A newly disclosed National Security Agency document illustrates the striking acceleration of the use of cyberweapons by the United States and Iran against each other, both for spying and sabotage, even as Secretary of State John Kerry and his Iranian counterpart met in Geneva to try to break a stalemate in the talks over Iran’s disputed nuclear program.
The document ( https://firstlook.org/theintercept/document/2015/02/10/iran-current-topics-interaction-gchq ), which was written in April 2013 for Gen. Keith B. Alexander, then the director of the National Security Agency, described how Iranian officials had discovered new evidence the year before that the United States was preparing computer surveillance or cyberattacks on their networks.
It detailed how the United States and Britain had worked together to contain the damage from “Iran’s discovery of computer network exploitation tools” — the building blocks of cyberweapons. That was more than two years after the Stuxnet worm attack by the United States and Israel severely damaged the computer networks at Tehran’s nuclear enrichment plant.
(Score: 1) by PartTimeZombie on Tuesday February 24 2015, @03:14AM
My first thought was that while the article says that Kerry met with his Iranian counterpart to try to break the stalemate, in reality I can't see the US really negotiating over something like this.
Their diplomacy seems to be of the gunboat variety when issues arise that might be against what The US sees as their interests.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 24 2015, @03:17AM
FTFY.