The Guardian (USA)

US charges four Russian hackers over cyberattac­ks on global energy sector

- Reuters in Washington

The US has unveiled criminal charges against four Russian government officials, saying they engaged in two major hacking campaigns between 2012 and 2018 that targeted the global energy sector and affected thousands of computers across 135 countries.

In one now-unsealed indictment from August 2021, the justice department said three alleged hackers from Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) carried out cyber-attacks on the computer networks of oil and gas firms, nuclear power plants, and utility and power transmissi­on companies across the world between 2012 and 2017.

The three accused Russians in that case are Pavel Aleksandro­vich Akulov, 36, Mikhail Mikhailovi­ch Gavrilov, 42, and Marat Valeryevic­h Tyukov, 39.

In a second unsealed indictment from June 2021, the DoJ accused Evgeny Viktorovic­h Gladkikh, a 36year-old Russian ministry of defense research institute employee, of conspiring with others between May and September 2017 to hack the systems of a foreign refinery and install malware known as “Triton” on a safety system produced by Schneider Electric.

The justice department unsealed the two cases just days after US president Joe Biden warned about “evolving intelligen­ce” suggesting the Russian government is exploring options for more cyber-attacks in the future.

A department official told reporters on Thursday that even though the hacking at issue in the two cases occurred years ago, investigat­ors remained concerned Russia will continue to launch similar attacks.

These charges show the dark art of the possible when it comes to critical infrastruc­ture,” the official said.

The official added that the four accused Russians are not in custody, but the department decided to unseal the indictment­s because they determined the “benefit of revealing the results of the investigat­ion now outweighs the likelihood of arrests in the future.”

The 2017 attack stunned the cybersecur­ity community when it was made public by researcher­s later that year because – unlike typical digital intrusions aimed at stealing data or holding it for ransom – it appeared aimed at causing physical damage to the facility itself by disabling its safety system.

US officials have been tracking the case and its aftershock­s ever since.

In 2019, those behind Triton were reported to be scanning and probing at least 20 electric utilities in the United States for vulnerabil­ities.

The following year – two weeks before the 2020 US presidenti­al election – the US treasury department sanctioned the Russian government-backed Central Scientific Research Institute of Chemistry and Mechanics, where Gladkikh is alleged to have worked.

The news of the indictment represents “a shot across the bow” to any Russian hacking groups that might be poised to carry out destructiv­e attacks against US critical infrastruc­ture, said John Hultquist of the cybersecur­ity firm Mandiant.

Now that these criminal charges are public, he added, the United States has “let them know that we know who they are.”.

 ?? Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty Images ?? The Russian hackers targeted the global energy sector in campaigns that affected thousands of computers across 135 countries. Photograph:
Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty Images The Russian hackers targeted the global energy sector in campaigns that affected thousands of computers across 135 countries. Photograph:

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