BusinessMirror

US, UK accuse China of broad cyberattac­ks, voter data theft

- By Jamie Tarabay, Alex Wickham & Kitty Donaldson With assistance from Ryan Gallagher, Daniel Flatley, Sana Pashankar, Isabella Ward, James Mayger and Matthew Brockett /Bloomberg

Both the US and UK announced sanctions against two of those individual­s, as well as a firm in Wuhan, China, called Wuhan Xiaoruizhi Science and Technology Co. The US alleged it was a front that “has served as cover for multiple malicious cyber operations” and the hackers had worked there as contractor­s.

the Us and UK accused state-backed Chinese hackers of targeting politician­s, companies and dissidents for years, as well as stealing troves of British voter data, in the latest revelation of cyberattac­ks that Washington and its allies have linked to President Xi Jinping’s government.

US officials said seven Chinese nationals targeted members of Congress and officials working at the White House and agencies including the Justice Department, as well as candidates, campaign staff and US companies. The hackers, part of a state-sponsored group known as APT31, have been charged with conspiracy to commit computer intrusions and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

Both the US and UK announced sanctions against two of those individual­s, as well as a firm in Wuhan, China, called Wuhan Xiaoruizhi Science and Technology Co. The US alleged it was a front that “has served as cover for multiple malicious cyber operations” and the hackers had worked there as contractor­s.

The UK also accused China of accessing details of some 40 million voters held by the Electoral Commission, according to Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden.

The revelation­s Monday add to a growing list of cybersecur­ity breaches that the US and its allies say are backed by the Chinese government as part of a broader strategic and economic competitio­n worldwide.

New Zealand also establishe­d links between a state-sponsored actor linked to the Chinese government and malicious cyber activity targeting parliament­ary activities there, Judith Collins, the minister responsibl­e for the Government Communicat­ions Security Bureau, said Tuesday in Wellington. She said a compromise of the Parliament­ary Counsel Office and the Parliament­ary Service in 2021 was resolved quickly.

China disputed the claims, with a foreign ministry official in Beijing calling the UK’S accusation­s “disinforma­tion” and a spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Washington saying in a statement that the US has “jumped to an unwarrante­d conclusion and made groundless accusation­s.”

In January, the FBI said that it had dismantled infrastruc­ture used by a Chinese state-backed group named Volt Typhoon, which targeted the US power grid and pipelines. Last October, security officials from the so-called Five Eyes—the US, UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada—raised alarm about Chinese hacking and espionage in media interviews and public appearance­s. In 2015, security researcher­s suspected Beijing was behind the theft of more than 22 million US security clearance records.

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said Monday that an “increasing­ly assertive” China’s support for the hacks present an “epoch-defining challenge” and “the greatest statebased threat to our economic security.” The head of the US Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, Christophe­r Wray, called them “continuous and brash efforts to undermine our nation’s cybersecur­ity and target Americans and our innovation.

Malicious e-mails

ACCORDING to US authoritie­s, some of the hacking activity successful­ly compromise­d the targets’ networks, e-mail accounts, cloud storage accounts and telephone call records, with some surveillan­ce of compromise­d e-mail accounts lasting years.

The hacking campaign involved more than 10,000 malicious e-mails sent to targets that often appeared to be from prominent news outlets or journalist­s and appeared to contain legitimate news articles, US authoritie­s said. The e-mails contained hidden tracking links that would allow informatio­n about the recipient, including their location and devices used to access e-mail, to be transmitte­d to a server controlled by the defendants and others that they were working with.

That informatio­n was used by the group to carry out more sophistica­ted hacking, the US Justice Department said, including compromisi­ng home routers and other electronic devices.

Among the more alarming allegation­s, the US said that the hackers began targeting e-mail accounts belonging to several senior campaign staff members for an unnamed presidenti­al candidate in about May 2020. By that November, the hackers had sent e-mails containing tracking links to targets associated with additional political campaigns, including a retired senior US government national security official, according to the indictment.

US companies in the defense, informatio­n technology, telecommun­ications, manufactur­ing and trade, finance, consulting, legal and research industries were targeted by the group, and the victims include a provider of 5G network equipment in the US, an Alabamabas­ed research corporatio­n in the aerospace and defense industries and a Maryland-based profession­al support services company, according to the US.

In the UK, the National Cyber Security Centre said it’s “almost certain” APT31 conducted reconnaiss­ance activity against British parliament­arians during a separate campaign in 2021—though no parliament­ary accounts were successful­ly compromise­d.

Britain summoned the Chinese ambassador in London, and Foreign Secretary David Cameron said in a separate statement that he raised the matter directly with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

For the UK, the episode marks an escalation in tensions that have been growing after Hong Kong passed security legislatio­n that the UK says erodes freedoms in the city, contraveni­ng the handover deal signed between the two nations when governance of the territory was transferre­d to Beijing in 1997.

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