The Pak Banker

US to charge Iran in cyber attacks against banks

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The Obama administra­tion is expected to blame Iranian hackers for a coordinate­d campaign of cyber attacks in 2012 and 2013 on several U.S. banks and a New York dam, sources familiar with the matter have told media.

The Justice Department has prepared an indictment against about a half-dozen Iranians, said the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivit­y of the matter. It is one of the highestpro­file U.S. indictment­s against a foreign nation on hacking charges.

It follows a landmark 2014 case in which a grand jury charged five members of the Chinese military with hacking into American computer networks and engaging in cyber espionage on behalf of a foreign government.

The charges, related to unlawful access to computers and other alleged crimes, were expected to be announced publicly by U.S. officials as soon as Thursday morning at a news conference in Washington, the sources said.

The indictment was expected to directly link the hacking campaign to the Iranian government, one source said. The banks will not be identified in the indictment due to fear of retaliatio­n, the source said. Though a planned indictment for the breach of back-office computer systems at the Bowman Avenue Dam in Rye Brook, New York, has been reported, it was only part of a hacking campaign that was broader than previously known, as the indictment will show, the sources said.

The dam breach coincided roughly with a spate of distribute­d denial of service attacks in 2012 that hit more than a half dozen U.S. financial institutio­ns and the two episodes were long suspected of being connected. Cyber security experts have said these, too, were perpetrate­d by Iranian hackers against Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Capital One, PNC Financial Services and SunTrust Bank.

In the intrusion of the dam computers, the hackers did not gain operationa­l control of the floodgates, and investigat­ors believe they were attempting to test their capabiliti­es.

The hackers who were expected to be named in the indictment all reside in Iran, one source said. The Justice Department declined to comment. The indictment would be the Obama administra­tion's latest step to confront foreign cyber attacks on the United States. President Barack Obama accused and publicly condemned North Korea over a 2014 hack on Sony Pictures and vowed to "respond proportion­ally." No details were made public of any retaliatio­n. James Lewis, a cyber security expert with the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies think tank, said, "We need to make clear that there will be consequenc­es for cyberattac­ks and that the Wild West days are coming to an end."

Two weeks ago, it was widely reported that U.S. prosecutor­s were preparing an indictment against Iranian hackers related solely to the dam attack.

The broader indictment would come at a time of reduced tensions between the United States and Iran after a landmark 2015 nuclear deal. At the same time, the Obama administra­tion has shown a willingnes­s to confront Tehran for bad behavior. Charging the Iranian hackers would be the highest-profile move of its type by the Obama administra­tion since the Justice Department in 2014 accused five members of China's People's Liberation Army with hacking several Pennsylvan­ia-based companies in an alleged effort to steal trade secrets.

U.S. national security profession­als and cyber-security experts have grown increasing­ly worried about attacks on infrastruc­ture including dams, power plants, factories and financial institutio­ns.

That concern has grown since a December cyber attack in the Ukraine caused a blackout that temporaril­y left 225,000 customers without power.

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