The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘Thousands’ of EU diplomatic cables hacked

Cables reveal anxiety about how to handle Trump as well as concerns about China, Russia and Iran

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BRUSSELS: Hackers apparently connected to China accessed thousands of sensitive EU diplomatic cables, the New York Times reported yesterday, in the latest embarrassi­ng data breach to hit a major internatio­nal organisati­on.

The cables from the EU’s diplomatic missions around the world reveal anxiety about how to handle US President Donald Trump as well as concerns about China, Russia and Iran.

The leak, discovered by cybersecur­ity firm Area 1, recalls the publicatio­n by Wikileaks of a vast haul of US State Department cables in 2010, though in the EU case the trove is much smaller and consists of less secret communicat­ions, the NYT reported.

In one cable, the EU’s diplomatic mission in Moscow describes the controvers­ial summit in Helsinki in July between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin as “successful (at least for Putin)”.

Another gives a detailed account of a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, in which he rails against Trump’s trade tactics, saying the US was “behaving as if it was fighting in a no-rules freestyle boxing match” and vowing not to give in to “bullying”.

There are extensive reports on the situation in Ukraine, where a conflict rumbles on between government forces and proRussian separatist­s, including a warning dating from February that Moscow may already have deployed nuclear warheads in Crimea, which it annexed in 2014.

The NYT said that according to Area 1, the techniques used by the hackers over the course of three years were similar to those used by an elite Chinese military unit. The hackers apparently gained access to the diplomatic communicat­ions network after a simple “phishing” campaign targeting EU officials in Cyprus.

Many of the cables are runof-the-mill weekly reports from missions around the world, detailing conversati­ons with leaders and officials, the NYT said.

More sensitive, classified communicat­ions are handled on a different, more secure system.—

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? File photo shows a man types on a computer keyboard in this illustrati­on picture.
— Reuters photo File photo shows a man types on a computer keyboard in this illustrati­on picture.

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