SEVEN RUSSIAN AGENTS CHARGED BY THE US FOR CYBER CRIMES


Russian
spies have been accused of involvement in a series of cyber-plots across the
globe, leading the US to level charges against seven agents.
The US
justice department said targets included the global chemical weapons watchdog,
anti-doping agencies and a US nuclear company.
The
allegations are part of an organised push-back against alleged Russian
cyber-attacks around the world.
Russia
earlier dismissed the allegations as "Western spy mania".
Added to
this, the Dutch authorities have said a laptop seized from the four suspects in
April was found to have been used in Brazil, Switzerland and Malaysia.
In Malaysia,
the Netherlands said, it was used to target the investigation into the downing
of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 in 2014 over territory held by Russian-backed
rebels in eastern Ukraine. All 298 people on board were killed.
The
revelations about how the British and Dutch security agencies disrupted the
operations of the GRU are astonishing in their detail and their openness.
This is not
what secretive intelligence agencies normally do.
But the
willingness of both countries to be so candid illustrates how determined both
they and some other Western governments are to try to push back against what
they see as a concerted pattern of Russian aggression.
"I
imagine Mr Putin is shouting at one or two people right now," a cheerful
British official told me.
Russia's foreign ministry - which had earlier
dismissed the allegations from the UK and the Netherlands as "Western spy
mania" - released an official statement late on Thursday, saying it was
the victim of "yet another stage-managed propaganda campaign".
"It's
unclear who is supposed to believe these statements accusing Russian citizens
of attempting to mount cyber-attacks against the OPCW and trying to obtain data
related to the Malaysian flight MH17, as if it is necessary to be near the
target of your attack," it said.
"Any
Russian citizen carrying a mobile device is seen as a spy," the statement
added.
John Demers,
US Assistant Attorney General for National Security, told a press conference in
Washington that many of the attacks were aimed at delegitimizing sports bodies
and "altering perceptions of the truth".
He said the
attacks were how Russia retaliated for bans on its athletes following
evidence it was systematically using drugs to enhance their performance.
As a result
of the findings, the US has indicted seven people, four of whom were the men
expelled from the Netherlands, while the other three were among those
charged in July with hacking Democratic officials during the 2016 US elections.
They were
also charged with wire fraud, identity theft and money laundering.
All seven
men are thought to be in Russia, which does not have an extradition treaty with
the US.
A joint
statement from British Prime Minister Theresa May and her Dutch counterpart
Mark Rutte said the alleged plot against the OPCW demonstrated "the GRU's disregard
for global values and rules that keep us all safe".
Meanwhile,
British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said the UK was discussing further
sanctions against Russia with its allies.
The EU has
also denounced the alleged cyber-plots.
The four
suspects identified by Dutch officials had diplomatic passports - which meant
the Netherlands could not arrest them as diplomats are in theory immune from
prosecution in their host country - and included two IT experts and two support
agents, officials said.
The four
hired a car and parked it in the car park of the Marriot hotel in The Hague,
which is next to the OPCW office, to hack into the OPCW's wifi network, Major
General Onno Eichelsheim from the Dutch MIVD intelligence service said.
Equipment in
the car boot was pointed at the OPCW and was being used to intercept login
details, he said, adding that the antenna for the operation lay under a jacket
on the car's rear shelf.
When the men
were intercepted they tried to destroy one of the mobile phones they were
carrying, Maj Gen Eichelsheim said.
He said one
of their mobile phones was found to have been activated near the GRU building
in Moscow, while another carried a receipt for a taxi journey from a street
near the GRU to the airport.
Maj Gen Eichelsheim
said the group were planning to travel to Switzerland, to a laboratory in Spiez
where the OPCW analysed samples.
They never
made it. Instead, the four were immediately escorted out of the country, he
added.
They were
named by the MIVD as hackers Alexei Morenetz and Yevgeny Serebriakov, and
support agents Oleg Sotnikov and Alexei Minin.
Officials
said they were from the GRU's Unit 26165, which has also been known as APT 28.
The UK's ambassador to the Netherlands, Peter Wilson, said the unit had
"sent officers around the world to conduct brazen close access
cyber-operations" - which involve hacking into wifi networks.
He said the
hackers were planning to travel on to the OPCW-certified laboratory in Spiez
near Berne in Switzerland, where the Novichok nerve agent used in March's
attack on Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the British city of Salisbury was
identified.
At the time
the Russian operation was disrupted, the OPCW was investigating the Skripal
case as well as an alleged chemical attack in April on the Syrian town of Douma
near Damascus by Russian-backed government forces, the MIVD said.
"With
its aggressive cyber-campaigns, we see the GRU trying to clean up Russia's own
mess - be it the doping uncovered by Wada [the World Anti-Doping Agency] or the
nerve agent identified by the OPCW," Mr Wilson said.
A laptop
seized from the suspects was found to have been used in Brazil, Switzerland and
Malaysia, the Dutch officials said.
The
cyber-operation in Malaysia targeted the attorney general's office and
Malaysian police as well as the investigation into MH17's shooting down,
Ambassador Wilson said.
Earlier this
year Dutch-led international investigators concluded that a missile that
brought down MH17 belonged to a Russian brigade. Russia has denied any
involvement in the plane's destruction, which led to the deaths of many Dutch
citizens.
Data from
the laptop showed it was also present in the Swiss city of Lausanne where it
was linked to the hacking of a laptop belonging to Wada, which has exposed
doping by Russian athletes.
FROM .bbc.com/news/
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