Fiji Sun

World On Brink of ‘Serious Digital Sabotage’, Says Dutch Spy Chief

- Daily Mail

The world may be close to a “serious act of digital sabotage” which could trigger unrest, “chaos and disorder”, Dutch spy chief Rob Bertholee warned Tuesday.

Sabotage of critical infrastruc­ture ‘is the kind of thing that might keep you awake at night,’ Bertholee told a timely cyber security conference in The Hague, as global experts grapple with the fallout of a massive cyber attack over the past days.

Digital threats ‘are not imaginary, they are everywhere around us,’ the head of the country’s intelligen­ce services (AIVD) told the conference organised by the Dutch government.

“In my opinion, we might be closer to a serious act of digital sabotage than a lot of people can imagine,” he told hundreds of experts and officials.

Mr Bertholee highlighte­d how in 2012 the computers at Saudi Arabia’s largest oil company came under brief attack, or how three years later Ukrainian electricit­y companies were hacked causing a massive blackout lasting several hours. The world’s infrastruc­ture was heavily interconne­cted, which had huge benefits, but also “vulnerabil­ities”. “Imagine what would happen if the entire banking system were sabotaged for a day, two days, for a week,” he asked.

“Or if there was a breakdown in our transporta­tion network. Or if air traffic controller­s faced cyber attacks while directing flights. The consequenc­es could be catastroph­ic. Sabotage on one of these sectors could have major public repercussi­ons, causing unrest, chaos and disorder.”

The threat of ‘cyber terrorism’ from terror groups such as Islamic State and Al-Qaeda was still limited, he said, but “jihadist-inspired terrorism is the number one priority’ of the Dutch intelligen­ce services.”

“The level of technical expertise available to a jihadist group is still insufficie­nt to inflict significan­t damage or personal injury through digital sabotage,” Mr Bertholee said.

“They may not yet have the capability but they definitely have the intent,” he warned. “Countries must be prepared for future threats in the digital domain, with government­s and private sector working closely together, as this is ‘where our societies have become most vulnerable,” he said.

Security researcher­s investigat­ing the massive cyberattac­k campaign over past days on Tuesday reported signs that it might be slowing, and suggested a possible North Korean link.

In the first clues of the origin of the massive ransomware attacks, researcher, Neel Mehta, posted computer code that showed similariti­es between the

malware and a vast hacking effort widely attributed to Pyongyang.

Europol meanwhile said the number of affected IP addresses around the world was 163,745 - a 38 per cent fall from the 226,000 reported on Sunday.

 ?? Photo: Daily Mail ?? Rob Bertholee (left), head of the General Intelligen­ce and Security Service of the Netherland­s (AIVD).
Photo: Daily Mail Rob Bertholee (left), head of the General Intelligen­ce and Security Service of the Netherland­s (AIVD).

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