The Free Press Journal

North Korea hackers steal US-Seoul war plan data

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Hackers from North Korea are reported to have stolen a large cache of military documents from South Korea, including the latest Washington-Seoul wartime operationa­l plan, a ruling party lawmaker said on Tuesday, reports IANS.

Citing informatio­n from unnamed defence officials, Democratic Party Representa­tive Lee Cheol-hee said the hackers broke into Defence Integrated Data Centre in September last year to steal the secret files, such as Operationa­l Plans 5015 and 3100.

OPLAN 5015 is the latest Seoul-Washington scheme to handle an all-out war with Pyongyang, which reportedly contains detailed procedures to “decapitate” the North Korean leadership. OPLAN 3100 is Seoul’s plan to respond to the North’s localized provocatio­ns. Lee said that 235 gigabytes of military documents were taken with the content of nearly 80 per cent of them yet to be identified.

Also among them were contingenc­y plans for the South’s special forces, reports to allies’ top commanders, and informatio­n on key military facilities and power plants, he added.

“The Ministry of National Defence has yet to find out about the content of 182 gigabytes of the total (stolen) data,” Lee said.

In May, the Defence Ministry’s investigat­ion authoritie­s said that the communist state was thought to be behind the hacking of the military’s key online network. They did not reveal what data had been taken at the time. The hacking incident has raised calls for the allies to remain alert to the possibilit­y of the belligeren­t regime readjustin­g its own contingenc­y or wartime plans based on the stolen military documents.

In recent years, Seoul has been pushing to bolster its cyber defence capabiliti­es as Pyongyang has launched a host of attacks on South Korean corporate and government websites by mobilizing its specially trained personnel, including those based in China and other foreign countries.

The hackers broke into the Defence Integrated Data Centre in September last year to steal the secret files. 235 gigabytes of military documents were taken with the content of nearly 80 per cent of them yet to be identified

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