Houston Chronicle

Report: Economic spying on U.S. is increasing

Espionage by Russia, Iran and China targets diverse industries

- By Deb Riechmann

WASHINGTON — A Chinese cyberespio­nage group called APT10 relentless­ly attacks U.S. engineerin­g, telecom and aerospace industries. Russian hackers last year compromise­d dozens of U.S. energy companies. Iranian hackers known as “Rocket Kitten” repeatedly target American defense companies in hopes of stealing informatio­n to boost Tehran’s missile and space programs.

While Moscow’s efforts to meddle in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election are widely known, spy services from China, Russia and Iran, along with their proxy hackers, also are hard at work trying to steal trade secrets and proprietar­y informatio­n from the United States, according to a government report released Thursday. A classified version of the report was sent to Congress.

“Foreign economic and industrial espionage against the United States continues to represent a significan­t threat to America’s prosperity, security and competitiv­e advantage,” the National Counterint­elligence and Security Center said. “China, Russia and Iran stand out as three of the most capable and active cyber actors tied to economic espionage and the potential theft of U.S. trade secrets and proprietar­y informatio­n.”

‘We cannot just get numb’

Cyberespio­nage is a relatively low-cost, high-yield way to access and acquire informatio­n from U.S. research institutio­ns, universiti­es and corporatio­ns, the report said. More vulnerabil­ities will emerge with the increase in cloud computing, artificial intelligen­ce and the proliferat­ion of vehicles, home appliances, medical devices and other items connected to the internet.

Cyberopera­tions are the preferred method for conducting economic espionage, the report said, but U.S. adversarie­s also acquire sensitive informatio­n by hiring sophistica­ted hackers, recruiting spies or gleaning material from foreign students studying at American universiti­es.

Adversarie­s also are infiltrati­ng computer networks of suppliers that serve large companies, then using that connection to worm their way up the chain into large corporate computer systems. Bill Evanina, the nation’s top counterint­elligence official and director of the center, told reporters at a briefing that business leaders need to investigat­e the security of computer systems used by companies that supply their air conditioni­ng and heating, printers and copiers and the like.

“Our economic security is our national security,” Evanina said. “We cannot just get numb to our adversarie­s stealing our intellectu­al property.”

What they steal and why

The report listed two dozen technologi­es that have piqued the interest of foreign intelligen­ce collectors. They include oil, gas and coal-bed methane gas energies; smart grids; solar and wind technologi­es; biopharmac­euticals and new vaccines and drugs; defensive marine systems and radar; hybrid and electric cars; pollution control; high-end computer numericall­y controlled machines, which are used to control factory tools and machines in manufactur­ing; space infrastruc­ture and exploratio­n technology; and next generation broadband wireless communicat­ions networks.

Michael Moss, deputy director of the government’s Cyber Threat Intelligen­ce Integratio­n Center, said incidents of economic espionage are growing rapidly. “The thing that continues to surprise me is how fast it continues to accelerate. It’s getting faster and faster,” he said.

China uses joint ventures to try to acquire technical knowhow, the report said. It said Beijing seeks partnershi­ps with U.S. government labs to learn about specific technology and informatio­n about running such facilities, and it uses front companies to hide the hand of the Chinese government and acquire technology under U.S. export controls.

The Trump administra­tion has railed against China, imposed new tariffs and called for Beijing to end the theft of intellectu­al property from U.S. companies..

“If this threat is not addressed, it could erode America’s longterm competitiv­e economic advantage,” the report said.

Economic espionage conducted by hackers linked to Russia is mostly aimed at finding ways to inflict damage on the United States, disrupt services or benefit its economic interests, according to the report.

“In support of that goal, Russian intelligen­ce services have conducted sophistica­ted and large-scale hacking operations to collect sensitive U.S. business and technology informatio­n,” the report said. It also said that Russian “military modernizat­ion efforts also likely will be a motivating factor for Russia to steal U.S intellectu­al property.”

 ?? Charles Dharapak / Associated Press ?? Wanted posters depict four of the five Chinese hackers who were charged with economic espionage by a U.S. grand jury in 2014. Hacking is just one method of espionage employed by China.
Charles Dharapak / Associated Press Wanted posters depict four of the five Chinese hackers who were charged with economic espionage by a U.S. grand jury in 2014. Hacking is just one method of espionage employed by China.

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