Featured Utah Hosts Defense Department Cyber Security Exercise

Published on July 21st, 2021 📆 | 3856 Views ⚑

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Utah Hosts Defense Department Cyber Security Exercise


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CAMP WILLIAMS, Utah – Hundreds of military and civilian cyber defense specialists converged on Utah Tuesday as the largest unclassified cyber defense exercise began at Camp Williams.  

As we learned earlier this year with the Colonial Pipeline and the JBS meatpacking plant computer attacks, cybersecurity is an ever-growing concern for the public. 

About 800 people from around the country arrived in Utah for Cyber Shield 2021. 

It’s a major event for Camp Williams.  

“What we are doing here at Cyber Shield give our soldiers real-world experience,” said Lt. Col. Brad Rhodes. 

The Army National Guard has stepped up its cybersecurity training. Hundreds of military members from across the US are training on defense-focused tactical exercises. 

“Depending on which open-source material you read, China has 50 – 100,000 cyber operators. They’re building capacity to attack and do incursions and properties around the world, Rhodes said. “So, it is very important to understand the nation-state actors out there are building these capacities and it’s why we need to build these capacities.”   

Rhodes has decades of experience in the military and said cybersecurity has climbed to the top of the list of defense priorities.  





“Inside the military itself, across the department of defense, we are actually a pretty small cadre. Having been in Cyber Com and working some of those missions out there, I will argue we are probably some of the most capable and talented cyber force.”   

Computer security workers from large companies like Boeing, Microsoft, and Utah’s Pluralsight are taking part in Cyber Shield 2021.  

“We look at what we are doing here for simulation. We start at website defacement then accelerate it to criminal actor. The criminal actor space is exactly what happened with the pipeline incident,” said Aaron Rosenmund from Pluralsight 

Rhodes said, “At the end of it we give them a report. Here’s what you did good, here’s what you did bad, and here is what you could improve.”  

He also offered some simple advice for people at home. 

“Don’t click on stuff,” Rhodes said. “Know that no, there isn’t a Nigerian prince.” 

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