U.S. weapons system designs reportedly viewed by Chinese hackers
The designs for over two dozen advanced U.S. weapon systems,
including missile defenses, combat aircraft, and ships, were reportedly
accessed by Chinese hackers.
The systems were listed in a previously undisclosed section of a
report prepared for government, defense industry and Pentagon officials
by the Defense Science Board (DSB), a committee of experts that advises
the U.S. Department of Defense on technical and scientific matters, the
Washington Post reported Monday.
“DoD and its contractor base have already sustained staggering losses
of system design information incorporating decades of combat knowledge
and experience that provide adversaries insight to technical designs and
system use,” the advisory group said in a public version of the report
released in January that covers the findings of an 18-month study into
the resilience of military systems against advanced cyber threats.
Among the designs documents obtained by hackers were those for
missile defense systems, including the PAC-3 Patriot missile system, the
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system and the U.S. Navy’s
Aegis ballistic-missile defense system, according to the Washington
Post, which obtained a copy of the previously undisclosed report
section.
System designs related to the F/A-18 fighter jet, the F-35 multirole
combat aircraft, the V-22 Osprey aircraft, the Black Hawk helicopter and
the Navy’s Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) class of vessels were also among
those listed in the breach report.
The DSB did not indicate when and where the data breaches occurred or
who was behind them. However, according to the Washington Post, unnamed
senior military and defense industry officials familiar with the
breaches said that most of them were the result of Chinese cyber
espionage efforts against defense contractors.
During the past year, U.S. government officials have been
increasingly vocal about China being responsible for cyber attacks that
resulted in the theft of intellectual property and other sensitive
information from U.S. companies and government agencies. In a report
released this month, the DOD said that last year “numerous computer
systems around the world, including those owned by the U.S. government,
continued to be targeted for intrusions, some of which appear to be
attributable directly to the Chinese government and military.”
The Chinese government has repeatedly denied its involvement in cyber espionage and dismissed such accusations as baseless.
In the public version of its report, the DSB described the cyber
threat as serious and said that in some ways its consequences are
similar to those of the nuclear threat of the Cold War.
The DOD’s actions to combat this threat are numerous, but fragmented,
so the Department is not yet prepared to defend against it, the DSB
said. “It will take years for the Department to build an effective
response to the cyber threat to include elements of deterrence, mission
assurance and offensive cyber capabilities.”
justina mae feliciano
mark joseph montelibano
queenian yanson
justina mae feliciano
mark joseph montelibano
queenian yanson
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