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China is waging cyber hell on West - we are already at war, ex-Tory leader warns

18 May 2024 , 10:45
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GCHQ said China poses
GCHQ said China poses 'a significant risk to international norms and values'

CHINA'S vast army of hackers are waging a cyber war on the West to pave the way for a new world order, a top MP has warned.

In a stark warning, former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith said: "This is a war and we are losing it."

Chinese troops at a joint counter-terrorism military exercise in Orenburg, Russia qhiddeidzeiqzrprw
Chinese troops at a joint counter-terrorism military exercise in Orenburg, RussiaCredit: Getty
It's feared China is waging a colossal cyber war on the West - including Britain
It's feared China is waging a colossal cyber war on the West - including BritainCredit: Getty
Chinese President Xi Jinping is building a 'new axis of authoritarian states'
Chinese President Xi Jinping is building a 'new axis of authoritarian states'Credit: AP
Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith warned China's cyber war on the West is only set to expand
Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith warned China's cyber war on the West is only set to expandCredit: Getty

It comes as GCHQ revealed that China is the intelligence agency's top priority as it "poses a genuine and increasing cyber-risk to the UK".

Anne Keast-Butler, the agency's director, accused Beijing of "working with others to try and reshape the world".

UK government officials fear China stole names and bank details of Britain's entire armed forces in an epic hack - and accused Beijing of hacking the Electoral Commission.

Putin accused of surrounding himself with same 'actors' at series of eventsPutin accused of surrounding himself with same 'actors' at series of events

Some 270,000 people including regular troops, reservists and some veterans have been affected by the hack on the Ministry of Defence's payroll system.

Defence officials refused to name the country or hackers behind the attack - but insiders suspect China.

Amid the crisis, Mr Duncan Smith said the suspected Chinese attack is just the tip of the iceberg - with Beijing waging a colossal cyber war on the West.

The 70-year-old warned China is "trying to break down the West" - and it's just the beginning.

Speaking to The Sun, he said: "This is China - the second largest economy in the world, the second largest military. It plans to take over America.

"They are very significant players now. They want to make sure the world is run in their way of thinking.

"This is the just the beginning of what is essentially a war.

"It's a cyber war at present, but who knows. If Russia wins in Ukraine, China will take Taiwan. The nature of China's threat grows. 

"If they can confuse us, make us unsure, disinform us, create division, then that plays well to their plans. China is working constantly to undermine us. This is the reality of what's happening.

"It's to get as much information as they can by hacking us, find out what we're up to, and counter anything that we do and make sure we're constantly fighting this rather than doing anything in return." 

Catholics across the world pray for Pope Benedict XVI as his body lies in stateCatholics across the world pray for Pope Benedict XVI as his body lies in state

He added: "If you push anyone inside the security services, they will tell you China is at war with us.

"They see us as a legitimate target and they want to go after us. And that's what they are doing.

"It's time to call China a threat. It's time to take action, it's time to invest more. This is a war and we are just losing it.

"The UK is worried about pushing China too hard. They think they have business interests in China which may be affected, so I think there's a hesitancy."

The PRC is looking to shape global technology standards in its own favour, seeking to assert its dominance within the next ten to fifteen years

Anne Keast-ButlerGCHQ chief

Echoing GCHQ's warning, Mr Duncan Smith said China is building a "new axis of authoritarian states".

And their "purpose is to break the hold that the free world has over key institutions and ability to function", he claims.

"Those powers are China, North Korea, Russia and Iran," Mr Duncan Smith said.

"[Xi] wants to see all countries adopting China's form of strong, centralised unelected government."

Addressing the CyberUK conference, GCHQ's Keast-Butler said China poses "a significant risk to international norms and values through their coercive and destabilising actions".

She said Beijing's "irresponsible actions" were "weakening the security of the internet", The Times reports.

"China has built an advanced set of cyber-capabilities and is taking advantage of a growing commercial ecosystem of hacking outfits and data brokers at its disposal," she said.

This is the just the beginning of what is essentially a war

Iain Duncan SmithConservative MP

"China poses a genuine and increasing cyber-risk to the UK.

"The PRC is looking to shape global technology standards in its own favour, seeking to assert its dominance within the next ten to fifteen years."

Speaking in March, Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden also warned there was a "clear pattern of hostile activity from China".

The Ministry of Defence cyberattack came less than two months after China's "state-affiliated actors" were blamed by the government for two "malicious" cyberattack campaigns in the UK.

And this year, the US revealed that a Chinese hacking network known as Volt Typhoon had infiltrated the country’s critical infrastructure for as long as five years.

FBI director Christopher Wray described the group as “the defining threat of our generation”.

EYEING UP TAIWAN

Beyond the West, experts have warned China is waging a relentless secret cyber war on Taiwan to pave the way for a full-scale invasion.

Beijing has long used Taiwan as a testing ground for its cyber warfare capabilities - but attacks have been increasing at an unprecedented rate.

According to Taiwanese parliament member Wang Ting-Yu, the island is hit by a whopping 20million cyber attacks every day - and Chinese hackers are responsible for the majority of them.

In a chilling warning in November, former Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen said the island was "facing mounting military intimidation, grey-zone campaigns, cyber attacks and information manipulation".

And analysts fear China's escalating cyber warfare is setting the stage for an all-out invasion of Taiwan - which Beijing regards as part of its territory.

Kitsch Yen-Fan, the assistant director for the Global China Hub at the Atlantic Council, warned "we are already at war".

"This is a constant thing," he told 60 Minutes.

The number and types of attacks China wages against Taiwan are very different from what they deploy to other nations

James TurgalFormer FBI Executive Assistant Director of Information and Technology

"Fake news on social media is a way for [China] to pave the way for their eventual operation.

"They want to basically sway public opinions, demoralise the public, to make their eventual takeover that much easier, which is actually what the Russians were trying to do in Ukraine."

China has vowed to take Taiwan by force if necessary - carrying out ever more regular invasion rehearsals.

Taiwan insists it is an independent nation after splitting from China in 1949.

Cyber attacks escalated dramatically before the Taiwanese elections in January.

Last year, 7-Eleven stores were hacked to display the message, "Get out of Taiwan".

And data shows that attacks spiked ahead of Pelosi's visit to the small island in the summer of 2022.

At a train station in the port city of Kaohsiung, digital signs were hacked to call Pelosi "an old witch".

CYBER ATTACK SPIKE

Anne An, manager of threat intelligence analysis at Trellix, said China's malicious activities "have demonstrated a higher level of stealth and sophistication in evading detection".

An told The Sun: "China's cyberattacks on Taiwan have grown in both frequency and sophistication in recent years.

"Throughout 2023, political tensions in the Taiwan Strait have also sparked periodic spikes in cyber threat activities targeting Taiwan.

"Throughout the course of the previous six months, Trellix telemetry has recorded an uptick in malicious activity targeting Taiwan by China-associated APT groups, ranging from eight detections per day to over 800 detections per day during the peak period.

"Based on our data, top attack tools leveraged against Taiwan include China Chopper and Cobalt Strike.

The number of groups in China that are performing hacking and trying to get into technology companies or get into cloud customers is huge

Kate MorganGoogle’s Threat Analysis Division

"Most recently in early 2024, Trellix observed another significant spike in cyber threat activity targeting Taiwan's financial organisations, local police departments, and government offices ahead of its presidential election.

"These malicious activities have demonstrated a higher level of stealth and sophistication in evading detection, discovery, and establishing command and control. 

"Over the past 12 months in the global context, Trellix has observed a drastic increase in threat activity from China-affiliated APT groups, rising from 8,000 daily detections in January 2023 to over 150,000 detections in January 2024."

Cybersecurity experts at Google noted a "massive increase" in Chinese cyber attacks on Taiwan last year.

Kate Morgan, senior engineering manager in Google’s Threat Analysis Division, told Bloomberg that Google is tracking close to 100 hacking groups out of China.

Kate, who monitors government-sponsored hacking campaigns, said hackers are going "after everything" - including government, private companies and defence organisations.

"The number of groups in China that are performing hacking and trying to get into technology companies or get into cloud customers is huge," she said.

According to Cloudflare, cyber attacks designed to overwhelm and crash networks in Taiwan reached new levels last year, spiking 3,370 per cent — a more than thirty fold increase since the previous year.

A Fortinet study said Taiwan faced up to 15,000 cyber attacks every second in the first half of 2023 - an increase of 80 per cent compared to the same period in 2022.

"The number and types of attacks China wages against Taiwan are very different from what they deploy to other nations," James Turgal, former FBI Executive Assistant Director of Information and Technology, told Politico.

Turgal called it an “embarrassment campaign", where China infiltrates systems to post degrading statements that make Taipei look bad.

"You basically manipulate and take over the website and put up anti-Taiwan statements on government sites that are forward-facing — which is a type of attack you don’t see against US interests," he said.

"You saw a lot of those just before Russia entered Ukraine."

Roy Chun Lee, Taiwan’s deputy minister of foreign affairs, told Politico: "Every day there are attempts to find loopholes and backdoors in our system."

Imogen Braddick

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