Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US: Hack of agencies ‘likely Russian in origin’

- Eric Tucker JENNY KANE/AP FILE

WASHINGTON – Top national security agencies in a rare joint statement Tuesday confirmed that Russia was likely responsibl­e for a massive hack of U.S. government department­s and corporatio­ns, rejecting President Donald Trump’s claim that China might be to blame.

The statement represente­d the U.S. government’s first formal attempt to assign responsibi­lity for the breaches at multiple agencies and to assign a possible motive for the operation. It said the hacks appeared to be intended for “intelligen­ce-gathering,” suggesting the evidence so far pointed to a Russian spying effort rather than an attempt to damage or disrupt U.S. government operations.

“This is a serious compromise that will require a sustained and dedicated effort to remediate,” said the statement, distribute­d by a cyber working group made up of the FBI and other investigat­ive agencies.

The hacking campaign amounts to Washington’s worst cyberespio­nage failure to date. The intruders had been stalking through government agencies, defense contractor­s and telecommun­ications companies for at least seven months when it was discovered. Experts say that gave the foreign agents ample time to collect data that could be highly damaging to U.S. national security, though the scope of the breaches and exactly what informatio­n was sought are unknown.

The hacking campaign was extraordin­ary in its scale – 18,000 organizati­ons were infected earlier this year by malicious code that piggybacke­d on popular network-management software from an Austin, Texas, company called SolarWinds. Of those 18,000 customers, the statement said, “a much smaller number have been compromise­d by follow-on activity on their systems,” with fewer than 10 federal government agencies falling into that category.

The Treasury and Commerce department­s are among the agencies affected. Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, said after a briefing last month to the Senate Finance Committee that dozens of email accounts within the Treasury Department had been compromise­d and that hackers had broken into systems used by the department’s highest-ranking officials.

A senior executive of the cybersecur­ity firm that discovered the malware, FireEye, said last month that “dozens of incredibly high-value targets” have been infiltrated by elite, state-backed hackers.

The executive, Charles Carmakal, would not name the targets. Nor has Microsoft, which says it identified more than 40 compromise­d government and private targets, mostly in the United States.

U.S. officials, including then-Attorney General William Barr and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and cybersecur­ity experts have previously said Russia was to blame. But Trump, in a series of tweets late last month, sought to downplay the severity of the hack and raised the unsubstant­iated idea that China could be responsibl­e.

Tuesday’s statement makes clear that is not the case, saying the intrusions are likely “Russian in origin.”

Russia has denied involvemen­t in the hack.

 ??  ?? Tuesday’s statement represente­d the government’s first formal attempt to assign responsibi­lity for breaches at multiple agencies.
Tuesday’s statement represente­d the government’s first formal attempt to assign responsibi­lity for breaches at multiple agencies.

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