Russia's first
targets in Ukraine: its cell phones and Internet lines.
The
Russian forces occupying Crimea are jamming cell phones and severing Internet
connections between the peninsula and the rest of Ukraine. Moscow hasn't
succeeded in imposing an information blackout, but the attacks could be sign
that Russia is looking to escalate its military operations against the new
government in Kiev without firing a shot.
Russia
has a history of launching cyber-attacks on its neighbors with the aim of
disrupting the countries' ability to communicate to their citizens and with the
outside world. One attack in 2008, during Russia's war with Georgia,
accompanied a ground-based military assault and was intended to disrupt
government and media communications.
Although
the efforts in Crimea so far have failed to choke the region's communications
lines, experts are concerned that the strikes could be a precursor to damaging
Russian cyber attacks
on communications infrastructure elsewhere in Ukraine, particularly if tensions
escalate or Russian military forces push beyond Crimea. Disrupting Internet
service or knocking out Ukrainian government Web sites would allow Russia to
flex its muscle without necessarily drawing a military response from Kiev or
its Western allies.
The
new strikes appear to have been conducted mostly by hand rather than by hackers,
but they have the same goal. On Monday, Reuters reported that Russian military
forces were blocking mobile telephone services in some parts of Crimea. Russian
naval vessels were seen moving into and around the port at Sevastopol. Russian
navy ships are known to carry jamming equipment that can block phone and radio
signals. Two Crimean government Web portals were also offline; it was unclear
whether they'd been taken down by government officials or had been hit with a
malicious cyber attack
.
The
attacks have been escalating for days. On Friday, Ukrtelecom, the state-owned
telecommunications service provider, reported that several of its offices in
Crimea had been seized by unidentified individuals who cut phone and Internet
cables. As a result, customers across nearly the entire region lost phone and
Internet service, and the company said it was no longer able to provide a link
between the peninsula and the rest of Ukraine.
Two
days later, armed commandos reportedly cut off power lines at the Ukrainian
navy headquarters in the port city of Sevastopol. Hours later, Ukraine's UNIAN
news agency said other teams of commandos broke into several Ukrainian navy
communications stations and sabotaged communications lines in an attack similar
to the one on Ukrtelecom.
Asked
whether the administration was tracking any cyber attacks by Russian forces
against Ukraine or in the Crimea, a White House spokesperson said, "We
won't have anything on this for you." A spokesperson for the National
Security Agency and U.S. Cyber Command declined to comment about what steps the
United States might take to defend Ukraine's computer networks.
Still,
there are clear parallels between the Crimea attacks and those in Georgia and
Estonia in 2007, which were widely attributed to hackers working at the
unofficial behest of the Russian government. Those attacks knocked government
and media Web sites offline, blocked Internet access, and in Estonia disabled
ATMs. "Russia wants to degrade the ability of Ukraine to communicate inside
and outside the country," said Adam Segal, a senior fellow at the Council
on Foreign Relations who tracks countries offensive cyber capabilities.
"If there is military conflict, cyber attacks will be used to degrade the
ability of conventional forces to operate," Segal said.
If
history is a guide, any cyber attacks from Russia might not come directly from
military or intelligence services, but through mercenaries or so-called
"patriotic hackers" Moscow quietly encouraged to strike Estonia and
Georgia. This would give the Russian government the ability to deny that it was
behind any offensive.
"The
U.S. president, NATO secretary general and European leaders could call [Russian
President Vladimir] Putin to warn that they are not fooled by his use of
nationalist proxies and will hold him to account," Jason Healey, the
director of the Cyber Statecraft Initiative at the Atlantic Council, wrote in a
blog post Monday. "Since warnings won't sway Putin, they should be backed
with harder options. The U.S. Department of Defense could order its muscular
Cyber Command to prepare to disrupt the attacks if asked to do so by Ukraine's
government."
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