FBI threatens to go after Russian hackers
by alethoRT | May 23, 2014
On
the heels of a high-profile indictment announced earlier this week by
the United States Department of Justice against five Chinese military
officers, sources say Russian hackers could be among the next
individuals targeted by the DOJ.
The Wall Street Journal, Foreign Policy magazine and the Chicago Tribune
all reported this week that officials close to the US government’s hunt
for foreign hackers say Russians are on the radar of the Justice
Department, and could be named in the next DOJ indictment.
All
three outlets hesitated to name their sources, but the Journal reported
that people familiar with the government’s investigations said alleged
cybercriminals in Russia are likely to be charged soon.
“For
several years, the Obama administration has put Chinese and Russian
cyber spies and criminals at the top of its list of worst offenders in
what officials describe as a relentless campaign targeting American
businesses for the benefit of those countries' own industries,” Shane
Harris wrote for FP. “Estimates on the true cost of
cyber-espionage range widely, but are generally believe by experts and
officials to be in the tens of billions of dollars annually.”
As
Harris reported, Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey
told members of the Senate Judiciary Committee this week that the FBI
was aggressively pursuing further criminal investigations pertaining to
foreign hacking cases, but fell short of announcing the filing of new
charges. Now with Monday’s indictment out of the way and the US
officially charging members of the Chinese military for the first time
ever, however, multiple sources said that American authorities are
gearing up to throw the book at Russian hackers.
Earlier
this week, the Justice Dept. said that five Chinese individuals working
within a highly-secretive cyber unit inside the People’s Liberation
Army have stolen trade secrets and sensitive communications from six
American entities, including major metal companies that compete with
Chinese businesses and the US Steel Workers union.
“The
range of trade secrets and other sensitive business information stolen
in this case is significant and demands an aggressive response,” US
Attorney General Eric Holder said in a statement on Monday.
“This
administration will not tolerate actions by any nation that seeks to
illegally sabotage American companies and undermine the integrity of
fair competition in the operation of the free market,” Holder added.
Nevertheless,
the Chinese government fired back and accused the US of hypocrisy, and
its Foreign Ministry demanded a withdrawal of the indictment and called
the US “the biggest attacker of China’s cyberspace.” As RT reported
earlier this week, leaked National Security Agency documents released
by former US government contractor Edward Snowden have revealed that the
US does, in fact, conduct economic cyberespionage in order to spy on
competitors in Brazil, France, Mexico and, indeed, China. As with China,
the Russian government has adamantly denied any involved in cyber
spying, and claims to lack the same technical abilities as the NSA.
And although the Justice Dept. declined to name any other targets of investigation while touting their latest cyber indictment on Monday,
reports for years have suggested that Russian hackers have targeted US
businesses in a similar way to what China’s PLA Unit 61398 are accused
of doing.
Most
recently, American cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike reported in January
that the Russian government spied on hundreds of US, European and Asian
companies, which Reuters called the first time ever that Moscow has been
linked to conduct economic espionage over the web.
"These
attacks appear to have been motivated by the Russian government's
interest in helping its industry maintain competitiveness in key areas
of national importance," Dmitri Alperovitch, CrowdStrike’s chief
technology officer of CrowdStrike, said to Reuters at the time.
"They are copying the Chinese play book," he said. "Cyber espionage is very lucrative for economic benefit to a nation."
In March, researchers in the US also traced a piece of malicious malware known as Turla back to Moscow.
"It
is sophisticated malware that's linked to other Russian exploits, uses
encryption and targets western governments,” Jim Lewis, a senior fellow
at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington,
told Reuters then. “It has Russian paw prints all over it.”

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