Oman Daily Observer

Russia may have tested cyber warfare on Latvia: Officials

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RIGA/BRUSSELS: Moscow was probably behind interrupti­ons in Latvia’s mobile communicat­ions network before Russia’s war games last month, in an apparent test of its cyber attack tools, Baltic and Nato officials said, based on early intelligen­ce of the drills.

Russia is suspected of interrupti­ng the mobile network along Latvia’s western coast for seven hours on August 30, Nato diplomats and Latvian security officials said. A communicat­ions jammer aimed towards Sweden from Russia’s Baltic outpost Kaliningra­d may have been used.

Latvian officials suspect Moscow targeted Latvia’s emergency services’ 112 hotline, which failed for the first time on September 13, just before the most intensive phase of Russia’s biggest war games since 2013, known as Zapad, or West, the officials said.

“Russia appears to have switched on a mobile communicat­ions jammer in Kaliningra­d, a very powerful one that wasn’t aimed at Latvia, but towards Gotland, the Aland Islands,” said Karlis Serzants, the Deputy Chairman of the Latvian parliament’s National Security Committee.

“One of the edges (of the beam) affected Latvia too,” he said after being briefed by Latvian intelligen­ce.

The Russian Defence Ministry did not respond to a Reuters request for comment on the allegation­s. A Swedish defence ministry spokespers­on said the ministry was not aware of any jamming attempt directed at Sweden.

The disruption­s were minor compared with the hackers who disrupted multinatio­nal firms, ports and public services across the globe this year, officials said.

But broader Nato intelligen­ce indicating that Russia put cyber at the heart of the Zapad drills and practised using it as an offensive tool is a major concern.

It is also a step that not all European allies in Nato are ready to take, diplomats and military officials said. Nato has so far stressed that its cyber strategy is purely defensive.

They also underscore Russia’s ability to intercept or jam civilian networks “within a significan­t radius and with relative ease”, a Nato diplomat said, adding that Russian technologi­cal advances could carry risks for Nato communicat­ions and radars.

US Army Lieutenant General Ben Hodges, who heads US. Army forces in Europe, said Russia had developed “a significan­t electronic warfare capability” over the past three years.

“A lot of this was on display during the (Zapad) exercises,” he told reporters, describing it as powerful, sophistica­ted and a sign of the progress Russia made in electronic warfare while Nato was fighting counterins­urgency campaigns in Afghanista­n.

The Zapad exercises in Belarus, the Baltic Sea, western Russia and Kaliningra­d, also showcased Russia’s military modernisat­ion on a new, vast scale. That led officials on both sides to talk of the risk of a Cold War-style confrontat­ion.

From the Arctic to the Black Sea, Moscow exercised some 100,000 troops in a series of interlocki­ng drills that some Nato officials said tested Russia’s ability to wage war on the West, Nato officials said. Moscow blames Nato for exaggerati­ng the size of the war games.

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