China behind massive cyber-attack on
Australia
A major cyber-attack against Australia’s Bureau of
Meteorology that may have compromised potentially sensitive national security
information is being blamed on China, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
(ABC) reported on Wednesday.
The Bureau of Meteorology owns one of Australia’s largest supercomputers
and the attack, which the ABC said occurred in recent days, may have allowed
those responsible access to the Department of Defense through a linked network.
The ABC, citing several unidentified sources with knowledge of the
“massive” breach, placed the blame on China, which has in the past been accused
of hacking sensitive Australian government computer systems.
“It’s China,” the ABC quoted one source as saying.
Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) executive director Peter
Jennings said there was evidence China was behind the hack.
The motivation for the attack on the bureau could be commercial,
strategic or both.
The bureau is a critical national resource and another state would place
a high value on its intellectual property and scientific research.
In the event of a conflict, compromising Australia’s ability to
accurately forecast weather would affect the operation of military and
commercial aircraft.
Beyond that, the bureau provides a gateway to other agencies.
“They’re looking for the weakest link and so if you go into an agency,
which may have a level of security clearance, but perhaps not as high as
central parts of the national security community, maybe there are weaknesses
they can exploit which will enable them to then move into other, more highly-valued
targets,” Jennings said.
The Bureau of Meteorology said in a statement on its website that it did
not comment on security matters, but that it was working closely with security
agencies and that its computer systems were fully operational.
The Australian Federal Police declined to comment on the matter. The
Department of Defence said in a statement that it was barred by policy from
commenting on specific cyber security incidents.
China’s Foreign Ministry dismissed the accusation, saying the government
opposed cyber-attacks and all parties concerned should strengthen dialogue to
solve the problem “in the spirit of mutual respect”.
“Groundless accusations and speculation are not constructive,” ministry
spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a regular briefing.
China has long been accused of using its considerable computing
resources to infiltrate online businesses for competitive advantage, as well as
conducting acts of cyber espionage.
In June, US officials blamed Chinese hackers for compromising the
records of up to four million current and former government employees.
China called the US comments irresponsible, while President Barack Obama
vowed that the United States would aggressively bolster its cyber defences.
China is Australia’s top trading partner, with two-way trade of about
A$150 billion ($110 billion) in 2013, and they signed a landmark free trade
agreement in 2014 that is likely to further boost commercial ties.
Australia needs China’s help to transition from a reliance on exports of
minerals such as coal and iron ore to expanding its food and agricultural
exports to a growing Asian middle class, moving from a “mining boom” to a
“dining boom”.
But Chinese firms have been locked out of sensitive deals in the past
over security concerns, most prominently a decision in 2013 to bar Huawei from
bidding on Australia’s National Broadband Network, a deal worth tens of
billions of dollars.
(From Reuters)
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