BAE Systems develops cyber defence for military aircraft

Posted on 10 October, 2017 by Advance 

BAE Systems is developing cyber defence capabilities to help aircraft detect and mitigate cyberattacks in real time.
   
Above:

An airborne Apache helicopter.
Courtesy BAE Systems


The new capabilities - including system analysis, reverse engineering, and intrusion detection - will build on the company’s state-of-the-art threat management solutions and help protect warfighters and aircraft from a variety of cyber threats.

While future platforms are designed with cybersecurity in mind, the current fleet of military aircraft was not always and may be vulnerable to cyberattacks. These fixed- and rotary-wing platforms were developed to be in service for decades and need periodic upgrades. They are complex systems packed with processors, computers, networks, and data links, creating an interconnected digital environment that may expose warfighters to cyber threats.

“We understand how the threats to military aircraft are evolving and we’re focused on developing technology that protects warfighters from current and emerging cyber threats,” said Cheryl Paradis, director of Threat Management Solutions at BAE Systems. “This work will help provide them with the tools they need to successfully complete their missions.”

The company’s new threat management capabilities include automated vulnerability assessment, subsystem hardening and malicious system behavior identification. The technology can be implemented on existing threat warning systems or as a stand-alone solution. This approach builds on the company’s commitment to providing more mission capabilities to warfighters without burdening their aircraft with excessive size, weight and power demands.

These cyber defence capabilities expand the company’s threat management portfolio, including the recently announced 3-Dimensional Advanced Warning System (3DAWS) product suite, which is designed to protect aircraft from first-encounter kinetic threats with layered countermeasures.