Business Day

Russia accused of cyber attacks

• Dutch and British allege moves to undermine Western democracie­s

- Guy Faulconbri­dge and Anthony Deutsch London/The Hague

Britain and the Netherland­s accused Russia of running a global campaign of cyber attacks to undermine Western democracie­s, including what the Dutch government described as an attempt to hack into the UN chemical-weapons watchdog.

Moscow denied what its foreign ministry spokeswoma­n called a “diabolical perfume cocktail” of allegation­s by someone with a “rich imaginatio­n”.

But the accusation­s will deepen Moscow’s isolation at a time when its diplomatic ties with the West have been downgraded over the poisoning of a spy in Britain and it is under US and European sanctions over its actions in Ukraine.

Dutch authoritie­s said they had disrupted an attempt to hack into the Hague-based Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) in April. At the time, the UN watchdog was investigat­ing the poison used to attack a former spy in Britain and chemical weapons which the West says were used in Syria by Russia’s ally President Bashar al-Assad.

Dutch Defence Minister Ank Bijleveld called on Russia to cease activities aimed at “underminin­g” Western democracie­s.

According to a presentati­on by the head of the Netherland­s’ military intelligen­ce agency, four Russians arrived in the Netherland­s on April 10 and were caught with spying equipment at a hotel next to the OPCW headquarte­rs.

The four were detained on April 13 and expelled to Russia, said Maj-Gen Onno Eichelshei­m of the Netherland­s.

The four had planned to travel to a laboratory in Spiez, Switzerlan­d used by the OPCW to analyse samples, he said.

Russian military intelligen­ce “is active here in the Netherland­s ... where a lot of internatio­nal organisati­ons are (based),” Eichelshei­m said.

Earlier on Thursday, Britain released an assessment based on work by its National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), which cast Russia’s GRU military intelligen­ce agency as a cyber aggressor that used a network of hackers to sow worldwide discord.

The GRU, Britain said, was almost certainly behind the BadRabbit and World Anti-Doping Agency attacks of 2017, the hack of the US Democratic National Committee in 2016 and the theft of e-mails from a UKbased TV station in 2015.

“The GRU’s actions are reckless and indiscrimi­nate: they try to undermine and interfere in elections in other countries,” said British foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt. “Our message is clear — together with our allies, we will expose and respond to the GRU’s attempts to undermine internatio­nal stability.”

The GRU, now officially known in Russia by a shorter acronym GU, is also the agency Britain has blamed in the past for sending two agents to England to poison former spy Sergei Skripal with a chemical weapon sprayed in his door.

Skripal, his daughter and a police officer fell seriously ill; a woman later died after her partner found the poison in a discarded perfume bottle.

Russia says the two men Britain blames for the attack were tourists who twice visited Skripal’s home town during a weekend trip to England, a story Britain says is so far-fetched as to prove Moscow’s culpabilit­y.

After the Skripal poisoning, dozens of Western countries launched the biggest expulsion of Russian spies working under diplomatic cover since the height of the Cold War. Moscow replied with tit-for-tat expulsions of Westerners.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is a former KGB spy, said on Wednesday that Skripal, a GRU officer who betrayed dozens of agents to Britain’s MI6 spy service, was a “scumbag” who had betrayed Russia.

Britain said the GRU was associated with a host of hackers including APT 28, Fancy Bear, Sofacy, Pawnstorm, Sednit, CyberCalip­hate, Cyber Berkut, Voodoo Bear and BlackEnerg­y Actors.

The US sanctioned GRU officers including its chief, Igor Korobov, in 2016 and 2018 for attempted interferen­ce in the 2016 US election and for various cyber attacks.

Australia and New Zealand backed the United Kingdom’s findings on the GRU.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Spy plots: Dutch defence minister Ank Bijleveld and British ambassador to the Netherland­s Peter Wilson.
/Reuters Spy plots: Dutch defence minister Ank Bijleveld and British ambassador to the Netherland­s Peter Wilson.

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