Massive cyberattack hits Ukrainian government websites
KYIV – A massive cyberattack warning Ukrainians to “be
afraid and expect the worst” hit government websites late on Thursday, leaving
some websites inaccessible on Friday morning and prompting Kyiv to open an investigation.
Ukraine’s foreign ministry spokesperson told Reuters it was
too early to say who could be behind the attack but said Russia had been behind
similar strikes in the past.
The cyberattack, which hit the foreign ministry, the cabinet
of ministers and the security and defense council among others, comes as Kyiv
and its allies have sounded the alarm about a possible new Russian military
offensive against Ukraine.
“It’s too early to draw conclusions, but there is a long
record of Russian (cyber) assaults against Ukraine in the past,” the foreign
ministry spokesman told Reuters.
The Russian foreign ministry did not immediately respond to
a request for comment. Russia has previously denied being behind cyber attacks
on Ukraine.
“Ukrainian! All your personal data was uploaded to the
public network. All data on the computer is destroyed, it is impossible to
restore it,” said a message visible on the hacked government websites, written
in Ukrainian, Russian and Polish.
“All information about you has become public, be afraid and
expect the worst. This is for your past, present and future.”
RISING TENSIONS
Following a flurry of inconclusive talks this week over
security in Europe, the United States warned on Thursday that the threat of a
Russian military invasion of Ukraine was high.
Russia said dialog was continuing but was hitting a dead end
as it tried to persuade the West to bar Ukraine from joining NATO and roll back
decades of alliance expansion in Europe – demands that Washington has called
“non-starters.”
Commenting on the cyberattack, a top Ukrainian security
official told Reuters: “All subjects of cyber security were aware of such
possible provocations by the Russian Federation. Therefore the response to
these incidents is carried out as usual.”
The government later said it had restored most of the
affected sites and that no personal data had been stolen. A number of other
government websites have been suspended to prevent the attack from spreading,
it said.
Relations between Ukraine and Russia collapsed after
Moscow’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the outbreak of war between Kyiv’s
forces and Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine that same year.
The United States said on Thursday Russia might be trying to
create a pretext to launch a new military assault on Ukraine, comparing the
situation to the circumstances in 2014.
Russia warned of possible “catastrophic consequences” if
there was no agreement on what the Kremlin has termed security red lines but
said Moscow had not given up on diplomacy and would even accelerate it.
The Russian comments reflect a pattern of Moscow saying it
wants to pursue diplomacy but rejecting calls to reverse its troop build-up
near Ukraine and warning of unspecified consequences for Western security if
its demands go unheeded.
Ukraine has suffered a series of cyber attacks since 2014,
which have knocked out power supplies, frozen supermarket tills, and forced the
authorities to prop up the hryvnia currency after banks’ IT systems crashed.
Ukraine believes the attacks are part of what it calls
Russia’s “hybrid war” against Ukraine and its allies.
In 2017, a virus called NotPetya by some experts, hit
Ukraine and spread around the world, paralyzing thousands of machines as it
spread to dozens of countries.
The Kremlin denied any involvement, rejecting “unfounded
blanket accusations.”
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