Five Eyes cybersecurity agencies have urged business and technology leaders to act quickly as AI transforms the cyber landscape.
In a joint statement issued on 22 June, the leaders of the Five Eyes cybersecurity agencies said AI is already changing both offensive and defensive cyber capabilities. They said AI can strengthen cyber defence capabilities, but it is also increasing the speed, scale and sophistication of cyber threats.
The agencies said frontier AI models could surpass current industry expectations and fundamentally reshape cyber capabilities within months rather than years. They warned that AI is lowering barriers for malicious actors and shrinking the time between vulnerability discovery and exploitation.
The statement was signed by cybersecurity leaders from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Signatories included the heads of the Australian Cyber Security Centre, the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security, New Zealand’s National Cyber Security Centre, the UK’s National Cyber Security Centre, the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, and the US National Security Agency’s Cyber Security Directorate.
The agencies said cyber resilience should be treated as a strategic business risk and leadership responsibility rather than solely a technical concern. Boards and executives should ensure that cyber controls are in place and can operate effectively under pressure during real incidents.
The statement urged leaders to assess organisational risk, preparedness and accountability while ensuring cybersecurity remains integrated into broader business decision-making. It also called on organisations to prioritise foundational cybersecurity practices, give cyber leaders sufficient authority and resources, and remain engaged as threats and guidance evolve.
The agencies said secure-by-design and secure-by-default must become standard practice rather than an aspiration. They also said resilience cannot depend on a single technology, making defence in depth essential as AI systems evolve.
The statement warned that new, previously unknown vulnerabilities, including zero-day exploits, will continue to emerge. It said breaches will occur, but preparedness can help organisations contain them quickly and prevent escalation into major operational and financial crises.
The Five Eyes agencies recommended five practical actions for leaders. Organisations should reduce their attack surface by limiting unnecessary access and external connectivity, and should question whether systems need to be exposed at all.
They should also accelerate patching processes because AI is shortening the time between vulnerability discovery and exploitation. Delays in patching can increase risk, especially for operational systems with long update cycles.
The statement also urged organisations to address legacy systems, describing unsupported systems as strategic liabilities rather than only technical debt. Leaders were also told to review and strengthen identity and access controls, enforce strong authentication, and regularly review permissions.
Incident preparation was another priority. The agencies said organisations should test response plans, train teams, and assume breaches will happen, with a focus on fast containment and recovery.
The agencies also encouraged organisations to deploy AI as a defensive tool, using it to identify vulnerabilities, strengthen monitoring and accelerate incident response. Organisations that integrate AI tools into security operations can detect vulnerabilities earlier, improve software quality, monitor unusual behaviour and respond faster to incidents.
The statement said success will not come from having the most tools. Instead, it said organisations should focus on getting the basics right, acting quickly and integrating cyber security into core business strategy.
The Five Eyes agencies said leaders who act now will reduce exposure, strengthen resilience, and build confidence with customers, partners, and investors. Those who delay, they said, will face growing, avoidable risks.
Why does it matter?
The statement reflects growing concern among major cybersecurity agencies that AI is changing the balance between attackers and defenders. By accelerating vulnerability discovery, automating reconnaissance and lowering technical barriers for malicious actors, AI could significantly reduce the time organisations have to identify, patch and mitigate emerging threats.
The warning also signals a broader shift in cybersecurity governance. Rather than treating cyber risk as a technical issue delegated to IT departments, governments increasingly expect boards and senior executives to view cyber resilience as a core organisational responsibility. As AI capabilities advance, secure-by-design systems, rapid patch management, strong identity controls and tested incident response plans are becoming central elements of national and corporate cyber resilience strategies.
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