A new national cyber strategy aimed at strengthening US digital defenses, countering foreign adversaries and accelerating innovation has been released by the Trump Administration.

The document, published on March 6, 2026, outlines a broad framework for addressing cyber threats through government coordination, private sector partnerships and technological investment. It sets out six policy pillars designed to guide federal cybersecurity policy and resource allocation.

The strategy frames cyberspace as central to US economic strength, national security and technological leadership. It argues that hostile states and cyber-criminal groups increasingly exploit digital systems to undermine democratic institutions, disrupt essential services and steal intellectual property.

According to the White House, the new approach prioritises proactive action rather than reactive defence. It emphasises using the full range of government capabilities, including offensive cyber operations, law enforcement measures and economic sanctions, to deter attacks and dismantle criminal networks.

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Six Pillars of the US National Cyber Strategy

The plan outlines six policy areas intended to shape US cyber policy in the coming years:

  1. Shaping adversary behavior through offensive and defensive cyber operations

  2. Promoting streamlined cybersecurity and data regulations

  3. Modernizing and securing federal government networks

  4. Protecting critical infrastructure and supply chains

  5. Maintaining leadership in emerging technologies such as AI and quantum computing

  6. Expanding the national cybersecurity workforce

Michael Bell, founder and CEO of Suzu Labs, said the strategy's priorities broadly align with the current threat landscape.

"The six pillars are the right priorities, and the strategy reads like people who understand the threat landscape were involved in writing it," Bell said. "Post-quantum cryptography, private sector offensive operations, regulatory streamlining, AI security. All correct […] but a strategy without a budget is a press release."

The security expert added that implementation will ultimately depend on how the government structures funding and operational capabilities.

"The strategy says, 'unleash the private sector,' and the direction is right, but the contracting vehicles for rapid classified offensive work don't exist yet," Bell said.

The strategy concludes that stronger coordination across government agencies and private industry will be required to counter growing cyber threats and protect the US digital ecosystem.