“In less than one day, we have seen major impacts to key functions of the global economy, including aviation, health care, banking, media and emergency services,” committee chair Mark Green, a Tennessee Republican, and Representative Andrew Garbarino, a New York Republican and chairman of the panel’s Subcommittee on Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Protection, wrote in a letter to Kurtz on Monday.
“Recognizing that Americans will undoubtedly feel the lasting, real-world consequences of this incident, they deserve to know in detail how this incident happened and the mitigation steps CrowdStrike is taking,” they wrote.
A CrowdStrike spokesperson said on Monday evening that the company was in discussion with congressional committees, which have the power to compel testimony by issuing subpoenas but usually first ask potential witnesses to appear voluntarily.
Other congressional committees have asked company officials for briefings on the outage, its causes and CrowdStrike’s response.
Last week’s outage was blamed on a defect in a software update and impacted CrowdStrike customers using Microsoft Windows. The impact of the outage rippled across the globe and disrupted health-care systems, airlines, ports, companies and governments.
(Updates with CrowdStrike comment, in fifth paragraph.)
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