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NATO calls for boost in cyber defense amid latest ransomware cyberattac­ks

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BRUSSELS, BELGIUM — North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on (NATO) chief Jens Stoltenber­g warned the alliance must step up its defense against cyberattac­ks, saying they could potentiall­y trigger their Article 5 mutual defense commitment.

Computer users around the world were scrambling Wednesday to reboot systems after a tidal wave of ransomware cyberattac­ks spread from Ukraine and Russia across Europe to the United States and then on to Asia.

It seemed to be very similar to the WannaCry ransomware which hit more than 200,000 users in more than 150 countries last month.

Stoltenber­g said the “attack in May and this week just underlines the importance of strengthen­ing our cyber defenses and that is what we are doing.”

“We exercise more, we share best practices and technology and we also work more and more closely with all allies,” he told reporters ahead of a NATO defense ministers meeting in Brussels on Thursday at which cybersecur­ity will be a key talking point.

Stoltenber­g recalled that NATO leaders had agreed last year that a cyberattac­k could be considered a threat sufficient­ly serious to warrant invoking the alliance’s ‘all for one, one for all’ security guarantee.

They also made cyber a NATO domain — on a par with the traditiona­l air, sea and land arms to become part of overall alliance planning and resource allocation.

NATO was also helping Ukraine, the country first hit by Tuesday’s cyberattac­k, with its online defenses, Stoltenber­g said.

In the NATO context, the greatest fear is that another state would attack an ally’s networks to undermine key industrial and civil society infrastruc­ture without firing a shot.

In the event, however, it seems non-state actors may be able to cause just as much mayhem. —

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