On Thu, 3 Apr 2003, Barry Raveendran Greene wrote:
This is assuming the US Government security authority over the Internet. Why should the US Government get the appearance of special privileges where other governments of the world do not? The vast majority of serious security incidents I see all cross national jurisdictions. So you can label them "international Internet security incidents."
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0403/040103td1.htm "The Homeland Security Department may take more of a direct role coordinating the security of the Internet's infrastructure, a top administration official said Tuesday." "The Bush administration's acting cybersecurity adviser Howard Schmidt said in an interview that homeland security and government agencies officials are working to formalize a security apparatus for the global Internet root servers, a series of computer systems that underpin the Internet's address system." Since US state and federal government affliated agencies already operate 5 out of 13 of the root servers, and 2(3) root server operators are essentially under the contractual supervision of the US government, I'm not sure how much more direct you can get. 3 root server operators are outside the US.