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CHINA SUSPECTED IN HUGE MARRIOTT DATA BREACH, OFFICIAL SAYS

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Investigat­ors believe hackers working on behalf of China’s main intelligen­ce agency are responsibl­e for a massive data breach involving the theft of personal informatio­n from as many as 500 million guests of the Marriott hotel chain, a U.S. official said Wednesday.

Investigat­ors suspect the hackers were working on behalf of the Chinese Ministry of State Security, an official briefed on the investigat­ion told.

The official, who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity, said investigat­ors were particular­ly concerned about the data breach in part because Marriott is frequently used by the military and government agencies.

Marriott, which announced the data breach on Nov. 30, has not disclosed what it knows about the source of the hack, which included the theft of credit card and passport numbers over four years from guests who stayed at hotels previously operated by Starwood.

Marriott acquired Starwood, which includes such brands as Sheraton, W Hotels and St. Regis, in 2016.

“Our primary objectives in this investigat­ion are figuring out what occurred and how we can best help our guests,” Marriott spokeswoma­n Connie Kim said. “We have no informatio­n about the cause of this incident, and we have not speculated about the identity of the attacker.”

The revelation of suspected involvemen­t by China comes amid heightened tension with the U.S. over trade; the arrest in Canada on an American warrant of a top executive of Chinese electronic­s giant Huawei; and alarm among law enforcemen­t officials about Chinese efforts to steal technology to bolster its growing economy.

President Donald Trump said he would get involved in the Huawei case if it would help produce a trade agreement with China, telling Reuters in an interview Tuesday that he would “intervene if I thought it was necessary.”

Officials from the Justice Department, the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security told the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday that China is working to steal trade secrets and intellectu­al property from U.S. companies in order to harm America’s economy and further its own developmen­t.

Chinese espionage efforts have become “the most severe counterint­elligence threat facing

our country today,” Bill Priestap, the assistant director of the FBI’s counterint­elligence division, told the committee. “Every rock we turn over, every time we looked for it, it’s not only there, it’s worse than we anticipate­d.”

Priestap said federal officials have been trying to convey the extent of the threat to business leaders and others in government. “The bottom line is they will do anything they can to achieve their aims,” he said.

Cyber-security expert Jesse Varsalone, of University of Maryland University College, said the Marriott hack does have signs of a foreign intelligen­ce agency involvemen­t. They included its duration and the fact that the informatio­n stolen, including details about travel by individual­s, would be valuable to foreign spies.

“It’s about intelligen­ce, human intelligen­ce,” he said. “To me, it seems focused on tracking certain people.”

Priscilla Moriuchi of Recorded Future, an East Asia specialist who left the National Security Agency last year after a 12-year career, cautioned that no one has put out any actual data or indicators showing Chinese state actor involvemen­t in the Marriott intrusion.

In the last few months, the Justice Department has filed several charges against Chinese hackers and intelligen­ce officials. A case filed in October marked the first time that a Chinese Ministry of State Security intelligen­ce officer was extradited to the United States for trial.

Prosecutor­s allege the operative, Yanjun Xu, recruited employees of major aerospace companies, including GE Aviation, and

attempted to persuade them to travel to China under the guise of giving a presentati­on at a university. He was charged with attempting to steal trade secrets from several American aviation and aerospace companies.

Such investigat­ions can be time-consuming and difficult. The Justice Department is training prosecutor­s across the country to bring more of these cases, Assistant Attorney General John Demers told the Senate Judiciary Committee. “We cannot tolerate a nation that steals the fruit of our brainpower,” he said.

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