Jason Healey has a new article in the Texas National Security Review (Vol 7, Iss 4) titled, “Cyber Effects in Warfare: Categorizing the Where, What, and Why.” Many of you will be familiar with this topic, as Jay workshopped this with SIWPS back in 2019. He argues, one reason why it has been difficult to assess how offensive cyber capabilities might affect modern warfare is that we have lacked a framework to assess the how, why, and where of different operations. You can read the article online here, and a summary below.
Summary: For decades, military practitioners and academics have come up with theories, evidence, and examples that indicate that offensive cyber operations might revolutionize modern warfare. Others have made an equally impressive case that refutes that such operations would even be relevant, making it hard to reach any definite conclusions. This paper introduces a novel analytical framework to assess offensive cyber operations based on the circumstances of their use across the different phases of war, from shaping operations prior to the conflict to the actual battlefield. This framework substantially simplifies the key questions of practitioners and academics in order to pose the more direct question: Where, when, and how might offensive cyber operations affect warfare outcomes, both today and in the future?