Springfield News-Sun

Hackers accessed email of top federal officials

White House weighs retaliatio­n against Russia-backed effort.

- By Alan Suderman

Suspected Russian hackers gained access to email accounts belonging to the Trump administra­tion’s head of the Department of Homeland Security and members of the department’s cybersecur­ity staff whose jobs included hunting threats from foreign countries, The Associated Press has learned.

The intelligen­ce value of the hacking of then-acting Secretary Chad Wolf and his staff is not publicly known, but the symbolism is stark.

Their accounts were accessed as part of what’s known as the SolarWinds intrusion, and it throws into question how the U.S. government can protect individual­s, companies and institutio­ns across the country if it can’t protect itself.

The short answer for many security experts and federal officials is that it can’t — at least not without some significan­t changes.

“The SolarWinds hack was a victory for our foreign adversarie­s, and a failure for DHS,” said Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, top Republican on the Senate’s Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee. “We are talking about DHS’s crown jewels.”

The Biden administra­tion has tried to keep a tight lid on the scope of the SolarWinds attack as it weighs retaliator­y measures against Russia. But an inquiry by the AP found new details about the breach at DHS and other agencies, including the Energy Department, where hackers accessed top officials’ schedules.

The AP interviewe­d more than a dozen current and former U.S. government officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the confidenti­al nature of the ongoing investigat­ion into the hack.

The vulnerabil­ities at Homeland Security, in particular, intensify the worries following the SolarWinds attack and an even more widespread hack affecting Microsoft Exchange’s email program, especially because in both cases the hackers were detected not by the government but by a private company.

In December, officials discovered what they describe as a sprawling, monthslong cyberespio­nage effort done largely through a hack of a widely used software from

Texas-based SolarWinds Inc. At least nine federal agencies were hacked, along with dozens of private-sector companies.

U.S. authoritie­s have said the breach appeared to be the work of Russian hackers. Gen. Paul Nakasone, who leads the Pentagon’s cyber force, said last week that the Biden administra­tion is considerin­g a “range of options” in response. Russia has denied any role in the hack.

Since then, a series of headline-grabbing hacks has further highlighte­d vulnerabil­ities in the U.S. public and private sectors. A hacker tried unsuccessf­ully to poison the water supply of a small town in Florida in February, and this month a new breach was announced involving untold thousands of Microsoft Exchange email servers that the company says was carried out by Chinese state hackers. China has denied involvemen­t in the Microsoft breach.

Sen. Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat and head of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, said the government’s initial response to the discovery of the SolarWinds hack was disjointed.

“What struck me was how much we were in the dark for as long as we were in the dark,” Warner said at a recent cybersecur­ity conference.

Wolf and other top Homeland Security officials used new phones that had been wiped clean along with the popular encrypted messaging system Signal to communicat­e in the days after the hack, current and former officials said.

One former administra­tion official, who confirmed the Federal Aviation Administra­tion was among the agencies affected by the breach, said the agency was hampered in its response by outdated technology and struggled for weeks to identify how many servers it had running SolarWinds software.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / AP 2020 ?? The intelligen­ce value of the hacking of then-acting Secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf and his staff is not publicly known.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / AP 2020 The intelligen­ce value of the hacking of then-acting Secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf and his staff is not publicly known.

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