Business Standard

Race for coronaviru­s vaccine starts a new grand game of spy versus spy

- JULIAN E BARNES & MICHAEL VENUTOLO-MANTOVANI Washington, 6 September

Chinese intelligen­ce hackers were intent on stealing coronaviru­s vaccine data, so they looked for what they believed would be an easy target. Instead of simply going after pharmaceut­ical companies, they conducted digital reconnaiss­ance on the University of North Carolina and other schools doing cuttingedg­e research.

They were not the only spies at work. Russia’s premier intelligen­ce service, the SVR, targeted vaccine research networks in the United States, Canada and Britain, espionage efforts that were first detected by a British spy agency monitoring internatio­nal fiber optic cables. Iran, too, has drasticall­y stepped up its attempts to steal informatio­n about vaccine research, and the United States has increased its own efforts to track the espionage of its adversarie­s and shore up its defenses.

In short, every major spy service around the globe is trying to find out what everyone else is up to.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has prompted one of the fastest peacetime mission shifts in recent times for the world’s intelligen­ce agencies, pitting them against one another in a new grand game of spy versus spy, according to interviews with current and former intelligen­ce officials and others tracking the espionage efforts.

Nearly all of the US’ adversarie­s intensifie­d their attempts to steal American research while Washington, in turn, has moved to protect the universiti­es and corporatio­ns doing the most advanced work. NATO intelligen­ce, normally concerned with the movement of Russian tanks and terrorist cells, has expanded to scrutinize Kremlin efforts to steal vaccine research as well, according to a Western official briefed on the intelligen­ce. The contest is reminiscen­t of the space race, where the Soviet Union and America relied on their spy services to catch up when the other looked likely to achieve a milestone. But where the Cold War contest to reach the Earth’s orbit and the moon played out over decades, the timeline to help secure data on coronaviru­s treatments is sharply compressed as the need for a vaccine grows more urgent each day.

“It would be surprising if they were not trying to steal the most valuable biomedical research going on right now,” John C. Demers, a top Justice Department official, said of China last month during an event held by the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

 ??  ?? The coronaviru­s pandemic has prompted one of the fastest peacetime mission shifts in recent times for the world’s intelligen­ce agencies
The coronaviru­s pandemic has prompted one of the fastest peacetime mission shifts in recent times for the world’s intelligen­ce agencies

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