HUAWEI ACCUSED OF HACKING AUSTRALIAN TELECOM OPERATOR
The White House attack on Huawei has been going on for over
two years. And we are talking about the active phase. US politicians and
officials have repeatedly accused Huawei of spying for the Chinese government.
True, at the same time they did not consider it necessary to provide evidence.
They believe that they should be taken at their word that the Chinese company
poses a threat to national security.
Perhaps their suspicions and accusations are not groundless.
At the very least, Bloomberg reporters conducted an investigation, which led to
the conclusion that Huawei was involved in a cyberattack on the
telecommunications network in Australia. They based their conclusions on
information from former US security officials.
So, in 2012, Australian intelligence officials informed
their American counterparts that they had discovered an intrusion into the
country’s telecommunications systems that involved a software update on
Huawei’s equipment. The firmware has a malicious code that allows wiretapping,
and the data was goes to servers in China.
Also, interestingly, after a few days, the virus
self-destructed to cover its tracks. In addition, the Australian intelligence
services have determined that Chinese intelligence was behind this operation,
whose employees infiltrated the ranks of Huawei technical specialists. They
were part of the maintenance of equipment and the modernization of
telecommunication systems, and in parallel carried out espionage activities.
A similar attack took place in the United States this year,
but the secret services were able to prevent it. The incidents confirmed both
countries’ suspicions that China was using Huawei equipment for espionage. They
formed the basis of a never-publicized investigation against the Chinese
company.
“All their intelligence services have pored over the same
material”; said Rogers, a former FBI agent who is now a national security
commentator on CNN. “This whole body of work has come to the same conclusion:
It’s all about administrative access; and the administrative patches that come
out of Beijing are not to secure.”
“The Australians from the get-go have been courageous in
sharing the information they had, not only with the intelligence channels but
more broadly in government channels,” Flournoy said. “Australia experienced it,
but it was also a vicarious wake-up call for Australia’s allies.”
Also, the Australian Signals Directorate, that country’s
leading cybersecurity agency, declined to answer specific questions about the
incident. “Whenever ASD discovers a cyber incident affecting an entity; it
engages the relevant entity to provide advice and assistance,” the agency said
in a statement. “ASD’s assistance is confidential — it is a matter for relevant
entities to comment publicly on any cybersecurity incident.”
In addition, “Australia is not alone in the threats we face
from state-based actors in cyberspace,” the agency tells, noting that the
government has “joined with others in the world to express serious concerns
about malicious cyber activities by China’s Ministry of State Security.”
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