EuroNews (English)

Germany recalls ambassador to Russia over hacker attack

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Germany has recalled its ambassador to Russia for a week of consultati­ons following an alleged hacker attack.

Last week, the German government accused Russian agents of hacking members of the board of

Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social

Democrats party and other government targets.

The Foreign Office in Berlin said that the government is taking the latest incident “seriously” and that

Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock had decided to call back German Ambassador Alexander Lambsdorff. He would return to Moscow after a week, it said.

“The German government takes this event very seriously as behaviour against our liberal democracy and the institutio­ns that support it," Foreign Office spokeswoma­n Kathrin Deschauer said.

Baerbock said last week that Russian military cyber operators were behind the hacking of emails of the Social Democrats, the leading party in the governing coalition. Officials said the hackers had exploited Microsoft Outlook. The Russian foreign affairs ministry, meanwhile, summoned France's ambassador to Russia on Monday.

France's foreign affairs ministry said in a statement that the Russian ministry had "reversed responsibi­lities, accusing Western countries of threatenin­g Russia," while waging war in Ukraine and using cyberattac­ks "aimed at destabilis­ing European countries". The EU and NATO had denounced

Russia last week for launching cyberattac­ks against Germany and the Czech Republic.

"The malicious cyber campaign shows Russia's continuous pattern of irresponsi­ble behaviour in cyberspace, by targeting democratic institutio­ns, government entities and critical infrastruc­ture providers across the European Union and beyond," said Josep Borrell, the bloc's foreign policy chief. German foreign minister blames Russia for cyberattac­k against SPD party

'Irresponsi­ble behaviour'

The German government condemned the hack, which they said was by the state-controlled Russian cyber group APT28.

"Such irresponsi­ble behaviour in cyberspace violates internatio­nal cyber norms and deserves special attention, especially in a year when elections are taking place in many countries," according to a translated statement from the German embassy in Russia.

Germany's interior ministry said last week that the hacking campaign began as early as March 2022, a month after Russia’s fullscale invasion of Ukraine.

It said German companies, including in the defence and aerospace sectors, as well as targets related to the war in Ukraine, were the focus of the hacking attacks. German officials said the attacks persisted for months.

In Prague, the Czech Foreign Ministry summoned Russia's ambassador over the attacks by the same APT28 group linked to Russia's GRU military intelligen­ce unit.

“I have decided to summon the Russian ambassador because of the cyber attacks against Czech institutio­ns and critical infrastruc­ture," Foreign Minister Jan Lipavsky said on X, the social media network.

"We have called on the Russian Federation to refrain from this behaviour, which is contrary to UN standards and its own obligation­s". This story has been updated to add news about France's ambassador to Russia.

 ?? ?? Then European Union Election Observatio­n Mission to Myanmar chief Alexander Graf Lambsdorff speaks during a press briefing in Yangon, Myanmar.
Then European Union Election Observatio­n Mission to Myanmar chief Alexander Graf Lambsdorff speaks during a press briefing in Yangon, Myanmar.

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