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Chinese
hack into White House network
By Demetri Sevastopulo in Washington
November 6 2008
Chinese hackers have penetrated the White House computer
network on multiple occasions, and obtained e-mails between
government officials, a senior US official told the Financial
Times.
On each occasion, the cyber attackers accessed the White
House computer system for brief periods, allowing them enough
time to steal information before US computer experts patched
the system.
US government cyber intelligence experts suspect the attacks
were sponsored by the Chinese government because of their
targeted nature. But they concede that it is extremely difficult
to trace the exact source of an attack beyond a server in
a particular country.
We are getting very targeted Chinese attacks so it
stretches credulity that these are not directed by government-related
organisations, said the official.
The official said the Chinese cyber attacks had the hallmarks
of the grain of sands approach taken by Chinese
intelligence, which involves obtaining and pouring through
lots of - often low-level - information to find a few nuggets.
Some US defence companies have privately warned about attacks
on their systems, which they believe are attempts to learn
about future weapons systems.
The National Cyber Investigative Joint Task Force, a new
unit established in 2007 to tackle cyber security, detected
the attacks on the White House. But the official stressed
that the hackers had only accessed the unclassified computer
network, not the more secure classified network.
For a short period of time, they successfully breach
a wall, and then you rebuild the wall ... it is not as if
they have continued access, said the official. It
is constant cat and mouse.
Dana Perino, White House press secretary, declined to comment.
The Chinese embassy also did not comment, but in the past
China has called similar allegations reflective of Cold-War
thinking.
The US has increased efforts to tackle cyber security, particularly
since Chinese hackers believed to be associated with the Peoples
Liberation Army last year perpetrated a major attack on the
Pentagon.
US military computer experts battled for weeks against a
sustained attack that eventually overcame the Pentagons
defences. The cyber attackers managed to obtain information
and emails traffic from the unclassified computer system that
supports Robert Gates, the defence secretary. Pentagon IT
technicians were forced to take the network down for days
to conduct repairs.
Concerns about Chinese hacking last year prompted President
George W. Bush to tell reporters ahead of a meeting with President
Hu Jintao of China that he might raise the issue with countries
of concern.
Over the past year, the US government has tightened restrictions
on officials using BlackBerrys and computers overseas, particularly
in Russia and China, and sometimes bars them from removing
the equipment from US government aircraft in the country.
In another incident, US government cyber investigators have
determined that an attack this summer on the Obama and McCain
campaign computer networks also originated in China. Details
of the intrusion were first reported by Newsweek.
The Secret Service warned the Obama and McCain campaigns
their networks had been comprised. The hackers successfully
downloaded large quantities of information, which security
agencies believed was an attempt to learn more about the contenders
policy positions.
According to the Newsweek report, the Obama campaign speculated
that China or Russia were behind the attacks. A second US
official said cyber analysts had concluded that the attacks
originated in China, but stressed that they were not able
to determine who was responsible.
There is no doubt that foreign governments are actively
targeting cyber space not only for sensitive information but
to influence our most sensitive processes such as the US presidential
election, said Sami Saydjari, head of the Cyber Defence
Agency, a private company that advises government on hacking.
This underscores the need for President-elect Obama
to take leadership in the cyber space race that is well underway.
While the US has raised concerns about cyber attacks, many
governments believe the US is also engaged in electronic spying.
Bob Woodward, the veteran Washington Post reporter, this year
revealed that the US had been spying on the Iraqi government.
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