"It's dozens of terrorist events that these have helped prevent, from my perspective," Gen Keith Alexander, commander of the US Cyber Commander and Director of the National Security Agency, told Senators during a Congressional hearing.
Responding to questions from Senator Pat Leahy, Alexander yesterday said the National Security Agency collects millions and millions of records and of them dozens of them have proved critical. This includes both domestic and foreign terrorist plots, he said, but refrained from elaborating further.
"The phone numbers on Zazi were the things that then allowed us to use the business records FISA, to go and find out connections from Zazi to other players throughout communities, specifically in New York City," he said.
"I just want to make sure that we're clear on one point. When I say dozens, what I'm talking about here is that these authorities complement each other in helping us identify different terrorist actions and help disrupt them. They complement each other," Alexander said.
He said that in light of the real and growing threats in cyberspace, the US needs a strong Pentagon role in cyberspace.
"While we feel confident that most foreign leaders believe that a devastating attack on the critical infrastructure and population of the United States by cyber means would elicit a prompt and proportionate response, it is possible, however, that some regime or cyber actor could misjudge the impact and the certainty of our resolve," he said.
The remote assaults last summer on Saudi Aramco and RasGas, for example, rendered inoperable-and effectively destroyed the data on-more than 30,000 computers.
