The article covers the Connecticut National Guard’s first Defensive Cyber Operations (DCO) Symposium. The event took place April 10–12, 2026 at Camp Nett in Connecticut.
More than 100 cyber soldiers from across New England showed up to sharpen their defensive skills. They focused on interoperability, readiness, and modern incident-response strategies—because let’s face it, the threat landscape keeps changing.
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Defensive Cyber Operations Symposium at Camp Nett strengthens regional cybersecurity
The Connecticut National Guard organized the three-day event and brought Army and Air National Guard cyber units together. Their goal? Share best practices, standardize procedures, and get everyone talking across state lines.
Connecticut’s taking cyber threats seriously, especially with critical infrastructure in the crosshairs across New England.
Key speakers, hands-on training, and takeaways
Ian Leatherman from Microsoft gave a keynote, pushing for a zero-trust security model, continuous verification, least-privilege access, and resilient architectures. He didn’t mince words about the need for constant vigilance.
Attendees also got threat-intelligence briefings from Palo Alto Networks Unit 42. These briefings detailed real-world attack methodologies and highlighted current global incident trends.
For hands-on training, 1st Lt. Hausmann led sessions focused on Windows exploitation. Participants dug into vulnerabilities like DACL misconfigurations and DLL hijacking.
They also worked with PowerShell for system auditing, threat detection, and automating incident response. The goal? Shrink adversary dwell time as much as possible.
- 126th Cyber Protection Battalion, Connecticut Army National Guard
- 146th Cyber Warfare Company, Connecticut Air National Guard
- Other Army and Air National Guard cyber units from across New England
Connecticut communities connected to the event
Camp Nett took center stage, but honestly, the symposium pulled in people from all over Connecticut. Folks showed up and tuned in from Hartford, New Haven, Stamford, Bridgeport, Waterbury, Norwalk, Danbury, and Bristol—just to name a few.
It was clear that communities from East Hartford to Middletown and Groton play a real part in a regional cyber-defense network. This network keeps critical infrastructure and public services safer than they’d otherwise be.
- Hartford
- New Haven
- Stamford
- Bridgeport
- Waterbury
- Norwalk
- Danbury
- Bristol
- East Hartford
- Middletown
Officials pointed out that these town-to-town connections let people share info faster. They get threat intelligence out there and coordinate responses when incidents spike during events like Cyber Yankee.
Collaboration also helps local agencies match up their defenses with state and national cybersecurity standards. That’s not always easy, but it’s happening more and more.
With Cyber Yankee on the horizon, the DCO symposium has sparked new momentum for defense readiness. Connecticut’s National Guard leaders believe the event boosted technical chops and, maybe even more importantly, built up the relationships and procedures that make quick, united responses possible—from New London to Tolland and Norwich.
Here is the source article for this story: Connecticut National Guard hosts first Defense Cyber Operations Symposium for Cyber Yankee 2026
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