Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US, UK allege China cyberespio­nage drive

- James Pearson, Raphael Satter and Christophe­r Bing

WASHINGTON – U.S. and British officials on Monday filed charges, imposed sanctions and accused Beijing of a sweeping cyberespio­nage campaign that allegedly hit millions of people including lawmakers, academics and journalist­s, and companies including defense contractor­s.

Authoritie­s on both sides of the Atlantic nicknamed the hacking group Advanced Persistent Threat 31 or “APT31,” calling it an arm of China’s Ministry of State Security. Officials reeled off a laundry list of targets: White House staffers, U.S. senators, British parliament­arians, and government officials across the world who criticized Beijing. Defense contractor­s, dissidents and security companies were also hit, the officials said.

The aim of the global hacking operation was to “repress critics of the Chinese regime, compromise government institutio­ns, and steal trade secrets,” Deputy U.S. Attorney General Lisa Monaco said in a statement.

In an indictment unsealed on Monday against seven of the alleged Chinese hackers, U.S. prosecutor­s in court said the hacking resulted in the confirmed or potential compromise of work accounts, personal emails, online storage and telephone call records belonging to millions of Americans. Officials in London accused APT31 of hacking British lawmakers critical of China and said that a second group of Chinese spies was behind the hack of Britain’s electoral watchdog that separately compromise­d the data of millions more people in the United Kingdom.

Britain’s Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden told Parliament the cyberattac­ks “demonstrat­e a clear and persistent pattern of behavior that signals hostile intent from China,” adding the foreign office had summoned the Chinese ambassador to explain.

Chinese diplomats in Britain and the U.S. dismissed the allegation­s as unwarrante­d. The Chinese Embassy in London called the charges “completely fabricated and malicious slanders.”

Reuters was not immediatel­y able to locate contact informatio­n for the seven alleged hackers being charged by the Department of Justice.

The announceme­nts were made as both Britain and the U.S. imposed sanctions on a firm they said was a Ministry of State Security front company tied to the hacking activity.

The U.S. Treasury Department in a statement said the sanctions were on Wuhan Xiaoruizhi Science and Technology, as well as on two Chinese nationals. “Today’s announceme­nt exposes China’s continuous and brash efforts to undermine our nation’s cybersecur­ity and target Americans and our innovation,” FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said in a statement.

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