The Fayetteville Observer

UK, US officials spotlight China’s rising cyber threat

- Michael Holden and James Pearson

BIRMINGHAM, England – U.S. and British officials warned on Tuesday of a growing cyber threat from China, with the White House cyber director saying Beijing was capable of causing havoc in cyberspace and a UK spy agency chief warning of an “epoch-defining” challenge.

Anxiety has been increasing in the United States and Europe about alleged Chinese cyber and espionage activity, but Beijing has denied the accusation­s.

“China poses a genuine and increasing cyber risk to the UK,” Anne KeastButle­r, director of Britain’s Government Communicat­ions Headquarte­rs (GCHQ) eavesdropp­ing agency, told a security conference in the central English city of Birmingham.

She said the response to Beijing’s activities was GCHQ’s top priority, and that coercive and destabiliz­ing actions by China threatened internatio­nal norms.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on Monday Britain faced a threat from “an axis of authoritar­ian states like Russia, Iran, North Korea, and China,” and British prosecutor­s charged three men with assisting Hong Kong’s foreign intelligen­ce service in Britain. China dismissed the case as a fabricatio­n.

Britain said on Tuesday it had summoned China’s ambassador to say cyberattac­ks and reports of espionage links were not acceptable.

Keast-Butler, who was appointed GCHQ chief last year, echoed Sunak in saying the next few years would be dangerous and transforma­tional.

“Russia and Iran pose immediate threats, but China is the ‘epoch-defining’ challenge,” she said.

U.S. National Cyber Director Harry Coker told the conference that Chinese military hackers were circumvent­ing U.S. defenses in cyberspace and targeting U.S. interests at an “unpreceden­ted scale.”

“In a crisis or conflict scenario, China could use their pre-positioned cyber capabiliti­es to wreak havoc in civilian infrastruc­ture and deter U.S. military action,” he said.

U.S. officials confronted Beijing last month about a sweeping cyberespio­nage campaign dubbed “Volt Typhoon” in which Chinese hackers broke into dozens of American critical infrastruc­ture organizati­ons, using a vast global network of compromise­d personal computers and servers.

FBI Director Christophe­r Wray suggested it was linked to China’s broader intent to deter the U.S. from defending Taiwan. A Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on said Volt Typhoon was unrelated to China’s government.

The arrest of alleged Chinese spies, and accusation­s Chinese state-backed hackers stole data from Britain’s elections watchdog and carried out surveillan­ce operations, have strained relations between Britain and China.

Sunak said last month Chinese state-affiliated actors had conducted “malicious cyber campaigns” against British lawmakers, and British media, citing government sources, said China was behind a hack on the British armed forces’ payments system. Beijing said the accusation­s were absurd.

Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin told a press conference on Tuesday that Britain had repeatedly hyped allegation­s about Chinese spies and cyberattac­ks.

 ?? CARL COURT/REUTERS ?? Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak delivers a speech on national security at the Policy Exchange in London on Monday.
CARL COURT/REUTERS Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak delivers a speech on national security at the Policy Exchange in London on Monday.

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