Nato investigates hacker sale of missile firm data
Nato is assessing the impact of a data breach of
classified military documents being sold by a hacker group online.
The data includes blueprints of weapons being used by Nato
allies in the Ukraine conflict.
Criminal hackers are selling the dossiers after stealing
data linked to a major European weapons maker.
MBDA Missile Systems admitted its data was among the stash
but claimed none of the classified files belong to the firm.
The pan-European company, which is headquartered in France,
said its information was hacked from a compromised external hard drive, adding
that it was cooperating with authorities in Italy, where the data breach took
place.
It is understood investigations are centred around one of
MBDA's suppliers.
In a statement, a Nato spokesperson said: "We are
assessing claims relating to data allegedly stolen from MBDA. We have no
indication that any Nato network has been compromised."
Cyber criminals, operating on Russian and English forums,
are selling 80GB of the stolen data for 15 Bitcoins (approximately £273,000)
and claimed to have sold the stash to at least one unknown buyer so far.
One stolen folder contains detailed drawings of MBDA
equipment but the company said the material is not sensitive
In their advert for the stolen data, the hackers claimed to
have "classified information about employees of companies that took part
in the development of closed military projects" as well as "design
documentation, drawings, presentations, video and photo materials, contract
agreements and correspondence with other companies".
A free 50MB sample of the data, seen by the BBC, includes
documents labelled "NATO CONFIDENTIAL", "NATO RESTRICTED"
and "Unclassified Controlled Information".
In addition to the sample, the criminals supplied additional
documents by email, including two marked "NATO SECRET".
Nato's classification levels are:
COSMIC TOP SECRET: unauthorised disclosure would cause
exceptionally grave damage to Nato
NATO SECRET: unauthorised disclosure would cause serious
damage to Nato
NATO CONFIDENTIAL: unauthorised disclosure would be damaging
to Nato interests
NATO RESTRICTED: unauthorised disclosure would be
disadvantageous to the interests of Nato
Unclassified Controlled Information is a US security label
for information that is government created or owned; information that requires
safeguarding or dissemination controls consistent with applicable laws,
regulations and government-wide policies The hackers would not confirm whether
or not the material had come from more than one hacked source.
The files, which the BBC has not been been able to
independently verify, detail a "communications intelligence" mission
by a US air squadron carried out at the end of 2020 in Estonia over the
Baltics.
It includes the call logs, full name, phone number and GPS
coordinates of a person allegedly at the centre of the operation.
A former Nato official said: "There's a lot of
over-classification in Nato but these labels matter. They are applied by the
originator of the information and NATO SECRET is not applied lightly.
"This really is the kind of information Nato doesn't
want out there in the public."
He added that the chances of the documents having been
declassified were slim bearing in mind most of the files appeared to have been
created between 2017 and 2020.
The sample files also included a presentation that appeared
to detail the inner workings of the Land Ceptor CAMM (Common Anti-Air Modular
Missile), including the precise location of the electronic storage unit within
it.
One of these was recently sent to Poland for use in the
Ukraine conflict as part of the Sky Sabre system and is operational.
MBDA Missile Systems has not disputed that its information
had been breached but said: "The company's internal verification processes
indicate that the data made available online are neither classified data nor
sensitive."
However, some of the documents known to have been stolen
from MBDA are labelled as "proprietary information not to be disclosed or
reproduced".
MBDA Missile Systems was created in December 2001 after the
merger of missile systems companies in France, Italy and the UK.
It has has 13,000 employees and is a joint venture of
Airbus, BAE Systems and Leonardo.
Last year it posted revenue of £3.5bn and counts the UK
Ministry of Defence, US military, the European Union and Nato as customers of
its weapons systems.
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