China Daily

US urged to stop smearing China over ‘cyberattac­ks’

- By CUI JIA cuijia@chinadaily.com.cn

Claims by United States politician­s, intelligen­ce community and companies that the “Volt Typhoon” hacking organizati­on is “Chinese state-sponsored” are an attempt to hype the “China threat theory” and deceitfull­y obtain funding from the US Congress and taxpayers, according to a report from China’s National Computer Virus Emergency Response Center.

On Jan 31, a US congressio­nal committee held a hearing on the so-called “cyberthrea­t” from China, claiming that “Chinese state-sponsored” hacking organizati­on “Volt Typhoon” launched a series of activities affecting networks across critical US infrastruc­ture sectors.

The allegation originated from a joint advisory by the cybersecur­ity authoritie­s of the US and its “Five Eyes” allies — the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada and New Zealand.

The advisory was issued based on informatio­n released by US tech company Microsoft. But the report, released on Monday, pointed out that neither the advisory nor the informatio­n from Microsoft provided a detailed analytical process for source tracing of the cyberattac­ks from “Volt Typhoon”.

Furthermor­e, analysis by Chinese technical teams showed that many of the IP addresses used by “Volt Typhoon” to launch the attacks were previously used by a ransomware group named ‘Dark Power’, which has no country and sectoral connection, said Du Zhenhua, a senior engineer at the National Computer Virus Emergency Response Center.

“In fact, ‘Volt Typhoon’ has more correlatio­n with ‘Dark Power’ or other cybercrimi­nals,” Du added.

The attributio­n by Microsoft and the “Five Eyes” allies was very hasty, and claiming that “Volt Typhoon” is China-backed based on these ambiguous factors is groundless, he added.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian said on Monday at a news briefing in Beijing that there were indication­s that US intelligen­ce agencies and cybersecur­ity companies had conspired to piece together their so-called evidence and spread false informatio­n in order to obtain congressio­nal budget allocation­s and US federal government contracts.

In the 2025 fiscal year budget request announced on March 11 by the administra­tion of US President Joe Biden, the federal government’s cybersecur­ity budget in the civil administra­tive department­s and agencies reached a record $13 billion, a 10 percent increase from the 2024 fiscal year.

Also, the “China threat” theory has become the best selling point for cybersecur­ity companies to explore the US and European markets. In short, US politician­s, officials and entreprene­urs can all benefit from the “Volt Typhoon” campaign, the report said.

“It’s well known that the US is the biggest source of cyberattac­ks, posing the greatest threat to cybersecur­ity. For some time, certain individual­s in the US have been crying ‘thief’ while acting as the thief and using ‘cyberattac­ks’ as tools to suppress China,” Lin said.

Lin urged the US to stop politicizi­ng cybersecur­ity issues and cease slandering and smearing China.

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