The Guardian Australia

270,000 UK forces records thought to have been exposed to Chinese hackers

- Dan Sabbagh Defence and security editor

An estimated 270,000 payroll records belonging to nearly all members of Britain’s armed forces have been exposed to Chinese hackers in a breach at a third-party contractor that was discovered a few days ago.

The data at risk includes names and bank details and, in a few thousand instances, addresses and national insurance numbers of current and recently departed members of the army, navy and air force and reservists, government sources indicated.

There is no immediate evidence that any data has been stolen or interfered with, but inquiries are continuing. Personnel are expected to be offered credit checks so people can monitor if their bank details have been used without permission.

Grant Shapps, the UK defence secretary, is expected to brief MPs on Tuesday afternoon on the situation and the steps being taken by the MoD to deal with the problem. Hackers are believed to have been present in the system for some time, possibly weeks.

An announceme­nt had been planned on Tuesday, but details leaked overnight to the media before personnel were briefed, military sources said. Once the hack was discovered, the system was promptly taken offline.

Shapps is not expected to formally attribute the attack to China, but it is understood the hackers were from there. It is the latest in a growing number of data breaches linked to Beijing.

The Electoral Commission was hacked by Chinese actors in August 2021 and in March ministers held China responsibl­e. The attackers gained access to copies of the electoral registers and broken into its emails and control systems.

Rishi Sunak, the prime minister, said China was “behaving in an increasing­ly assertive way abroad” and was “the greatest state-based threat to our economic security”. Parliament­arians critical of Beijing were also targeted, the government said.

The SAS and other special forces are understood to be paid separately, and so not affected. Some of the 270,000 records that affected by the breach are understood to be duplicates, so the actual number of people affected is likely to turn out to be lower.

A Ministry of Defence spokespers­on said: “The defence secretary will make a planned statement to the House of Commons this afternoon setting out the multi-point plan to support and protect personnel.”

A spokespers­on for the Chinese foreign ministry said Beijing opposed and fought all forms of cyber-attack and rejected using the issue for political ends to smear other countries.

A spokespers­on for the Chinese embassy in London added: “China has always upheld the principle of noninterfe­rence in each other’s internal affairs. China has neither the interest nor

the need to meddle in the internal affairs of the UK.

“We urge the relevant parties in the UK to stop spreading false informatio­n, stop fabricatin­g so-called China threat narratives, and stop their anti-China political farce.”

Alfie Usher, an army veteran who runs Claims Bible, a military compensati­on specialist, said members of the armed forces should be vigilant.

“The MoD will offer a credit check software so people can keep an eye on new accounts being opened or any fraud alerts, along with individual­s taking extra care when using their emails to avoid phishing scams,” he added.

Investigat­ors, who include the government cybersecur­ity agencies GCHQ and NCSC, are also looking at “potential failings” by the contractor­s who ran the outsourced pay system on behalf of the MoD.

Forces pay is handled by SSCL, a subsidiary of the Paris-headquarte­red Sopra Steria. SSCL’s website says it provides core payroll, HR and pension services for 230,000 military personnel and reservists and 2 million veterans.

Sopra Steria has been approached for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA ?? The MoD building in London. The UK defence secretary, Grant Shapps, is expected to brief MPs onTuesday afternoon.
Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA The MoD building in London. The UK defence secretary, Grant Shapps, is expected to brief MPs onTuesday afternoon.

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