SUBMITTED RESOLUTIONS; Congressional Record Vol. 165, No. 58
(Senate - April 03, 2019)

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[Pages S2243-S2244]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                         SUBMITTED RESOLUTIONS

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 SENATE RESOLUTION 140--URGING THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A CYBER LEAGUE OF 
              INDO-PACIFIC STATES TO ADDRESS CYBER THREATS

  Mr. GARDNER (for himself and Mr. Coons) submitted the following 
resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations:

                              S. Res. 140

       Whereas the world has benefitted greatly from technological 
     innovations under the leadership of the United States in the 
     post-World War era, including the creation of the World Wide 
     Web which has provided an entirely new platform for wealth 
     creation and human flourishing through cyber-commerce and 
     connectivity;
       Whereas cybercrime affects companies large and small, as 
     well as infrastructure that is vital to the economy as a 
     whole;
       Whereas a 2018 study from the Center for Strategic and 
     International Studies, in partnership with McAfee, estimates 
     that the global economic losses from cybercrime are 
     approximately $600,000,000,000 annually and rising;
       Whereas, according to the Pew Charitable Trust, 64 percent 
     of people in the United States had fallen victim to 
     cybercriminals as of 2017;
       Whereas, on July 9, 2012, General Keith Alexander, then-
     Director of the National Security Agency, termed theft of 
     United States intellectual property ``the greatest transfer 
     of wealth in history'';
       Whereas, on September 25, 2015, the United States and the 
     People's Republic of China announced a commitment that 
     ``neither country's government will conduct or knowingly 
     support cyber-enabled theft of intellectual property, 
     including trade secrets or other confidential business 
     information, with the intent of providing competitive 
     advantages to companies or commercial sectors'';
       Whereas the People's Republic of China nonetheless 
     continues to contribute to the rise of cybercrime, exploiting 
     weaknesses in the international system to undermine fair 
     competition in technology and cyberspace, including through 
     theft of intellectual property and state-sponsored malicious 
     actions to undermine and weaken competition;
       Whereas, according to the 2019 Worldwide Threat Assessment 
     by the Director of National Intelligence: ``China, Russia, 
     Iran, and North Korea increasingly use cyber operations to 
     threaten both minds and machines in an expanding number of 
     ways--to steal information, to influence our citizens, or to 
     disrupt critical infrastructure.'';
       Whereas, from 2011 to 2018, more than 90 percent of cases 
     handled by the Department of Justice alleging economic 
     espionage by or to benefit a foreign country involved the 
     People's Republic of China;
       Whereas more than \2/3\ of the cases handled by the 
     Department of Justice involving theft of trade secrets have a 
     nexus to the People's Republic of China;
       Whereas experts have asserted that the Made in China 2025 
     strategy of the Government of the People's Republic of China 
     will incentivize Chinese entities to engage in unfair 
     competitive behavior, including additional theft of 
     technologies and intellectual property;
       Whereas the Democratic People's Republic of Korea has also 
     contributed to the rise of cybercrime and according to the 
     2018 Worldwide Threat Assessment by the Director of National 
     Intelligence: ``We expect the heavily sanctioned North Korea 
     to use cyber operations to raise funds and to gather 
     intelligence or launch attacks on South Korea and the United 
     States. . . . North Korean actors developed and launched the 
     WannaCry ransomware in May 2017, judging from technical links 
     to previously identified North Korean cyber tools, 
     tradecraft, and operational infrastructure. We also assess 
     that these actors conducted the cyber theft of $81 million 
     from the Bank of Bangladesh in 2016.'';
       Whereas section 2(a)(8) of the North Korea Sanctions and 
     Policy Enhancement Act of 2016 (22 U.S.C. 9201(a)(8)) states, 
     ``The Government of North Korea has provided technical 
     support and conducted destructive and coercive cyberattacks, 
     including against Sony Pictures Entertainment and other 
     United States persons.'';
       Whereas the United States has taken action on its own 
     against international cybercrime, including through--
       (1) the North Korea Sanctions and Policy Enhancement Act of 
     2016 (Public Law 114-122), which imposed mandatory sanctions 
     against persons engaging in significant activities 
     undermining cybersecurity on behalf of the Democratic 
     People's Republic of Korea; and
       (2) criminal charges filed by the Department of Justice on 
     October 25, 2018, in which the Department alleged that the 
     Chinese intelligence services conducted cyber intrusions 
     against at least a dozen companies in order to obtain 
     information on a commercial jet engine;
       Whereas the March 2016 Department of State International 
     Cyberspace Policy Strategy noted that ``the Department of 
     State anticipates a continued increase and expansion of our 
     cyber-focused diplomatic efforts for the foreseeable 
     future'';
       Whereas concerted action by countries that share concerns 
     about state-sponsored cyber theft is necessary to prevent the 
     growth of cybercrime and other destabilizing national 
     security and economic outcomes; and
       Whereas section 215 of the Asia Reassurance Initiative Act 
     of 2018 (Public Law 115-409) calls for ``robust cybersecurity 
     cooperation between the United States and nations in the 
     Indo-Pacific region'' and ``authorized to be appropriated 
     $100,000,000 for each of the fiscal years 2019 through 2023 
     to enhance cooperation between the United States and the 
     Indo-Pacific nations for the purpose of combatting 
     cybersecurity threats'': Now, therefore, be it
       Resolved, That the Senate--
       (1) urges the President to propose and champion the 
     negotiation of a treaty with like-minded partners in the 
     Indo-Pacific to ensure a free and open Internet free from 
     economically crippling cyberattacks;
       (2) calls for the treaty, which can be referred to as the 
     Cyber League of Indo-Pacific States (in this resolution 
     referred to as ``CLIPS''), to include the creation of an 
     Information Sharing Analysis Center to provide around-the-
     clock cyber threat monitoring and mitigation for governments 
     that are parties to the treaty; and
       (3) calls for members of CLIPS--
       (A) to consult on emerging cyber threats;
       (B) to pledge not to conduct or support theft of 
     intellectual property, including trade secrets or other 
     confidential business information;
       (C) to introduce and enforce minimum criminal punishment 
     for cyber theft;
       (D) to extradite alleged cyber thieves, consistent with 
     existing agreements and respecting national sovereignty;
       (E) to enforce laws protecting intellectual property, 
     including patents;

[[Page S2244]]

       (F) to ensure that government agencies comply with software 
     license terms;
       (G) to minimize data localization requirements (consistent 
     with the Agreement between the United States of America, the 
     United Mexican States, and Canada, signed at Buenos Aires 
     November 30, 2018 (commonly known as the ``United States-
     Mexico-Canada Agreement''));
       (H) to seek cooperation with respect to the standards 
     described in the Arrangement on the Recognition of Common 
     Criteria Certificates in the field of Information Technology 
     Security, dated May 14, 2014;
       (I) to provide for public input when devising legislation 
     on cybersecurity; and
       (J) to cooperate on the attribution of cyberattacks and 
     impose appropriate consequences.

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