African Cyber Power: Establishing a Strategic Rationale for Offensive Cyber Capabilities - The Case of South Africa
摘要
This paper explores the strategic rationale underpinning the development of offensive cyber power capacity in African states, using South Africa as a case study. South Africa was selected due to its prominence on the continent in terms of technological, political and security developments. Building on prior research, the paper contends that the cyber power of states is structured around a triadic model consisting of interdependent defensive, offensive, and developmental dimensions. Accordingly, it posits that each state’s cyber capacity should be evaluated in alignment with its distinct national security imperatives, which may diverge significantly from those of more technologically advanced nations. To this end, the paper locates offensive cyber power within the broader context of offensive intelligence operations and examines South Africa’s national security posture to identify threats that may justify both the application of offensive intelligence measures and the acquisition of cyber-based offensive capabilities. The paper finds that South Africa’s national security framework suggests that the country is at a pivotal point in the evolution of its offensive cyber power capabilities, and that there is a growing recognition that purely defensive mechanisms are no longer adequate to counter the increasingly complex and proliferating cyber-enabled threats it faces. Accordingly, there is a compelling and urgent strategic rationale for South Africa to pursue the development of offensive cyber power, as an integral component of its broader national security posture. Future studies will explore the applicability and relevance of these findings, within the context of the triadic mode, to other African states.