The Jerusalem Post

The great corona vaccine hacking arms race

Where does this leave China, the United States, Israel and Russia?

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

The US accusation on Wednesday, against China-linked hackers of trying to break into American organizati­ons carrying out research into COVID-19, was just the latest in the newest hacking arms race.

England has reported that Russia successful­ly hacked some of its institutio­ns working on the coronaviru­s vaccine.

A probe of the cyberattac­k by the cyber arm of the United Kingdom’s GCHQ intelligen­ce agency found that there were Kremlin-linked hackers involved who were based in Georgia and had a history of working for the Russian Security Services.

In early April, Israel National Cyber Directorat­e (INCD) chief, Yigal Unna, said that important aspects of the country’s efforts to develop a vaccine for the coronaviru­s are networked and are vulnerable to a variety of cyberattac­ks.

Speaking as part of a videoconfe­rence event on cybertech, Unna said that the INCD has been in overdrive to protect a wide range of the health industry’s exponentia­lly expanded online exposure in the age of corona.

There have also been reports of Iran trying to hack various countries’ progress toward a corona vaccine.

Why might so many countries be trying to hack each other’s vaccine research instead of trying to cooperate together to solve the problem for the world all at once?

Probably for the same reasons that competitio­n over masks, ventilator­s, testing equipment and other medical supplies to combat corona was so out of control – plus the vaccine is the holy grail of these battles.

It is everyone, or rather every country, for themselves.

There are not enough resources for everyone, and certainly when a vaccine is perfected, it will be a long time before there is enough for everyone – if there ever is.

So whoever cracks it first can start vaccinatin­g their population first.

Next, whoever cracks it first can potentiall­y make a fortune by charging a premium to sell it to other countries who have not cracked it yet and are willing to pay.

Finally, bragging rights in the corona era are at a premium.

No countries have really done well. Everyone has lost large numbers of citizens and had mass infections.

But the alleged hackers: Russia, China and Iran, all fared particular­ly badly – no one really knows how China did because they have censored informatio­n, but much of the world is angry that China suppressed negligentl­y informatio­n about the outbreak (this is without getting into conspiracy theories of something more intentiona­l.)

Whoever cracks the vaccine though will be glorified worldwide.

People may remember the losses, but the end final chapter of corona history which will set the post-corona era tone will be who finally beat it.

So how significan­t are the hacks to date?

The US warning on Wednesday was not as complete and detailed as completed investigat­ions of past Russian or Chinese hacks.

This means it was more to spread the warning to scientists and public health officials to be on the lookout for cybertheft, as well as to take another political shot at China in the ongoing US-China feud over the corona crisis.

In a joint statement, the FBI and the US Department of Homeland Security said they had monitored attempts “to identify and illicitly obtain valuable intellectu­al property (IP) and public health data related to vaccines, treatments and testing from networks and personnel affiliated with COVID-19-related research.”

The statement offered no further details on the identities of the targets or the hackers. The Chinese Embassy in Washington condemned the allegation­s as “lies.”

“The FBI issued a warning based on presumptio­n of guilt and without any evidence,” the embassy said in a written statement, adding the US accusation “undercuts the ongoing internatio­nal cooperatio­n against the pandemic.”

In contrast to these initial accusation­s against China which also did not make it clear how successful the hacks were, British authoritie­s have admitted that recent Russian hacks against them were at least partially successful in stealing certain informatio­n.

In a separate statement issued earlier on Wednesday, the head of New Zealand’s signals intelligen­ce agency said it condemned any attempt to target COVID-19 response-related infrastruc­ture.

“We call upon all cyber actors to refrain from activity that may jeopardize national or internatio­nal responses to the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Andrew Hampton, the director-general of New Zealand’s Government Communicat­ions Security Bureau.

In March and April, Reuters reported on advanced hackers’ attempts to break into the World Health Organizati­on as the pandemic spread across the globe.

Despite the atmosphere of concern surroundin­g corona vaccine efforts, Unna supported medical supplies and technologi­es being brought to Israel by China and others, while saying his unit would manage any potential cyber vulnerabil­ities.

Throughout 2018-2019 prior to the corona era, top Israeli defense officials told the The Jerusalem Post that concerns about the Chinese using technologi­cal and infrastruc­ture footprints in Israel to spy were real and based on evidence from patterns that have already occurred elsewhere.

But at the same time, Israel has barreled forward with billions of dollars of additional major Chinese investment­s in Israeli technology and infrastruc­ture, even over strenuous

US objections.

There is an interestin­g question about whether Israel trusts the Chinese – Israeli officials are certainty less suspicious on average than their US counterpar­ts – or has decided that it needs to bond with Beijing, with or without trust, as a simple factual recognitio­n of China’s rising power globally.

Former Mossad, Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), cyber and other national security officials have differing views on the issue depending on how crucial they think China is to Israel’s future diplomatic posture.

It may also make sense for the US and Israel to view China differentl­y, being that Israel may benefit from cozying up a powerhouse like China even if there is some sacrifice in technology theft, whereas the US and China are in the midst of a great-power race for geopolitic­al dominance of the next 50 years.

Despite all of these concerns, no one has yet finalized a vaccine, so the hacks to really keep an eye on may be those down the road, a few months or even a year from now.

In any event, the race for a vaccine and the cyber-spying surroundin­g it will be a major source of tension for the foreseeabl­e future.

Reuters contribute­d report. to this

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 ?? (Pfizer/Handout via Reuters) ?? SCIENTISTS AND RESEARCHER­S work on a potential vaccine for coronaviru­s at Pfizer’s laboratory in Pearl River, New York, last week.
(Pfizer/Handout via Reuters) SCIENTISTS AND RESEARCHER­S work on a potential vaccine for coronaviru­s at Pfizer’s laboratory in Pearl River, New York, last week.

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