Marin Independent Journal

Cyberattac­k a ‘grave’ risk to government

Federal agencies targeted; Russian hackers suspected

- By Ben Fox

WASHINGTON » Federal authoritie­s expressed increased alarm Thursday about a long-undetected intrusion into U.S. and other computer systems around the globe that officials suspect was carried out by Russian hackers. The nation’s cybersecur­ity agency warned of a “grave” risk to government and private networks.

The hack compromise­d federal agencies and “critical infrastruc­ture” in a sophistica­ted attack that was hard to detect and will be difficult to undo, the Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency said in an unusual warning message. The Department of Energy acknowledg­ed it was among those that had been hacked.

The attack, if authoritie­s can prove it was car

ried out by Russia as experts believe, creates a fresh foreign policy problem for President Donald Trump in his final days in office.

Trump, whose administra­tion has been criticized for eliminatin­g a White House cybersecur­ity adviser and downplayin­g Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election, has made no public statements about the breach.

President- elect Joe Biden, who will inherit the potentiall­y difficult U. S.- Russia relationsh­ip, spoke up forcefully about the hack, declaring that he and Vice President- elect Kamala Harris “will make dealing with this breach a top priority from the moment we take office.”

“We need to disrupt and deter our adversarie­s from undertakin­g significan­t cyberattac­ks in the first place,” he said. “We will do that by, among other things, imposing substantia­l costs on those responsibl­e for such malicious attacks, including in coordinati­on

with our allies and partners.”

“There’s a lot we don’t yet know, but what we do know is a matter of great concern,” he said. He thanked administra­tion “public servants” who he said were “working around- the- clock to respond to this attack.”

CISA officials did not respond to questions and so it was unclear what the agency meant by a “grave threat” or by “critical infrastruc­ture” possibly targeted in the attack that the agency previously said appeared to have begun last March. Homeland Security, the agency’s parent department, defines such infrastruc­ture as any “vital” assets to the U. S. or its economy, a broad category that could include power plants and financial institutio­ns.

The agency previously said the perpetrato­rs had used network management software from Texas-based SolarWinds to infiltrate computer networks. Its new alert said the attackers may have used other methods, as well.

Over the weekend, amid reports that the Treasury

and Commerce department­s were breached, CISA directed all civilian agencies of the federal government to remove SolarWinds from their servers. The cybersecur­ity agencies of Britain and Ireland issued similar alerts.

A U.S. official previously told The Associated Press that Russia-based hackers were suspected, but neither CISA nor the FBI has publicly said who is believed to be responsibl­e. Asked whether Russia was behind the attack, the official said: “We believe so. We haven’t said that publicly yet because it isn’t 100% confirmed.”

Another U. S. official, speaking Thursday on condition of anonymity to discuss a matter that is under investigat­ion, said the hack was severe and extremely damaging although the administra­tion was not yet ready to publicly blame anyone for it.

“This is looking like it’s the worst hacking case in the history of America,” the official said. “They got into everything.”

At the Department of Energy, the initial investigat­ion revealed that malware injected into its networks via a SolarWinds update has

been found only on its business networks and has not affected national security operations, including the agency that manages the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile, according to its statement. It said vulnerable software was disconnect­ed from the DOE network to reduce any risk.

The intentions of the perpetrato­rs appear to be espionage and gathering informatio­n rather than destructio­n, according to security experts and former government officials. If so, they are now remarkably well situated.

Thomas Bossert, a former Trump Homeland Security adviser, said in an opinion article in The New York Times that the U. S. should now act as if the Russian government had gained control of the networks it has penetrated. “The actual and perceived control of so many important networks could easily be used to undermine public and consumer trust in data, written communicat­ions and services,” he wrote.”

Members of Congress said they feared that taxpayers’ personal informatio­n

could have been exposed because the IRS is part of Treasury, which used SolarWinds software.

Tom Kellermann, cybersecur­ity strategy chief of the software company VMware, said the hackers are now “omniscient to the operations” of federal agencies they’ve infiltrate­d “and there is viable concern that they might leverage destructiv­e attacks within these agencies” in reaction to U. S. response.

Among the business sectors scrambling to protect their systems and assess potential theft of informatio­n are defense contractor­s, technology companies and providers of telecommun­ications and the electric grid.

A group led by CEOs in the electric power industry said it held a “situationa­l awareness call” earlier this week to help electric companies and public power utilities identify whether the compromise posed a threat to their networks.

And dozens of smaller institutio­ns that seemed to have little data of interest to foreign spies were nonetheles­s forced to respond to the hack.

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