Part I. Of Brokers and Proxies: 1. Cyber proxies: an introduction; 2. Proxies: an instrument of power since ancient times; 3. Cyber power: geopolitics and human rights; Part II. Cyber Proxies Up Close: 4. Cyber proxies on a tight leash: the United States; 5. Cyber proxies on a loose leash: Iran and Syria; 6. Cyber proxies on the loose: the former Soviet Union; 7. Change over time: China's evolving relationships with cyber proxies; Part III. Implications: 8. The theory: state responsibility and cyber proxies; 9. The practice: shaping cyber proxy relationships; 10. Conclusion: cyber proxies, the future, and suggestions for further research; Future research; Notes.
Cyber Mercenaries explores how and why states use hackers as proxies to project power through cyberspace.
Tim Maurer co-directs the Cyber Policy Initiative at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He is a member of several US track 1.5 cyber dialogues and the Freedom Online Coalition's cybersecurity working group. He co-chaired the Advisory Board of the 2015 Global Conference on CyberSpace, participated in the Global Commission on Internet Governance, and supported the confidence-building work of the OSCE. His work has been published by Foreign Policy, The Washington Post, TIME, Jane's Intelligence Review, CNN, Slate, Lawfare, and other academic and media venues. He holds a Master's in Public Policy from the Harvard Kennedy School.
'The cyber revolution is accelerating the diffusion of power in
global politics. Non-state actors are increasingly important, but
they form a complex set of alliances and arrangements with
governments. Some are proxies for government on a tight leash; some
virtually roam free. Tim Maurer continues his pioneering work on
cyber politics with this important exploration of cyber
mercenaries.' Joseph S. Nye, University Distinguished Service
Professor at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and author of
The Future of Power
'Anyone who wants a thorough understanding of cyber operations,
including proxies, must read this book. Maurer is an investigative
scientist and provides the first blow-by-blow account of real cyber
operations that use proxies. He uncovers new information about
existing proxy relationships between nations, what feeds the proxy
relationship, and how countries differ in how proxies are used in a
depth never seen before. If you're going to read one book on
offensive cyber, read this one.' David Brumley, Director of CyLab
at Carnegie Mellon University, and Winner of DARPA's Cyber Grand
Challenge
'Cyber Mercenaries is a very timely book focusing on cyber proxies
– subjects often hidden behind the wall of government secrecy while
playing an increasingly important and visible in cyber operations.
States have a long history of using conventional proxies, cyber
proxies are 'the newest kids on the block'. Based on academic
research and case studies, Tim Maurer addresses the capabilities of
cyber proxies, the different types of cyber proxies and their
relationships with states in the manner that is both very
insightful and catching for policy makers, practitioners of
international relations, academia, experts and citizens alike.'
Marina Kaljurand, Chair of the Global Commission on the Stability
of Cyberspace and served as the Foreign Minister of Estonia from
2015–2016
'Authoritarian regimes, like China, Russia, and Iran like to hide
their tracks in the digital wilderness by outsourcing cyber
espionage operations to the criminal underworld. Others prefer to
keep a tight leash, but still employ hundreds of contractors to aid
their strategic ambitions. Tim Maurer's Cyber Mercenaries offers
the first systematic scholarly treatment of how and why governments
use proxies to do their bidding in cyberspace. Weaving together
high-level theories and historical analogies with highly detailed
case studies, Maurer's book helps illuminate how governments
maneuver for influence in cyberspace today. A must read for
scholars and students alike.' Ron Deibert, Director of the Citizen
Lab at the Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto
'Tim Maurer's Cyber Mercenaries is a comprehensive and cogent
description of how nation-states engage proxy actors to carry out
cyber-based espionage, information operations, and even acts of
destruction. Combining deep research with compelling analysis,
Maurer demonstrates that this increasing blend of public and
private cyber aggression challenges our concepts of sovereignty,
international law, and even warfare. Indispensable for government
and private sector policy makers.' Michael Chertoff, former US
Secretary of Homeland Security and Executive Chairman of the
Chertoff Group
'A must-read for anybody interested in how states use hackers and
for what ends. Rigorously researched, Maurer offers the first
comprehensive study of proxy relationships in the cyberspace
domain.' Eric Rosenbach, Co-Director of the Belfer Center, Harvard
Kennedy School, former Pentagon Chief of Staff and Assistant
Secretary of Defense
'As the technology and use of cyber means has evolved, there has
been a persistent lag in understanding by political leaders and
citizens of those means. Cyber Mercenaries is an important
contribution to closing that gap. Building on conceptual frameworks
from international relations scholarship and Just War theory, and
illustrating with several contemporary case studies, Maurer shows
how existing international law and political agreements likely
offer an incomplete basis for maintaining stable expectations and
relations among states as cyber interactions increase in the years
to come.' Daniel Baer, former US Ambassador to the OSCE and Deputy
Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and
Labor
'Countries such as Iran and Syria have become increasingly adept at
exploiting the ambiguity of cyberspace to their benefit. They
frequently engage in coercive cyber operations against domestic and
regional political adversaries and embrace proxies to evade
accountability. Cyber Mercenaries provides an authoritative
framework for understanding how Iran and Syria pursue their
strategic interests in cyberspace. Maurer is especially skillful at
bridging a scholarly perspective with accessible examples and
language, and in doing so makes a significant contribution to
breaking down barriers and improving the public discourse.' Collin
Anderson, author of Iran's Cyber Threat: Espionage, Sabotage, and
Revenge
'Cyber Mercenaries is comprehensive and sophisticated guide to the
growing threat of hostile actions in cyber space for which a nation
cannot or will not take responsibility. Tim Maurer explains in
clear language the policy implications for attribution, deterrence,
military stability, and the potential of emerging international
norms.' Robert Axelrod, Walgreen Professor for the Study of Human
Understanding, University of Michigan and MacArthur Prize
Recipient
'In Cyber Mercenaries, Tim Maurer sheds light on the complex,
covert relationships that have been forged between governments and
their proxies in cyberspace, where national security norms and
strategies have been upended. Maurer describes new systemic
security vulnerabilities faced by connected societies, as state and
non-state actors of all stripes capitalize on the instantaneous
extraterritorial reach made possible through cyber technologies.
This book provides an important framework for thinking about norms
on cyber proxies, consistent with universal human rights and
international law. This is an important contribution to the global
conversation about governance in the digital ecosystem.' Eileen
Donahoe, Executive Director of Stanford University's Global Digital
Policy Incubator and former US Ambassador to the UN Human Rights
Council
'The use by states of proxies - mercenaries and privateers - is
nothing new. But in the information age the use of such proxies has
become both more pervasive and more concerning in view of the
potential for ill-judged or ill-disciplined behaviour to be
attributed to states with potentially escalatory consequences. Tim
Maurer has produced a ground-breaking and rigorous study of this
phenomenon drawing on a wide range of case studies.' Nigel Inkster,
Senior Adviser at the International Institute for Strategic Studies
and former senior official of the British Secret Intelligence
Service
'A timely book on the subject which is of extreme importance to
everybody.' Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan, authors of The Red
Web: The Struggle Between Russia's Digital Dictators and the New
Online Revolutionaries
'Tim Maurer has broken important new ground explaining how states
project force in cyberspace through proxies, from government
contractors to activists to mercenary hackers. He argues
persuasively that states' dependence on proxy forces will increase,
and that we will see new kinds of collaboration and even
competition between state and non-state actors. His book is an
important and urgent call to policymakers to start thinking about
how to avoid new conflicts that will inevitably arise from these
state-proxy relationships.' Shane Harris, author of @War: The Rise
of the Military-Internet Complex
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