01/22/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/22/2025 12:05
WASHINGTON-Today, House Committee on Homeland Security Chairman Mark E. Green, MD (R-TN) delivered the following opening statement in a full committee hearing to examine cybersecurity threats to the homeland, featuring testimony from the private sector. Witness testimony was provided by Adam Meyers, senior vice president of Counter Adversary Operations at CrowdStrike; retired Rear Admiral Mark Montgomery, U.S. Navy, senior director of the Center on Cyber and Technology Innovation at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies; Brandon Wales, vice president of Cybersecurity Strategy at SentinelOne; and Kemba Walden, president at Paladin Global Institute.
Watch Chairman Green's opening statement.
As prepared for delivery:
Good morning. Now that we are officially organized as a Committee, I would like to welcome everybody to the 119th Congress.
We have a lot of work to do to support President Trump's agenda and secure the homeland. That is why cybersecurity is a top priority, and why it is the topic of our first full committee hearing.
In today's interconnected world, virtually every aspect of American life is impacted by cybersecurity. From our nation's healthcare system and water supply to simple internet browsing, cyberspace is increasingly becoming a digital battlefield. America's adversaries use cyberspace to undermine our sovereignty and threaten the services and infrastructure that Americans depend on.
The People's Republic of China (PRC), Russia, North Korea, Iran, and criminal actors weaponize cyberspace to harm our nation. They are only getting more sophisticated-and more aggressive.
Right now, the PRC is burrowed into our infrastructure.
Let that sink in for a moment. China is pre-positioned in our infrastructure, we know it, and they have been-for years.
Should we enter into a conflict with the PRC, the Chinese Communist Party is ready to shut down our essential services-our communications, our energy grid, our maritime ports, and our water systems, to name a few.
We cannot let this happen. The American economy, government, and military depend upon the resilience of our networks and infrastructure.
It's past time for us to get a step ahead of the Typhoons-a list of actors that seem to grow every day. We've played defense for too long, and now it's time to go on the offense.
To do this, we need prepared cyber professionals. I know that some of these nation-state issues go beyond what our current cyber defenders can address. This is why one of my top priorities this Congress is to pass my Cyber PIVOTT Act, which cultivates the cyber workforce we need at scale. We passed it out of this Committee unanimously last year, and this year, we hope to get it signed into law.
We also need a coordinated, whole-of-government effort that can rapidly share information with the private sector. Since the private sector owns and operates most of the critical infrastructure in the United States, the collaboration of the organizations our witnesses represent today is essential.
I look forward to hearing from our panel of witnesses today about how we can improve public-private partnerships for cyber and critical infrastructure issues.
So far, I've focused on one threat actor-arguably the one that poses the greatest risk to the United States in cyberspace and beyond. However, there are many other threats that we must be prepared to address simultaneously.
For example, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps has targeted our elections, notably hacking the Trump campaign in the 2024 cycle. It has also repeatedly tried to compromise U.S. water and wastewater systems. The intelligence community indicates that Moscow uses cyber disruptions to influence the decisions of countries like the United States. North Korea is a major culprit of cybercrimes as well.
To devise strategies to address these challenges and threats in cyber space, we must better understand them-and that's what we are doing here today.
Our witnesses will provide the insights we need to think critically about tackling current and emerging cyber threats to our homeland. All witnesses are private sector leaders-three of whom bring key insights from their government experience.
Thank you all for being here to set the scene for us as we dive into the 119th Congress. I look forward to the discussion, and to a productive Congress of enhancing our cybersecurity posture.
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