Russia, China, Iran and North Korea are launching daily cyber strikes on the computer networks of federal, state and local government agencies, US corporations, and academic institutions, said Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats.
Of the four, “Russia has been the most aggressive foreign actor, no question,” he said.
Coats spoke at the Hudson Institute think tank shortly after the Department of Justice announced the indictment of 12 Russian military intelligence officers on charges of hacking into the computers of the 2016 US presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton and Democratic Party organizations.
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The indictment and Coats’ comments came three days before US President Donald Trump was to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin for talks in Helsinki, Trump’s first formal summit with Putin.
The summit will begin with one-on-one talks between the two leaders in which Trump has said he will raise the US intelligence assessment that Russia used cyber attacks and other means to meddle in the 2016 election, a charge Moscow denies.
Coats warned that the possibility of a “crippling cyber attack on our critical infrastructure” by a foreign actor is growing.
He likened daily cyber attacks to the “alarming activities” that US intelligence agencies detected before al Qaeda staged the most devastating extremist attack on the US homeland on Sept 11, 2001.
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“The system was blinking red. Here we are nearly two decades later and I’m here to say the warning lights are blinking red again,” he said.
“However, we fully realize that we are just one click away of the keyboard from a similar situation repeating itself,” Coats continued.
At the same time, he said, some of the same Russian actors who meddled in the 2016 campaign again are using fake social media accounts and other means to spread false information and propaganda to fuel political divisions in the United States, he said.
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Coats cited unnamed 'individuals' affiliated with the Internet Research Agency, the St. Petersburg-based “troll factory” indicted by a federal grand jury in February as part of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into alleged Russian election meddling.
These individuals have been “creating new social media accounts, masquerading as Americans and then using these accounts to draw attention to divisive issues,” he said.
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