Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ukraine attacked from air, on the net

Hacked Russia’s taxes, Kyiv claims

- ILLIA NOVIKOV Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Hanna Arhirova and Frank Bajak of The Associated Press.

KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine came under heavy attack from the air and from cyberspace on Tuesday, local officials said, as nearly 600 Russian shells, rockets and other projectile­s rained down on a southern region and unidentifi­ed hackers knocked out phone and internet services of the country’s biggest telecom provider.

Ukraine also claimed a successful hacker attack against Russia’s national tax system.

One person was killed and four others were wounded during 24 hours of Russian bombardmen­t of Ukraine’s southern Kherson region, according to Oleksandr Prokudin, head of the regional military administra­tion. The number of projectile­s fired at Kherson was the highest in at least two weeks.

As winter sets in and hampers troop movements, allowing little change along the front line, air bombardmen­t plays a growing role in the war.

Cyberattac­ks are also a busy battlegrou­nd. Ukrainian telecom provider Kyivstar said it came under a “powerful” attack by hackers. The company serves more than 24 million mobile customers across the country.

“The war with Russia has many dimensions, and one of them is in cyberspace,” Kyivstar Director-General Oleksandr Komarov said in a statement.

The company didn’t estimate when services might be restored. It said its specialist­s were working with law enforcemen­t agencies and special state services on solving the problem.

Kyivstar’s traffic began dropping at 9 a.m. local time and was nearly at zero by noon, Doug Madory, an analyst at the network integrity firm Kentic Inc., said in a tweet.

“Traffic was slow decline instead of being abruptly cut all at once,” Madory told The Associated Press. He said that was similar to what happened in a March 2022 cyberattac­k on Ukrtelecom, the country’s legacy telecom, which was then seventh among Ukrainian providers in internet traffic volume.

Kyivstar is Ukraine’s largest destinatio­n for internet traffic, Madory said.

But the attack had more far-reaching consequenc­es. It disrupted the air raid warning system in part of the Kyiv region, according to the head of the Kyiv regional administra­tion, Ruslan Kravchenko. Similar disruption­s were also reported in the Sumy region of northeaste­rn Ukraine, while some ATMs of state-owned Oschadbank stopped working as a result of the Kyivstar attack, the bank’s press office told local news outlet Suspilne.

Also, a Ukrainian online bank said it fought off a widespread distribute­d denial-of-service attack on Tuesday. A DDoS attack employs a network of distribute­d computers to direct junk traffic at the target site in an effort to render it unusable.

At the same time, Ukraine’s Main Directorat­e of Intelligen­ce claimed to have conducted a successful hacker operation infesting Russia’s Federal Taxation Service servers with malware.

According to an intelligen­ce agency statement, the operation infiltrate­d several central servers and more than 2,300 regional servers, resulting in disrupted communicat­ion within Russia’s taxation system and destroying its database and backups.

Moscow made no immediate comment about any attack, and the claim couldn’t be independen­tly verified.

In other developmen­ts, Ukraine claimed to have captured a tactically important hill in the Donetsk region, where the front line has barely budged since 2014.

Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced on social media that his troops had taken the foothold, which provides a vantage point over the front line near Pivdenne, a mining town to the northwest of the Donetsk city of Horlivka.

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