The Borneo Post

CIA blasts WikiLeaks for publishing secret documents

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WASHINGTON: The Central Intelligen­ce Agency ( CIA) on Wednesday accused WikiLeaks of endangerin­g Americans, helping US rivals and hampering the fight against terror threats by releasing what the anti-secrecy site claimed was a trove of CIA hacking tools.

A CIA spokeswoma­n would not confirm the authentici­ty of the materials published by WikiLeaks, which said they were leaked from the spy agency’s hacking operations.

Neverthele­ss, said spokeswoma­n Heather Fritz Horniak, “The American public should be deeply troubled by any WikiLeaks disclosure designed to damage the intelligen­ce community’s ability to protect America against terrorists and other adversarie­s.”

“Such disclosure­s not only jeopardise US personnel and operations, but also equip our adversarie­s with tools and informatio­n to do us harm,” she said.

Horniak defended the CIA’s cyber operations, which the WikiLeaks materials showed focused heavily on breaking into personal electronic­s using a wide range of malware systems.

“It is CIA’s job to be innovative, cutting- edge, and the fi rst line of defence in protecting this country from enemies abroad,” she said.

On Tuesday, WikiLeaks published nearly 9,000 documents it said were part of a huge trove leaked from the CIA, describing it as the largest- ever publicatio­n of secret intelligen­ce materials.

“This extraordin­ary collection, which amounts to more than several hundred million lines of code, gives its possessor the entire hacking capacity of the CIA,” it said.

The documents showed that CIA hackers can turn a TV into a listening device, bypass popular encryption apps, and possibly control one’s car.

Most experts believe the materials to be genuine, and US media said Wednesday that the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion is opening a criminal probe into the leak.

The source of the materials remained unclear. The investigat­ion could focus on whether the CIA was sloppy in its controls, or, as The Washington Post reported, it could be ‘a major mole hunt’ for a malicious leaker or turncoat inside the agency. — AFP

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