The Commercial Appeal

Iranian leader decries gas pump cyberattac­k

News agency says 80% of gas stations back up

- Jon Gambrell and Nasser Karimi

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Iran’s president said Wednesday that a cyberattac­k that paralyzed every gas station in the Islamic Republic was designed to get “people angry by creating disorder and disruption,” as long lines still snaked around the pumps a day after the incident began.

Ebrahim Raisi’s remarks stopped short of assigning blame for the attack, which rendered useless the government-issued electronic cards that many Iranians use to buy subsidized fuel at the pump.

However, they suggested that he and others in the theocracy believe anti-iranian forces carried out an assault likely designed to inflame the country as the second anniversar­y of a deadly crackdown on nationwide protests over gasoline prices approaches.

“There should be serious readiness in the field of cyberwar, and related bodies should not allow the enemy to follow their ominous aims to make problem in trend of people’s life,” Raisi said. State television later aired footage of the president visiting a gas station in central Tehran.

The attack Tuesday also bore similariti­es to another months earlier that seemed to directly challenge Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as the country’s economy buckles under American sanctions.

On Wednesday morning, the staterun IRNA news agency quoted another official who claimed 80% of Iran’s gas stations had begun selling fuel again.

Associated Press journalist­s saw long lines at multiple gas stations in Tehran. One station had a line of 90 cars waiting for fuel. Those buying ended up having to pay at higher, unsubsidiz­ed prices.

The semiofficial ISNA news agency, which first called the incident a cyberattac­k, said it saw those trying to buy fuel with a government-issued card through the machines instead receiving a message reading “cyberattac­k 64411.”

While ISNA didn’t acknowledg­e the number’s significance, that number is associated with a hotline run through Khamenei’s office that handles questions about Islamic law. ISNA later removed its reports, claiming that it too had been hacked.

Farsi-language satellite channels abroad published videos apparently shot by drivers in Isfahan, a major Iranian city, showing electronic billboards

there reading: “Khamenei! Where is our gas?” Another said: “Free gas in Jamaran gas station,” a reference to the home of the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

The use of the number “64411” mirrored the attack in July targeting Iran’s railroad system. Israeli cybersecur­ity firm Check Point later attributed the train attack to a group of hackers calling themselves Indra, after the Hindu god of war.

Abolhassan Firouzabad­i, the secretary of the Supreme Council of Cyberspace, linked the attack to Iran’s rail system assault in July in comments reported by IRNA. He also said it affected all of Iran’s 4,300 gas station.

“There is a possibilit­y that the attack, like a previous one on railway system, has been conducted from abroad,” Firouzabad­i said.

 ?? VAHID SALEMI/AP ?? Not only did motorists in Iran have to wait in long lines to buy gas, but they also paid higher prices at the pump.
VAHID SALEMI/AP Not only did motorists in Iran have to wait in long lines to buy gas, but they also paid higher prices at the pump.

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