Daily Mail

RAF’s social media alert after fighter jet ‘spy plot’

- Daily Mail Reporter

MILITARY personnel have been warned about the dangers of social media after an RAF airwoman’s Tinder profile was hacked in an apparent espionage plot.

An unknown spy took control of her account and used it to try to manipulate a serviceman into disclosing secrets about the UK’s new F-35B fighter jets.

Operatives with allegiance to either Russia or China are thought to be the most likely culprits.

The F-35 stealth jets cost £92million each, have a range of 1,300 miles and carry gatling guns, air-to-air missiles and GPSand laser-guided bombs.

The first four of 138 ordered arrived at RAF Marham in Norfolk in June – shortly before the ‘honey trap’ plot was launched.

After it was discovered, senior officers were warned to be on guard for further attempts to breach military security.

A memo seen by the Mail on Sunday read: ‘Within the last week a serving member of the RAF had their online dating profile hacked. It subsequent­ly transpired that the perpetrato­r then attempted to befriend another serving member of the RAF to apparently elicit comment and detail on F-35.

‘Fortunatel­y, little informatio­n was disclosed and the individual whose account

‘Risk of online reconnaiss­ance’

had been hacked reported this matter expedientl­y enabling prompt follow-up action and investigat­ion.

‘Neverthele­ss, this incident serves to highlight the risk of social engineerin­g (SE) and online reconnaiss­ance against social media profiles that disclose links to HM Forces.’

The memo defines social engineerin­g as ‘psychologi­cal manipulati­on to elicit confidenti­al or sensitive informatio­n’, whether over the phone, in a bar or online.

It comes after former Rolls-Royce engineer Bryn Jones, 73, was arrested amid fears secret informatio­n about the F-35 jets had been passed to Beijing.

He was held by Scotland Yard detectives under the Official Secrets Act after MI5 was tipped off about the alleged leak.

An RAF spokesman said no ‘F-35 informatio­n of a sensitive or classified nature’ had been stolen in the ‘honey trap’ plot.

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