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Yesterday β€” 5 December 2025Main stream

At VA, cyber dominance is in, cyber compliance is out

The Department of Veterans Affairs is moving toward a more operational approach to cybersecurity.

This means VA is applying a deeper focus on protecting the attack surfaces and closing off threat vectors that put veterans’ data at risk.

Eddie Pool, the acting principal assistant secretary for information and technology and acting principal deputy chief information officer at VA, said the agency is changing its cybersecurity posture to reflect a cyber dominance approach.

Eddie Pool is the acting principal assistant secretary for information and technology and acting principal deputy chief information officer at the Department of Veterans Affairs.

β€œThat’s a move away from the traditional and an exclusively compliance based approach to cybersecurity, where we put a lot of our time resources investments in compliance based activities,” Pool said on Ask the CIO. β€œFor example, did someone check the box on a form? Did someone file something in the right place? We’re really moving a lot of our focus over to the risk-based approach to security, pushing things like zero trust architecture, micro segmentation of our networks and really doing things that are more focused on the operational landscape. We are more focused on protecting those attack surfaces and closing off those threat vectors in the cyber space.”

A big part of this move to cyber dominance is applying the concepts that make up a zero trust architecture like micro segmentation and identity and access management.

Pool said as VA modernizes its underlying technology infrastructure, it will β€œbake in” these zero trust capabilities.

β€œOver the next several years, you’re going to see that naturally evolve in terms of where we are in the maturity model path. Our approach here is not necessarily to try to map to a model. It’s really to rationalize what are the highest value opportunities that those models bring, and then we prioritize on those activities first,” he said. β€œWe’re not pursuing it in a linear fashion. We are taking parts and pieces and what makes the most sense for the biggest thing for our buck right now, that’s where we’re putting our energy and effort.”

One of those areas that VA is focused on is rationalizing the number of tools and technologies it’s using across the department. Pool said the goal is to get down to a specific set instead of having the β€œ31 flavors” approach.

β€œWe’re going to try to make it where you can have any flavor you want so long as it’s chocolate. We are trying to get that standardized across the department,” he said. β€œThat gives us the opportunity from a sustainment perspective that we can focus the majority of our resources on those enterprise standardized capabilities. From a security perspective, it’s a far less threat landscape to have to worry about having 100 things versus having two or three things.”

The business process reengineering priority

Pool added that redundancy remains a key factor in the security and tool rationalization effort. He said VA will continue to have a diversity of products in its IT investment portfolios.

β€œWhere we are at is we are looking at how do we build that future state architecture, as elegantly and simplistically as possible so that we can manage it more effectively, they can protect it more securely,” he said.

In addition to standardizing on technology and cyber tools and technologies, Pool said VA is bringing the same approach to business processes for enterprisewide services.

He said over the years, VA has built up a laundry list of legacy technology all with different versions and requirements to maintain.

β€œWe’ve done a lot over the years in the Office of Information and Technology to really standardize on our technology platforms. Now it’s time to leverage that, to really bring standard processes to the business,” he said. β€œWhat that does is that really does help us continue to put the veteran at the center of everything that we do, and it gives a very predictable, very repeatable process and expectation for veterans across the country, so that you don’t have different experiences based on where you live or where you’re getting your health care and from what part of the organization.”

Part of the standardization effort is that VA will expand its use of automation, particularly in processing of veterans claims.

Pool said the goal is to take more advantage of the agency’s data and use artificial intelligence to accelerate claims processing.

β€œThe richness of the data and the standardization of our data that we’re looking at and how we can eliminate as many steps in these processes as we can, where we have data to make decisions, or we can automate a lot of things that would completely eliminate what would be a paper process that is our focus,” Pool said. β€œWe’re trying to streamline IT to the point that it’s as fast and as efficient, secure and accurate as possible from a VA processing perspective, and in turn, it’s going to bring a decision back to the veteran a lot faster, and a decision that’s ready to go on to the next step in the process.”

Many of these updates already are having an impact on VA’s business processes. The agency said that it set a new record for the number of disability and pension claims processed in a single year, more than 3 million. That beat its record set in 2024 by more than 500,000.

β€œWe’re driving benefit outcomes. We’re driving technology outcomes. From my perspective, everything that we do here, every product, service capability that the department provides the veteran community, it’s all enabled through technology. So technology is the underpinning infrastructure, backbone to make all things happen, or where all things can fail,” Pool said. β€œFirst, on the internal side, it’s about making sure that those infrastructure components are modernized. Everything’s hardened. We have a reliable, highly available infrastructure to deliver those services. Then at the application level, at the actual point of delivery, IT is involved in every aspect of every challenge in the department, to again, bring the best technology experts to the table and look at how can we leverage the best technologies to simplify the business processes, whether that’s claims automation, getting veterans their mileage reimbursement earlier or by automating processes to increase the efficacy of the outcomes that we deliver, and just simplify how the veterans consume the services of VA. That’s the only reason why we exist here, is to be that enabling partner to the business to make these things happen.”

The post At VA, cyber dominance is in, cyber compliance is out first appeared on Federal News Network.

Β© Getty Images/ipopba

Cyber security network and data protection technology on virtual interface screen.
Before yesterdayMain stream

Ask the CIO: Veterans Affairs

By: wfedstaff
17 November 2025 at 11:53

The Department of Veterans Affairs’ top technology priorities encompass cybersecurity, modernization and veteran experience, emphasizing a shift from compliance-driven cybersecurity to a risk-based, assume-breach model anchored in zero trust and operational resilience.

Join Federal News Network Executive Editor Jason Miller for an exclusive conversation with the Eddie Pool, the acting assistant secretary for information and technology and chief information officerΒ and Travis Rosiek, Rubrik’s public sector chief technology officer as they discuss VA’s evolving modernization strategies and what it means for industry partners.

Learning objectives:

  • Cybersecurity and zero trust: Explain VA’s shift to a risk-based, assume-breach model and the role of zero trust in achieving cyber resilience

  • Business process modernization: Describe how streamlined workflows and standardized systems improve veteran services

  • Data governance and interoperability: Understand the use of authoritative data and enterprise standards to enable better decision-making

  • AI and analytics in service delivery: Explore how AI and predictive analytics support proactive, data-driven outcomes

  • Workforce and technology strategy: Assess strategies for upskilling staff, centralizing shared services, and maintaining resilient IT infrastructure

The post Ask the CIO: Veterans Affairs first appeared on Federal News Network.

Β© Getty Images/iStockphoto/anyaberkut

Automation and optimisation concept, business process workflow development
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