An Information Age Strategy for Government Information Technology

The below is a chapter I wrote for Threats In the Age of Obama (Amazon), recently published by Nimble Books. The book is divided into two portions: one set of chapters on future threats, and another set on ideas for dealing with them. My chapter–in the latter section–focused on information technology solutions.

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What is the perfect information technology solution to coming national security threats?

There isn’t one solution to multiple threats. Rather than searching for a single solution, our national security community should adapt its IT procurement strategy to develop many solutions, each addressing a specific threat at the lowest possible cost.

The existing strategy is as follows: after being caught off guard by an unforeseen crisis–a terrorist attack, an outbreak of violence, a surprise nuclear test–we reflect on our failure and identify a single cause. Maybe we didn’t have enough information. Maybe we had too much information and couldn’t sort through it all. Or maybe we had the right information but we didn’t collaborate.

After pinpointing the cause we spend years–and tens of millions of dollars–trying to develop a handful of Perfect Software Tools to remedy the deficiency. Much of that time and money is spent on procurement bureaucracy: the first line of code is written after months of identifying requirements, issuing RFPs, waiting for bids, and awarding contracts.… Read the rest