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CYBER WARS
Australia says 'state actor' hacked parties, parliament
By Andrew BEATTY
Sydney (AFP) Feb 18, 2019

Thai junta shoots down proposal to slash defence spending
Bangkok (AFP) Feb 18, 2019 - Thailand's junta defended its $7 billion defence budget and annual draft on Monday after political opponents proposed slashing military spending by 10 percent and ending conscription after elections.

The country spends among the most on defence in Southeast Asia and recent big purchases -- including submarines and tanks from China -- have drawn criticism in a state riddled with inequality and corruption.

Its generals have grabbed power a dozen times since 1932 with defence spending spiking in lockstep with each coup.

Last year the junta-picked National Legislative Assembly proposed a defence budget for 2019 of $7 billion, a $1 billion increase since the latest 2014 coup.

But Pheu Thai, linked to ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra and the country's most popular political party, has vowed to end conscription and cut spending by 10 percent if it beats the odds and returns to power after the March 24 poll.

Junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha -- who hopes to become civilian premier under an army-aligned party after the elections -- on Monday justified the increase as necessary to upgrade obsolete gear.

"If we do not have it, our military quality cannot be compared with other countries," he told reporters.

Chan-O-Cha said the breakout of war was impossible to predict and in peacetime the army "fights against drugs and illegal entry" into the country.

Military conscription, he added, is "a duty of all Thai men".

The army runs an annual draft for 100,000 men each year -- all male citizens must participate at least once after they turn 21, but are exempted if they are students.

Thailand has not fought a full blown war in living memory, although border disputes have previously turned into bloody conflicts with Laos and more recently Cambodia.

The military has used its might more frequently inside the country, quelling street protests, staging coups or fighting insurgents in the Muslim-majority "Deep South", bordering Malaysia.

Army chief Apirat Kongsompong gave a coded slapdown to Pheu Thai's leadership over the proposal to cut military spending, insisting they should listen to a nationalist Cold War-era propaganda song, Nhak Paen Din.

Roughly translating as "Scum of the Earth", it was the anthem of paramilitary units who led a massacre of at least 41 students protesting the return of a military dictator in October 1976.

The #NhakPaenDin was top trending on Thai Twitter on Monday, a sign of the bitter memories it evokes, particularly among Thailand's pro-democracy movement.

Australia on Monday said a "sophisticated state actor" had hacked the country's main political parties and parliament, just weeks before a closely fought election.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison told lawmakers that investigators looking into a hack of parliament computer systems revealed two weeks ago "also became aware that the networks of some political parties" had been breached.

"Our cyber experts believe that a sophisticated state actor is responsible for this malicious activity," he said.

Australian security agencies said they did not know who was behind the attack or their motives.

It is not yet clear what, if any, material was stolen during the hacks, how long the perpetrators went undetected, or whether it could make some political figures vulnerable to blackmail.

Earlier this month, Australia reported a "security incident on the parliamentary computing network".

That forced users -- including the prime minister and the cabinet -- to change passwords and take other security measures.

Experts warn that attribution is time-consuming and difficult.

"I think it's definitely too early to say," said Fergus Hanson, a cybersecurity expert at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

He added, however, that there were only "one or two actors" capable of carrying out such an attack.

Hanson said he would put China "at the top" of the list of possible suspects, but "wouldn't rule out" Russia's involvement.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said such speculation about Beijing was "irresponsible" and an attempt to "smear" the country.

"When investigating network breaches, there should be sufficient evidence, unreasonable guesses can't be made," Geng said at a regular press briefing in Beijing.

Geng urged media to "stop using so-called cyber leaks and hacking attacks to discredit China and stop compromising China's interests and China's bilateral relations with the countries concerned".

Beijing and Canberra have sparred over access to natural resources, maritime claims and the use of Chinese state-backed technology companies.

Relations have recently been frayed over Canberra's decision to ban Huawei from the country's 5G network amid national security concerns and the expulsion of Huang Xian, a Chinese billionaire who doled out millions in Australian political donations.

- High-value target -

Australians are expected to go to the polls mid-May, raising fears that hackers could be trying to influence the outcome of the vote, or change the tenor of the debate.

Both Russia and China have used cyber operations in a bid to influence democratic votes.

Beijing's spies are accused of targeting Taiwanese officials before the election there last year.

Dozens of Russians have been indicted for trying to tilt the 2016 US presidential election, and alleged Russian involvement in Britain's referendum on leaving the European Union in the same year has been well documented. Moscow has denied the accusations.

As part of the Five Eyes intelligence network -- which also includes Britain, Canada, New Zealand and the United States -- Australia is a particularly rich target for foreign interests.

"Our political institutions represent high-value targets. But we have resilient systems in place to detect compromises and remediate them," said Alastair MacGibbon, head of the Australian Cyber Security Centre.

Five Eyes membership also gives Australia access to a host of signals and human intelligence to back up any suspicions of state hacking.

MacGibbon said the hackers were sophisticated enough to get into the network, but "not sophisticated enough to remain undetected".

His organisation has already briefed electoral commissions across the country and could be deployed to provide technical support to those affected.

He said it was unclear whether the attackers gained access to sensitive data or emails.

"We don't know. These are very early days," he said. "We genuinely do not know."

Morrison insisted, however, "there is no evidence of any electoral interference".

"We have put in place a number of measures to ensure the integrity of our electoral system."


Related Links
Cyberwar - Internet Security News - Systems and Policy Issues


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CYBER WARS
Germany to let NATO use its cyber skills
Brussels (AFP) Feb 14, 2019
Germany is to join the ranks of NATO countries making its cyber warfare skills available to the alliance to help fight hacking and electronic warfare, officials said on Thursday. NATO has designated cyberspace as a conflict domain alongside land, sea and air and says electronic attacks by the likes of Russia and China - but also criminals and so-called "hacktivists" - are becoming more frequent and more destructive. German officials used a meeting of defence ministers in Brussels on Thursday t ... read more

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