Federal News
U.S. Government Strengthens Cybersecurity Posture
March 19, 2026
The U.S. National Cyber Strategy, led by the White House and supported by agencies including CISA and the U.S. Army, is intensifying efforts to deter cyberattacks from adversaries such as Iran by increasing the consequences of targeting critical infrastructure. This strategy emphasizes public-private partnerships, particularly with the Defense Industrial Base, to enhance protection of military readiness and national security. Procurement professionals should anticipate increased demand for cybersecurity solutions and services that support critical infrastructure defense and resilience.
- The strategy prioritizes safeguarding defense installations and critical infrastructure, signaling potential procurement opportunities for cybersecurity technologies and services.
- Agencies like CISA are focusing on partnerships with private sector entities, indicating a collaborative procurement environment.
- Contractors specializing in cyber defense, risk management, and infrastructure protection may find expanded opportunities aligned with this strategy.
- Organizations should align proposals and capabilities with the strategyโs emphasis on elevating adversary risk and protecting defense-critical assets.
The risk calculus on our adversary side in this space doesnt seem to be calibrated correctly. Things like holding our critical infrastructure at risk. That is something that an adversary would not consider doing in any sort of kinetic way, primarily because they know the response from the United States would be rather dramatic. That same level of thinking should have to be applied when they are making calculations in [the cyber] domain.
— Sean Cairncross, White House National Cyber Director
If there is a disruption to the critical infrastructure to supply some of our bases, can we move people and equipment in a time of conflict? We have priorities given to [the strategys] pillar four: protecting our defense, critical infrastructure. All of our installations weve been doing, seeing that now come out from the White House with a very clear directive to prioritize and work together.
— Brandon Pugh, Principal Cyber Adviser, U.S. Army
We are a partnership agency first, and so we are working with all the people here on stage, with all of the companies and critical structure organizations in this room. In shaping adversary behavior. Were really looking to increase the cost of doing business to the adversary, and were trying to figure out ways to do that at scale.
— Chris Butera, Acting Executive Assistant Director For Cybersecurity, CISA
Agencies
White House, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, U.S. Army
Locations
Sources
- U.S. Cyber Strategy Aims to Reset Adversariesโ Risk Calculus Amid Iran Threats | GovCIO Media & Research · GovCIO Media & Research · Mar 19