Small Wars Journal

NATO Is in a Cyberwar with Russia and Must Expand Article 5 to Include Cyberwarfare or Risk Losing and Diminishment

Fri, 09/24/2021 - 1:59am

NATO Is in a Cyberwar with Russia and Must Expand Article 5 to Include Cyberwarfare or Risk Losing and Diminishment

By Brian E. Frydenborg

Introduction

Article 5 of NATO’s foundational 1949 North Atlantic Treaty(link is external) demands that if an “armed attack” is carried out against even just one member state, all other member states “shall” consider that attack (and any armed attack) on a member state “an attack against them all” and “will assist,” up to and “including the use of armed force.”  This bedrock is the centerpiece for over seven decades of the Pax Americana(link is external): the U.S.-led global system of military power, alliances, collective defense, and ability to project combined strength anywhere on the planet.  For it to continue in these roles, NATO must adapt to current and future threats by adding cyberwarfare(link is external)—including information warfare(link is external)—to Article 5.

 

Cyberwarfare a Defining Part of Modern Warfare

Most cyberattacks(link is external) against NATO states are carried out by Russia(link is external).  A key element of these involve what is called “information warfare” (“a new face of war,” quoting a RAND Corporation report(link is external)), heavily involving disinformation and that includes “warfare” to indicate these are hardly benign/normal influence operations but those that have always been part of any serious conventional war in modern times.

The ever-evolving concept of warfare(link is external) in our digital age, then, does not have to include(link is external) shots being fired(link is external) from guns, and it is naïve to not consider(link is external) cyberwarfare as simply another(link is external) form of war(link is external) in the twenty-first century that uses force in the digital realm to achieve results in some of the same spirit as traditional armies: attack, defense, deception, sabotage, destruction, and to pressure actors to change behavior.  Clausewitz most famously wrote(link is external) that “war is merely the continuation of policy [or politics] by other means” and would have well understood cyberwarfare to be war and well within that “other means” category.

Russia and China(link is external) are the two countries that have led in cyberwarfare.  Bolder but weaker Russia is NATO’s—and America’s—foremost enemy (even if unofficially but obviously in a de facto sense(link is external)), while China is stronger but more reserved as the West’s clearest top rival.  China has carried out and been a leader in(link is external) non-weaponized hacking and espionage (admittedly common among all major states), but has not, say, publicly released disinformation or stolen information in a manner timed to seriously interfere with NATO countries’ elections (as Russia has(link is external)).  And though China has its own complex influence operations(link is external), Russia undoubtedly has led by far in cyberattacks more hostile(link is external) than espionage (uniquely so among major powers) since(link is external) its game-changing 2007 Estonia cybercampaign(link is external).

Figure 1. Where the political warfare fits within the implements of power.  “All activities are illustrative, rather than an exhaustive list of possible actors.”  From RAND's The Growing Need to Focus on Modern Political Warfare

Russia officially considers(link is external) NATO a “threat(link is external),” and since that 2007 Estonia cybercampaign, has been(link is external) far more aggressive(link is external) and threatening(link is external) towards NATO states, often stoking internal divisions(link is external) and flooding them in cyberattacks, including(link is external) election interference(link is external) and boosting secessionism(link is external), with notable cybercampaigns being carried out against over twenty(link is external) NATO member states (apart(link is external) from campaigns(link is external) against non-NATO states(link is external)). 

Furthermore, de facto, undeclared wars are the most common type(link is external) of war in modern history even if the term “war” is not used.  America, for example, has a long history of undeclared war(link is external) going all the way back to the nation’s earliest days involving conflict(link is external) with Native Americans and also the 1798-1800 Quasi-War(link is external), then popularly termed “The Undeclared War with France.”  As one scholar notes(link is external), “the legal state of war is possible without actual fighting.”

 

The Nature of Russian Cyberwarfare Confronting NATO 

Thus, it is hardly extreme to consider(link is external) NATO and Russia in an undeclared cyberwar and, therefore(link is external), a state of undeclared war(link is external)NATO Review, NATO’s flagship journal, even in 2017 published analysis(link is external) noting that Russia was waging “non-kinetic political war on the West,” as I have(link is external) also maintained.

Russia’s weapons in its undeclared war on NATO are not tanks, bombs, bullets, or jets; rather, they are illicit financing, trolls, bots, and fake news, with the Kremlin often fomenting, funding, and promoting the rise of far-right(link is external) ethno-nationalist extremists, all while disparaging those in the center and mainstream left.  Putin’s party, the banally nationalist United Russia, has even formed formal and informal alliances(link is external) with significant(link is external) like-minded political parties(link is external) in major(link is external) NATO countries.

These campaigns(link is external), relying on hacking, disinformation, propaganda, and other cyber-methods, are coordinated through major components of the Russian government and close Putin allies in and out of the Kremlin(link is external), often using thousands of fake accounts to artificially boost their impact, which, in turn, are bolstered within(link is external) the target states by agents and local allies along with unwitting true believers long dubbed “useful idiots(link is external).”  In many NATO countries—including the U.S.(link is external)—Putin is even liked(link is external) by far-rightists(link is external).  Domestic media, then, can become loud voices augmenting Russia’s propaganda, especially right-wing media outlets(link is external), but also some(link is external) on the far-left(link is external).  Repeated enough, top traditional outlets latch onto(link is external) this disinformation, sometimes mainstreaming it, other times critiquing yet still propagating, as I have previously explained(link is external).

Reigning as the supreme disruptor on social media, Russia spews a “firehose of falsehoods(link is external)” that has been massively effective, distorting(link is external) and gaslighting(link is external) public discussion(link is external) to wildly amplify(link is external) Russia’s preferred narratives beyond any natural organic reach, influencing many millions, thus helping to create an atmosphere where disinformation is sometimes consumed even more(link is external) than actual news(link is external) and doubt about even basic truths(link is external) becomes widespread(link is external).

And once Putin’s favored are in office partly because of Russian disinformation, they in turn(link is external) further spread Russian disinformation(link is external) from the highest levels(link is external) of their governments,(link is external) even mimicking Kremlin tactics(link is external) and adopting(link is external) policies favorable to Russia(link is external), even covering up Russia’s trail (both America’s 2019 Mueller report(link is external) and the British Parliament’s Intelligence & Security Committee’s exceptional Russia report(link is external) released last year note damning examples of obstruction(link is external) in their respective governments).

Most notably for NATO, the American presidential candidate Putin twice ordered Russian election interference on behalf of had expressed hostility(link is external) to NATO repeatedly during the campaign(link is external), even contemplated leaving the Alliance(link is external) as president, and may still have done so if reelected(link is external).

 

Cyberwarfare a Larger Threat Now to NATO than Terrorism

By far, the most damaging, destabilizing, and effective attacks NATO countries since 9/11 have been Russian cyberattacks, campaigns(link is external) that have been able(link is external) to affect political outcomes(link is external) and internal dynamics in numerous NATO countries to suit Putin’s agenda.

Russian cyberwarfare efforts(link is external) against the U.S. have included election interference—beginning with what I called back in December 2016 the First Russo-American Cyberwar(link is external)—that has already caused damage to America(link is external), its democracy(link is external), and its reputation(link is external) that is hard to exaggerate(link is external), with effects(link is external) not only still being felt(link is external) by the U.S(link is external). but guaranteed to still(link is external) be felt for some time(link is external).  Russia is also clearly(link is external) and repeatedly(link is external) promoting unrest(link is external) and division, recently pushing(link is external) both disinformation(link is external) about the coronavirus(link is external) and bogus(link is external) conspiracy theories(link is external) of fraud 2020 U.S. presidential election.  In the run-up(link is external) to that election, the Russians targeted(link is external) the main political rival(link is external) of their preferred incumbent, just as in 2016.

These efforts produced results: multiple(link is external) respectable surveys(link is external) and any casual look at social media show that vast numbers(link is external) of Americans—even key leaders(link is external)—are supporting(link is external) this disinformation, even spreading nonsense about both the 2020 presidential election(link is external), damaging faith in the very foundations(link is external) of democracy coronavirus(link is external) (including millions doubting(link is external) coronavirus vaccines(link is external), literally helping kill Americans(link is external)).  There are also global effects on opinion of America(link is external) and the rest of the West along with international views(link is external) on coronavirus(link is external) and vaccines(link is external).

Most recently coming to light are the devastatingly far-reaching(link is external) SolarWinds operation(link is external); a cyberattack against USAID(link is external) that ensnared some 150(link is external) government agencies, non-profits, think tanks, and human rights groups globally that have criticized Russia; a recent attack on top U.S. cybersecurity firm FireEye(link is external); and the Colonial Pipeline(link is external) and JBS meat plant ransomware(link is external) attacks, with Russia playing(link is external) a role(link is external) with these ransomware groups(link is external) similar to how(link is external) the Taliban gave al-Qaeda safe harbor, resulting in the 9/11 attacks—incidentally, the only time NATO ever invoked Article 5.

In contrast, physical(link is external) terrorist attacks(link is external) in NATO countries since 9/11, while tragic(link is external), have still had comparatively limited effects.  Even Russia’s own 2018 Novichok chemical weapon attack(link is external) on British soil in Salisbury against Russian military intelligence officer turned spy for the UK Sergei Skripal had more symbolic an effect than anything else, dwarfed by the damage from Russian efforts(link is external) to move the 2016 Brexit vote in the direction of Leave(link is external) or the effect of Russia’s campaign(link is external) to amplify Scottish secessionism (now increasingly likely(link is external) and sooner rather than later(link is external), an outcome that would obviously dismember and damage a UK already acutely damaged(link is external) by Brexit).  To(link is external) quote journalist George Packer, “antisocial media has us all in its grip.”
 

Falling Short 

NATO currently has a Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence(link is external) (CCDCOE) in Tallinn, Estonia.  Yet even presently, one-sixth of NATO— Albania, Canada, Iceland, Luxembourg, and North Macedonia—are not members of this Centre, though, encouragingly(link is external), Canada and Luxembourg are going to join, new states were recently added(link is external), and non-NATO states Austria, Finland, Sweden, and Switzerland are “Contributing Participants,” a status available to those outside of NATO; Australia, Ireland, Japan, South Korea, and—most recently(link is external)—Ukraine will join that second group.  There is also set to be a new military cyberdefense command center fully operational in 2023(link is external) at NATO’s military base in Belgium.

NATO considers(link is external) “cyber defence…part of NATO’s core task of collective defence” and has since 2014(link is external), when the Alliance first specifically articulated the possibility of invoking Article 5 in reaction to cyberattacks (but only “on a case-by-case basis(link is external)”).  NATO has since(link is external) “pledge[d] to ensure the Alliance keeps pace with the fast evolving cyber threat landscape and that our nations will be capable of defending themselves in cyberspace as in the air, on land and at sea,” repeatedly reiterating(link is external) that Article 5 being invoked(link is external) in response to a cyberattack is a possibility, including just this September 2020(link is external) and in June 2021(link is external).

Yet official working papers(link is external)conferences(link is external), interviews, statements, and raising possibilities are no substitute for a concrete, clear policy, and NATO simply does not have this.

The vague idea seems to be that if a cyberattack was “serious(link is external)” enough, Article 5 could be activated, but this seems myopic: death by a thousand cuts is still death and has the same effect as decapitation, so tolerating many smaller attacks, thereby transmitting a clear indication that there will not be a collective Article 5 response to them, is just bad policy.  It is also most decidedly not the case for armed attacks, in which any by a nation-state or sponsored by one would trigger Article 5.  Years of unrelenting cyberwarfare has done more damage to NATO than any Soviet Army did during the Cold War, in part, because of Article 5: the USSR and then Russia did not dare use armed force to strike any NATO country for fear of Article 5’s unequivocal guarantee of a collective response, even in 2015 when NATO-member Turkey shot down a Russian military jet(link is external) over Syria.

Yet when it comes to cyberwarfare, NATO is practically inviting Russia to attack and get away with it, with the Alliance quite consistently demonstrating an unwillingness, even inability under its existing framework to collectively respond to Russia’s cyberaggression.  As the aforementioned UK Russia report(link is external) noted, “Russia is not overly concerned about individual reprisal” against its aggressive acts, including its cyberattacks, with even the U.S. demonstrably inspiring little hesitation.

Clearly, pretending cyberwarfare is not war and allowing cyberwarfare in real-world practice to be kept out of NATO’s Article 5—leaving individual members states flailing independently and ineffectively against an organized, determined, and capable de facto enemy content to stand down its conventional military against NATO while unleashing its cyberunits upon it with impunity—has failed.

At the end of New York Times cybersecurity reporter Nicole Perlroth’s recent book This Is How They Tell Me the World Endsthe indispensable, terrifying, definitive account(link is external) of the development of cyberwarfare and the mess in which we currently find ourselves—the author warns that “many will say” that “these…critical assignments of our time” to deter and defend ourselves from cyberwarfare “are impossible, but we have summoned the best of our scientific community, government, industry, and everyday people to overcome existential challenges before.  Why can’t we do it again?…We don’t have to wait until the Big One to get going.”

As a main advantage of the West over Russia is that people like the West a lot more than Russia—materializing in close economic, diplomatic, and military ties Russia can only dream of—the easiest way for the West to face and fight this dire and metastasizing cyberthreat from Russia is by leveraging its alliances, and, most of all, this means involving NATO and doing so in a big way. 

As there is no statute of limitations on cyberattacks and the just-proposed framework not precluded by the current NATO treaty, NATO would even be in its full rights (and is overdue) to now invoke Article 5 against Russia for its cyberwarfare so that this cyberwarfare will result in far more pain for Russia than any damage it inflicts.

 

How to Revise Article 5 and the NATO Treaty Overall

With Russia’s rampant cyberwarfare only intensifying(link is external) and its obvious pattern as a hostile bad-faith actor(link is external), it is absolutely necessary for a paradigm shift in the international system for deterring cyberattacks.  Because NATO is the premier Western defensive alliance, crystalizing cyberwarfare’s relationship to Article 5 is a must, the only way for NATO to maintain credible collective defense in the twenty-first century. 

To this end, “or cyberattack” must be added after every occurrence of the words “armed attack” in Article 5(link is external) (e.g., “The Parties agree that an armed attack or cyberattack against one or more of them…”).

In a longform, earlier version of this proposal(link is external), I have proposed a new detailed Article 15 that defines cyberwarfare in the Article 5 context and who/what would be covered.  Any attacks that cause damage and harm would be included, as would digital information warfare/disinformation campaigns.  Yet fairly standard espionage operations will not be included (say, China’s hacking) unless either the scale is so exceptional (as was the case with Russia’s unprecedented SolarWinds hack(link is external)) or if what is hacked is weaponized(link is external) or threats to weaponize that information are made.

By “weaponized,” I mean any action that tries to coerce, influence, or target publicly.  Targets that would trigger Article 5 include all NATO citizens, residents, or entities—public sector or private—or anyone operating on NATO member state territory, as NATO cannot tolerate its territory being used for any such attack.  Any attacks targeting family, friends, or connections of these folks for the same purposes would also be covered.  This would apply to all state or state-sponsored cyberattacks, while terrorist or non-state actors would also be covered under certain actions but other activities would default to being handled by normal counterterrorism and/or law enforcement agencies.

 

Conclusion

Expanding Article 5 is necessary and overdue. The early twenty-first century’s second decade has been something of a Wild West, with Russia using the lawlessness of the cyber domain(link is external) to its devastating effect.  The time for lawlessness is over, and revising NATO’s Article 5 as suggested herein will not only clarify the rules for NATO enemies and rivals, but also for the members of a NATO Alliance itself that is in desperate need of clarity(link is external) and strength on this issue.  It will also make NATO once again an alliance that instills fear in the minds of Russian leaders (as it did with Stalin(link is external) and subsequent Soviet leadership(link is external)) who would engage in reckless acts of aggression against NATO or its states, even if “just” through cyberwarfare.

About the Author(s)

Brian Frydenborg has spent two decades studying, writing about, or working in the fields of conflict analysis, counterterrorism, international affairs, public policy, politics, history, and humanitarian aid and international development.  His work has been featured in Newsweek, Jerusalem Post, Modern War Institute at West Point, London School of Economics and Political Science Middle East Centre, Jordan Times, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), and Real Clear Defense/History, among others.  You can follow him on Twitter @bfry1981 and on his website, Real Context News.

 

Comments

MayRonda

Tue, 01/18/2022 - 9:34am

The Russians know how to hide their plans. The misfire that they made at the 2014 Olympics is unlikely to happen again. Cyber attacks from Russia cause very great damage to many countries, primarily to the inhabitants of the United States. I would like US residents to be safe and able to make online purchases in applications like Tette nude(link is external) without fear and not be afraid that someone will steal something from their credit card. I hope that the US and Russia will begin to interact much more closely in matters of cyber attacks.