As cyber threats grow more sophisticated in the age of artificial intelligence and rising geopolitical tensions, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) has strengthened its digital defenses through a joint cybersecurity program with partners from the United States and Australia.
In a news release dated earlier this week, the DFA has announced the completion of the Foreign Assistance Leveraged for Cybersecurity Operational Needs (Falcon) Program, a capacity-building initiative conducted with the US Department of State and Australian firm CyberCX.
The program wrapped up with a two-day simulation on April 14–15 at the DFA headquarters in Pasay City, testing how the agency would respond to a large-scale cyberattack, an increasingly urgent concern as governments worldwide face hacking attempts targeting sensitive data and public services.
Officials said the exercise validated the DFA’s ability to detect, respond to, and recover from cyber incidents, including coordination across teams handling investigation, technical recovery, regulatory compliance, and crisis communication.
Undersecretary Ma. Theresa B. Dizon-de Vega described the effort as part of a broader push to safeguard the country’s digital diplomatic infrastructure.

She emphasized in her opening remarks that the current threat environment demands that cybersecurity be treated as an “indispensable function of modern diplomacy and national security.”
The initiative comes at a time when AI-powered cyberattacks — ranging from phishing to deepfake-driven fraud — are becoming more common, while geopolitical rivalries have increased risks of state-backed cyber intrusions targeting government systems.
For ordinary Filipinos, stronger cybersecurity at the DFA means better protection of personal data submitted for passports, visas, and other consular services.
It also helps ensure the reliability of official documents issued by the department, including those processed through DFA-CERT, which handles authentication and apostille services used for employment, study, and migration abroad.
At the closing ceremony, the CyberCX team formally turned over a cybersecurity strategy and roadmap to the DFA’s Office of Asset Management and Support Services and its Information and Communications Technology Division.

US Embassy representatives, including Acting Deputy Economic Counselor Taylor Fincher, witnessed the turnover, highlighting continued cooperation between Manila and its allies on digital security.
Assistant Secretary Charmaine A. Serna-Chua said the program produced concrete tools to improve the DFA’s response to cyber incidents, including an Incident Communications Guidance Booklet and the formalization of DFA-CERT processes.
The lessons from the simulation will also help fast-track improvements in the DFA’s internal systems, including how records are secured and managed during cyber emergencies.
With more government services moving online and with Filipinos increasingly relying on digital platforms for travel and overseas work, officials said strengthening cyber resilience is no longer optional but essential.
The Falcon Program, they added, marks a step toward ensuring that Philippine diplomacy — and the services that support millions of Filipinos worldwide — remain secure in an increasingly complex digital landscape.




