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Nuclear weaponsAre nuclear weapons safe from cyber-attacks?

Published 22 July 2013

Research will look into whether today’s nuclear weapons are safe from computer hacking. Specifically, the research seeks to address the question of whether the ability to use and the confidence in nuclear weapons is being eroded by new cyber capabilities being developed by an increasingly large range of actors.

Dr. Andrew Futter, a lecturer at the University of Leicester’s Department of Politics and International Relations, has been awarded a grant by the U.K. Economic and Social Research Council. The grant of £167,000 awarded in early July means that he can go ahead with his research, entitled “Cyber Warfare and Nuclear Strategy: Changing the Utility of Nuclear Weapons in Global Security.”

A University of Leicester release reports that Futter will be looking at how advances in global cyber capacities might impact nuclear strategy and the utility of nuclear weapons. Specifically, the research seeks to address the question of whether the ability to use and the confidence in nuclear weapons is being eroded by new cyber capabilities being developed by an increasingly large range of actors.

The 3-year project will see Futter conduct research in the United States, Europe, and the United Kingdom, in order to speak with leading officials, practitioners, and academics from both the political and information technology worlds.

As part of the project, Futter intends to hold a multinational conference at Leicester during the second year of his research, and in the third year, publish a book detailing the key findings of the research as well as submitting policy briefings to the U.K. and U.S. governments and to NATO.

Futter says that while he remains open-minded about what the project may uncover, he hopes to raise the profile of a number of key issues that will become an increasingly important part of our everyday life.

 

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