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New Atlanticist

May 26, 2020

The 5×5—Is it a game or is it real? Simulations and wargaming in cyber

By Simon Handler

Greater insight into risk and response allow public and private sector organizations to better prepare for crisis before it happens and rerun history to stave off defeat in future. Wargames can be complex live events or low-cost simulations. They can even be the basis for major reforms to policy and doctrine, giving us much to understand about them. Shall we play a game?

Cybersecurity

New Atlanticist

Apr 1, 2020

The battle for 5G leadership is global and the US is behind: The White House’s new strategy aims to correct that.

By John T. Watts

The West has fallen behind in the competition for leadership of the 5G transition, a reality that has huge economic implications and also risks the West facing the reality of a global telecommunications backbone that not only has serious security flaws, but is also shaped by political values incompatible with our own. A new White House strategy aims to close the 5G transition gap.

Defense Technologies Internet

Report

Mar 4, 2020

A framework for an open, trusted, and resilient 5G global telecommunications network

By John T. Watts

The rollout of 5G will take place over the next decade, and its future is still being written. But, the United States and its allies are behind; they must act now or face irrelevancy. This study lays out a vision for a global 5G network that satisfies the values of the United States and like-minded partners and is in the best interests of the global population.

Cybersecurity Technology & Innovation

John T. Watts is a nonresident senior fellow in the Forward Defense practice of the Atlantic Council’s Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security and head of US federal coordination at Cocoon Data.

At the Atlantic Council, he was foundational in the development of Forward Defense. His diverse work at the Council has included research and papers examining the creation of a trusted and resilient global 5G telecommunications network; the threat and geopolitical implications of hypersonic weapons in the Indo-Pacific; the threat of disinformation to national sovereignty; and a range of Indo-Pacific national-security issues and regional relationships. He is particularly noted for his work running innovative and high-profile war games to explore long-term great-power competitive technology strategies, future Army concepts of operations, alternate cybersecurity challenges, and complex Baltic and Middle East security issues. His current work explores the opportunities, challenges, and implications of the AUKUS agreement. 

Previously he has been a senior policy advisor to the Office of the Secretary of Defense for Policy, where he managed strategic evaluations of security cooperation activities. He has also worked at a number of small and start-up tech and consulting companies. Prior to moving to the United States, Watts was a staff officer at the Australian Department of Defence and spent more than a dozen years in the Australian Army Reserves, including two as a liaison officer with the Virginia National Guard. 

Watts holds a Master of International Law from the Australian National University and Honours of Arts in international studies from the University of Adelaide, Australia.