating deployment of all Microsoft E5 security solutions to meet 91 of the target level Zero Trust requirements. Additionally, given this mandate, the DoD will be depending on one company for the majority of its productivity, collaboration, security, cloud, and OS needs. What consideration was given to the fact our near peer adversaries seemingly need to breach just one company to potentially compromise DoD assets and data?
    • The only vendor mentioned in the draft memo is Microsoft. Do you plan to provide guidance for interoperability with other cybersecurity vendors? If not, why?
    • What is your plan for ensuring a multi-vendor approach that encourages innovation and competition?
    • DoD’ 2018 Cyber Strategy directed the Department to increase the use of secure open-source software. Please describe DoD’s efforts to meet this directive.
    • In each of the last three fiscal years, how much financial support has DoD provided to support the maintenance of and cybersecurity-related improvements to open-source software projects used by DoD?
    • In the aftermath of the Storm-0558 hack, Microsoft pledged to provide free enhanced security logs to its customers, rather than restricting those logs to organizations paying for E5 licenses. Has Microsoft made good on its promise to provide enhanced security logs free of charge to DoD?
    • Your draft memo requires DoD components to begin initiating implementation of E5 by June 3, 2024. What is the rationale for the timeline requested in the draft memo?
  • In September 2023, it was reported that Chinese hackers successfully breached Microsoft’s email platform and stole thousands of emails from several high-level U.S. Officials.

Read the full letter here.

Print 
Share 
Like 
Tweet 

Search