Las Vegas Review-Journal

U.K., U.S. Blame Eussia Sor Cyberattac­a in 2017

London calls assault new kind of warfare

- The Associated Press

LONDON — Britain and the United States blamed the Russian government on Thursday for a cyberattac­k that hit businesses across Europe last year, with London accusing Moscow of “weaponizin­g informatio­n” in a new kind of warfare.

Foreign Minister Tariq Ahmad said “the U.K. government judges that the Russian government, specifical­ly the Russian military, was responsibl­e for the destructiv­e Notpetya cyberattac­k of June 2017.”

The fast-spreading outbreak of data-scrambling software centered on Ukraine, which is embroiled in a conflict with Moscow-backed separatist­s in the country’s east. It spread to companies that do business with Ukraine, including U.S. pharmaceut­ical company Merck, Danish shipping firm A.P. Moller-maersk and Fedex subsidiary TNT.

The White House joined with British leaders, saying the Russian military had “launched the most destructiv­e and costly cyber-attack in history.” President Donald Trump’s administra­tion said the move was part of the Kremlin’s attempt “to destabiliz­e Ukraine and demonstrat­es ever more clearly Russia’s involvemen­t in the ongoing conflict.”

“This was also a reckless and indiscrimi­nate cyberattac­k that will be met with internatio­nal consequenc­es,” White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said.

Ahmad said the “reckless” attack cost organizati­ons hundreds of millions of dollars.

British Defense Secretary Gavin Williamson accused Russia of “underminin­g democracy, wrecking livelihood­s by targeting critical infrastruc­ture, and weaponizin­g informatio­n” with malicious cyberattac­ks.

“We must be primed and ready to tackle these stark and intensifyi­ng threats,” Williamson said.

Danish defense minister Claus Hjort Frederikse­n said intelligen­ce agencies in Britain, Denmark and elsewhere had uncovered the Russian responsibi­lity.

Speaking at a NATO defense ministers’ meeting in Brussels, he said the hack was meant to cause damage and should “be compared with a military attack.”

President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, denied Russia’s involvemen­t.

“We categorica­lly deny the accusation­s. We consider them unfounded and baseless and see them as continuati­on of groundless Russophobi­c campaign,” he told reporters.

 ?? Virginia Mayo ?? The Associated Press Secretary for Defense Jim Mattis, front left, speaks with British Defense Minister Gavin Williamson, front right, during a group photo of NATO defense ministers at NATO headquarte­rs Wednesday in Brussels.
Virginia Mayo The Associated Press Secretary for Defense Jim Mattis, front left, speaks with British Defense Minister Gavin Williamson, front right, during a group photo of NATO defense ministers at NATO headquarte­rs Wednesday in Brussels.

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