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WASHINGTON — The White House has drafted a preliminary executive order aimed at strengthening the nation’s computer systems against attack, an effort to begin to accomplish through fiat what could not be achieved through Congress.

The draft order, whose contours are being debated, would create voluntary standards to guide companies in guarding themselves against cyber- attacks, according to administration officials. It would also establish a special council made up of key government agencies to identify threats that could compromise critical sectors.

White House spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said the administration was not going to discuss details of internal deliberations, “but an executive order is among the things we’re considering to fulfill the president’s direction to us to do absolutely everything we can to better protect our nation against today’s cyberthreats.”

Compromise legislation to bolster the nation’s defenses against cyberattacks that could affect electric grids, communications networks and other critical infrastructure failed this summer in the face of opposition from the Chamber of Commerce and Republicans, who decried even voluntary standards as a regulatory burden on business.

Last month, John Brennan, President Barack Obama’s top adviser on homeland security and counterterrorism, said an executive order was a good vehicle to make sure “the nation is protected.”

“If the Congress is not going to act on something like this,” he said, “then the president wants to make sure that we’re doing everything possible.”

The four-page draft order, whose contents were described to The Washington Post by several officials last week, is in the early stages, and completion could take months, officials said.

Under the draft, an interagency Cybersecurity Council would be led by the Department of Homeland Security. The council would take intelligence on cyberthreats and translate it into guidance that would be used to develop security standards.

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