Putin ready to cripple Britain in cyber war


Ministers believe that while they cannot stop Russia from launching cyber attacks on the UK, they are confident that they are taking the necessary steps to prevent the disruption of power supplies. Mr McFadden’s warning is designed to ensure that Britain’s critical national infrastructure and businesses do not underestimate the threat, and have the right protections in place.

Earlier this year, two NHS hospital trusts in London were hacked, causing the postponement of more than 800 planned operations and 700 outpatient appointments. The patients disrupted included those in need of cancer treatment and organ transplants.

The hack was thought to be the work of Qilin, a Russian cyber criminal gang. It took place via a ransomware attack on computers run by Synnovis, which provides pathology services to hospitals and GP surgeries.

Data published by the NHS in London showed that nearly 100 cancer treatments had to be postponed in a six-day period because of problems arising from the attack.

Last month, pro-Russian hackers claimed to have targeted several local councils. A group named NoName057(16) boasted that it had knocked the websites of the Salford, Bury, Trafford and Tameside councils out of use by flooding their websites with internet traffic.

‘Hacktivist’ threat

Mr McFadden will highlight the danger posed by “unofficial hacktivists” committing “increasingly frequent, and in some cases, increasingly sophisticated” attacks around the world.

“There are gangs of cyber criminals and mercenaries not directly under the Kremlin’s control, but who are allowed to act with impunity so long as they’re not working against Putin’s interests,” he will say.

“They recently targeted Nato’s Indo-Pacific partner South Korea in response to its monitoring of the deployment of North Korean troops to Kursk, where Russia is fighting Ukraine.

“And Russian state-aligned groups have taken responsibility for at least nine separate cyber attacks of varying severity against Nato states, including unprovoked attacks against our critical national infrastructure.

“These groups are unpredictable, they act with disregard for the potential geopolitical consequences, and with just one miscalculation could wreak havoc on our networks.”

He will say that Russia “won’t think twice about targeting British businesses” as Putin is “happy to exploit any gap in our cyber defences”.

Previous estimates have put the cost to the UK economy from cyber crime at £27 billion per year. Mr McFadden will meet business leaders this week, along with senior national security officials, to discuss how they can strengthen their defences against cyber attacks.

Ministers are drawing up legislation aimed at shoring up the UK’s defences against cyber attacks. The Cyber Security and Resilience Bill will strengthen regulators’ powers and force businesses to report attacks they currently brush under the carpet.

The Bill is expected to mandate that all providers of essential infrastructure understand and protect their supply chains from attack. The measures may also include improving the management of data on cyber attacks to learn lessons from previous hacks.

Ukraine used British-supplied Storm Shadow missiles in Russia for the first time this week. Joe Biden gave Kyiv the green light to use US-made long-range missiles inside Russia, paving the way for restrictions to be lifted on the UK’s Storm Shadows.



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