Russian
cyber-reconnaissance work covered the Games organisers, logistics services and
sponsors and was under way before the Olympics was postponed due to
coronavirus.
Russian military intelligence services were planning a cyber-attack on the Japanese-hosted Olympics and Paralympics in Tokyo this summer in an attempt to disrupt the world’s premier
sporting event, the UK National Cyber Security Centre has revealed, disclosing a joint operation with the US intelligence agencies.Many previous
ascribed Russian cyber-attacks have been against the state institutions of
Moscow’s political opponents, but some cyber-activity has been directed at the
agencies conducting inquiries into Russian sports doping.
The evidence
is the first indication that Russia was prepared to go as far as to disrupt the
summer Games, from which all Russian competitors had been excluded because of
persistent state-sponsored doping offences.
The UK has
also become the first government to confirm details of the breadth of a
previously reported Russian attempt to disrupt the 2018 winter Olympics and
Paralympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. It declared with what it described as
95% confidence that the disruption of both the winter and summer Olympics was
carried out remotely by the GRU unit 74455.
In
Pyeongchang, according to the UK, the GRU’s cyber-unit attempted to disguise
itself as North Korean and Chinese hackers when it targeted the opening
ceremony of the 2018 winter Games, crashing the website so spectators could not
print out tickets and crashing the wifi in the stadium.
The key
targets also included broadcasters, a ski resort, Olympic officials, service
providers and sponsors of the games in 2018, meaning the objects of the attacks
were not just in Korea.
The GRU also
deployed data-deletion malware against the winter Games IT systems and targeted
devices across South Korea using a VPN filter.
The UK
assumes that the reconnaissance work for the summer Olympics – including
spearphishing to gather key account details, setting up fake websites and
researching individual account security – was designed to mount the same form
of disruption, making the Games a logistical nightmare for business, spectators
and athletes.
The foreign
secretary, Dominic Raab, said: “The GRU’s actions against the Olympic and
Paralympic Games are cynical and reckless. We condemn them in the strongest
possible terms.
“The UK will
continue to work with our allies to call out and counter future malicious
cyber-attacks.”
On Monday,
the US indicted six Russian military intelligence officers for their alleged
role in hacking attacks on the 2018 winter Olympics, and on targets of the
“NotPetya” malware, including a Pennsylvania hospital, which is also alleged to
be work of the GRU’s unit 74455, known by cybersecurity researchers, as the
“Sandworm team”.
The US
assistant attorney general John Demers said the “Olympic Destroyer” attack, in
revenge for a doping investigation of the Russian Olympic team, “combined the
emotional maturity of a petulant child with the resources of a nation state”.
“As this case
shows, no country has weaponised its cyber-capabilities as maliciously and
irresponsibly as Russia, wantonly causing unprecedented collateral damage to
pursue small tactical advantages and fits of spite,” Demers said, adding the
damages on three US targets amounted to more than $1bn (£770m).
The US
justice department estimates the total worldwide damage caused by the NotPetya
worm at more than $10bn, with more than 300 victims worldwide, making it the
costliest hacking attack ever. The US indictments also cover alleged GRU
attacks on Ukraine, Georgia, the South Korean Olympics, the French elections
and the investigation into the 2018 Russian novichok nerve agent attack in the
UK.
The six
indicted GRU officers were charged with roles in producing components of the
NotPetya, Olympic Destroyer and other malware, as well as involvement in
spearphishing attacks on Olympic, French and Georgian officials.
The US
indictment provided intricate details of the alleged hacking operations,
including spearphishing attacks on Olympic athletes, with links to malware
disguised as updates about accommodation. British defence officials and experts
from the Organisation for Prohibition of Chemical Weapons were targeted with
emails designed to look as if they were sent by UK and German journalists.
One of the
accused GRU officers, Anatoliy Sergeyevich Kovalev, is also alleged to have
targeted car dealers and real estate agents for personal profit.
Demers did
not comment on the UK allegations that the GRU 74455 team was targeting next
summer’s Olympics.
The UK
accusations are part of an attempt to disrupt Russia’s cybersecurity threat
through maximum exposure and deter any disruption of a rescheduled summer Games
next year. British sources said the extent and persistence of the
cyber-activity against sporting bodies was likely to have been cleared at the
highest echelons of the Russian state.
Russia was
banned in December 2019 from all world sporting events by the World-wide
Anti-Doping Agency (Wada), including the summer Olympics, after Russia’s own
anti-doping agency was found guilty of manipulating laboratory data handed over
to investigators in January 2019.
At the time
of the four-year Wada ban, Russia claimed it was a victim of hysteria.
The 2018
attack on the winter Olympics predates the ban, and underlines how Russia has
been for many years trying to intimidate and penetrate those agencies seeking
to investigate Russian doping, even now going to the length of disrupting the
summer Olympics themselves.
The
revelations potentially come at a difficult time for Donald Trump as the issue
of Russian interference in US politics has reared its head again in the
presidential election campaign. Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani and the
New York Post have been accused of unwittingly letting themselves be used by
Russia to spread disinformation about the Democratic candidate, Joe Biden, and
his son Hunter.
The UK claims
the cyber-attacks are part of a pattern by the Russian state to electronically
target countries ranging from Ukraine, the US and Georgia to the UK, including
the Foreign Office.
British
officials pointed out that Russia at the UN general assembly had signed up to
an Olympic truce, including a commitment not to disrupt, or in any way
undermine, the safety of the Games.
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