North Korea Hackers Stole South Korea-U.S. Military Plans to
Wipe Out North Korea Leadership
Hackers from North Korea are reported to have stolen a large cache of military documents from South Korea, including a plan to assassinate North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un. [BBC]
October 11, 2017
(
Reuters) - North Korean hackers stole a large amount
of classified military documents, including South Korea-U.S. wartime
operational plans to wipe out the North Korean leadership, a South Korean
ruling party lawmaker said on Wednesday.
Democratic Party representative Rhee Cheol-hee said 235
gigabytes of military documents were taken from the Defense Integrated Data
Center in September last year, citing information from unidentified South
Korean defense officials.
An investigative team inside the defense ministry announced
in May the hack had been carried out by North Korea, but did not disclose what
kind of information had been taken.
Pyongyang has denied responsibility in its state media for
the cyber attacks, criticizing Seoul for “fabricating” claims about online
attacks.
Separately on Wednesday, cyber security firm FireEye said in
a statement North Korea-affiliated agents were detected attempting to phish
U.S. electric companies through emails sent in mid-September, although those
attempts did not lead to a disruption in the power supply.
It did not specify when the attempts had been detected or
clarify which companies had been affected.
Rhee, currently a member of the National Assembly’s
committee for national defense, said about 80 percent of the hacked data had
not yet been identified, but that none of the information was expected to have
compromised the South Korean military because it was not top classified
intelligence.
Some of the hacked data addressed how to identify movements
of members of the North Korean leadership, how to seal off their hiding
locations, and attack from the air before eliminating them.
Rhee said the North could not have taken the entire
operation plans from the database because they had not been uploaded in full.
These plans had likely not been classified properly but
defense ministry officials told Rhee the hacked documents were not of top
importance, he said.
“Whatever the North Koreans took, we just need to fix the
plans,” Rhee later told Reuters by telephone. “I disclosed this because the
military hasn’t been doing that fast enough.”
Rhee said on radio the hack had been made possible by “a
simple mistake” after a connector jack linking the military’s intranet to the
internet had not been eliminated after maintenance work had been done on the
system.
The South Korean Defense Ministry’s official stance is that
they cannot confirm anything the lawmaker said about the hacked content due to
the sensitivity of the matter.
In Washington, the Pentagon said it was aware of the media
reports but would not comment on the potential breach.
“Although I will not comment on intelligence matters or
specific incidents related to cyber intrusion, I can assure you that we are
confident in the security of our operations plans and our ability to deal with
any threat from North Korea,” Pentagon spokesman Colonel Robert Manning told
reporters.
FireEye said the phishing attack on the electric companies
detected was “early-stage reconnaissance” and did not indicate North Korea was
about to stage an “imminent, disruptive” cyber attack. The North has been
suspected of carrying out similar cyber attacks on South Korean electric
utilities, in addition to other government and financial institutions.
Those attempts were likely aimed at creating a means of
“deterring potential war or sowing disorder during a time of armed conflict”,
FireEye said.
“North Korea linked hackers are among the most prolific
nation-state threats, targeting not only the U.S. and South Korea but the
global financial system and nations worldwide,” its statement said.
“Their motivations vary from economic enrichment to
traditional espionage to sabotage, but all share the hallmark of an ascendant
cyber power willing to violate international norms with little regard for
potential blowback,” it said.
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