Microsoft’s Azure Government Top Secret Cloud: All you need to know – TechHQ

Just last month, Amazon Web Services (AWS) was named the winner of a US$10 billion cloud computing contract, called WildandStormy, for the National Security Agency (NSA). But Microsoft was evidently not satisfied with the results, given the ongoing legal tussle between both companies on the Pentagons JEDI cloud computing contract. In an apparent counter move, Microsofts Azure made Government Top Secret its cloud service for governmental agencies that need to manage top-secret data generally available a couple of weeks ago.

As Microsoft Azure corporate VP Tom Keane put it in a blog posting, This announcement, together with new services and functionality in Azure Government Secret, provides further evidence of Microsofts relentless commitment to the mission of national security, enabling customers and partners to realize the vision of a multi-cloud strategy and achieve greater agility, interoperability, cost savings, and speed to innovation.

The company has long offered Government and Government Secret services, but now is after highly classified data workloads. Unlike its other offerings, Azure Government Top Secret supports Intelligence Community Directive 705 standards, a list of precise steps a compartmented information facility has to follow.

Azure Government Top Secret is now generally available for US national security agencies. Source: Microsoft

Developed in collaboration with the US government, Microsofts Azure cloud has data centers organized into regions, with its own personnel comprising only US citizens and its own network fiber that is separate from the Azure commercial offering. The data centers need to follow strict rules on construction, physical security features, and staffing checks. As part of the process, the Azure regions are air-gapped.

The new regions, whose locations are not detailed, are launching with more than 60 Azure services, with more to come. Built into a unified data strategy, these services help human analysts more rapidly extract intelligence, identify trends and anomalies, broaden perspectives, and find new insights, Keane said.

Keane also shared that the Azure Government product portfolio was developed to further Microsofts relentless commitment to the mission of national security. Microsoft also revealed that it has added new services to Azure Government Secret, including Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS), Azure Functions, and Azure App Service. There are now 73 services available on the Government Secret cloud. In addition to those, Microsoft offers data analysis and AI services to government agencies through Azures Data Lake, Cosmos DB, HDInsight, and Cognitive Services.

Keanes blog post highlighted that in order to develop a unified cybersecurity approach to protect the nations data, mission owners can utilize products informed by this threat intelligence, including Azure Security Center and Azure Sentinel to integrate multiple security point solutions and continually assess, visualize, and protect the security state of resources in Azure, on-premises, and in other clouds. B

Microsoft was approved as a supplier of cloud services to the US intelligence community in 2018, and two years later was chosen, along with AWS, Google, Oracle, and IBM, as part of the multibillion-dollar C2E cloud contract where the CIA will get each company to bid for specific task orders for itself and the 16 other agencies within the US intelligence community.

This month, however, Microsoft lost out on a US$10 billion cloud contract with the NSA. It is protesting the decision to award the deal to Amazon Web Services in court. The company is likely hoping to score the same victory as AWS did with JEDI, the Department of Defenses US$10 billion-valued cloud contract. It was awarded to Microsoft in October 2019, but that contract was scrapped after a lengthy legal battle.

It is also fair to note that AWS was the first company to launch top-secret regions that were deemed fit to host the governments exceedingly private data. So, this levels the playing field and provides the government with a choice because previously, it was just a one-horse race, Keane said.

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Microsoft's Azure Government Top Secret Cloud: All you need to know - TechHQ

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