The Borneo Post

Britain, Australia blame Russia’s military intel for cyber attacks

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LONDON: Britain and Australia yesterday blamed Russia’s military intelligen­ce service for some of the biggest cyber attacks of recent years – including one on the Democratic National Committee during the 2016 US presidenti­al campaign.

They said the GRU military intelligen­ce service could have only been conducting operations of such scale on Kremlin orders.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly and angrily rejected similar charges.

He told US President Donald Trump during a July summit in Helsinki that talk of Russia meddling in the 2016 election was ‘nonsense’.

But Britain’s National Cyber Security Centre ( NCSC) and the Australian government pointed the blame directly at alleged GRU front operations such as Fancy Bear and APT 28.

The announceme­nt could further strain relations between Russia and Britain that began to deteriorat­e with the 2006 assassinat­ion with polonium in London of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko.

“This is not the actions of a great power, this is the actions of a pariah state,” British Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said during a visit to Brussels.

“We’ll continue working with allies to isolate, make them understand they cannot continue to conduct themselves in such a way.”

The Australian government added that Russia’s actions violated its internatio­nal commitment­s to “responsibl­e state behaviour” in cyberspace.

“Cyberspace is not the Wild West,” Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Foreign Minister Marise Payne said in a joint statement.

Russia is not the only nation accused of conducting aggressive cyber operations in recent years.

The United States blames North Korea for hacking Sony in 2014 and launching the WannaCry ransomware attack last year.

US security researcher­s said on Wednesday that an elite group of North Korean hackers was also the source of attacks on world banks that netted ‘ hundreds of millions’ of dollars.

But British government sources said the NCSC has assessed with ‘ high confidence’ that the GRU was ‘ almost certainly’ behind the DNC hack that some Hillary Clinton supporters helped tip the US election in Trump’s favour.

Batches of DNC emails were later published by WikiLeaks. Special Counsel Robert Mueller is investigat­ing whether their release was coordinate­d with the Trump campaign.

Mueller in July indicted 12 Russian GRU officers in connection with the DNC attack.

The independen­t findings by Britain and Australia may help Mueller fend off some of the accusation­s of political bias in his probe.

British sources said the GRU was also behind BadRabbit ransomware that caused disruption­s on the Kiev metro and at an internatio­nal airport in the Ukrainian port of Odessa last October.

The same attack affected Russia’s Interfax news agency and the popular Fontanka.ru news site.

British sources said the third strike resulted in the release of the medical files of global sports stars in August 2017.

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