China says Washington hack claims ‘fabricated’
BEIJING: China on Tuesday said the US had “fabricated” allegations it carried out a massive Microsoft hack, countering that Washington was the “world champion” of cyber attacks while raging at American allies for signing up to a rare joint statement of condemnation.
The United States on Monday accused Beijing of carrying out the March cyber attack on Microsoft Exchange, a top email server for corporations around the world, and charged four Chinese nationals over the “malicious” hack.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the attack was part of a “pattern of irresponsible, disruptive and destabilising behaviour in cyberspace”.
China’s Ministry of State Security, or MSS, “has fostered an ecosystem of criminal contract hackers who carry out both state-sponsored activities and cybercrime for their own financial gain”, Blinken said in a statement.
In a simultaneous announcement, the US Department of Justice said four Chinese nationals had been charged with hacking the computers of dozens of companies, universities and government bodies in the United States and abroad between 2011 and 2018.
President Joe Biden told reporters the United States was still completing an investigation before taking any countermeasures, and drew parallels with the murky but prolific cybercrime attributed by Western officials to Russia.
“The Chinese government, not unlike the Russian government, is not doing this themselves, but are protecting those who are doing it, and maybe even accommodating them being able to do it,” Biden told reporters.
In an effort to put the diplomatic squeeze on Beijing, the United States coordinated its statement Monday with allies—the European Union, Britain, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Japan and Nato.
China hit back, calling the allegations of a Beijing-supported cyber-attack campaign “fabricated”. “The US has mustered its allies to carry out unreasonable criticisms against China on the issue of cybersecurity,” foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters in Beijing.
“This move is fabricated out of nothing.” Earlier, China’s diplomatic missions around the world rattled out rebuttals, as Beijing made its own coordinated defence.
The Chinese embassy in New Zealand called the allegations “totally groundless and irresponsible” while the embassy in Australia accused Canberra of “parroting the rhetoric of the US”. “It is well known that the US has engaged in unscrupulous, massive and indiscriminate eavesdropping on many countries including its allies,” the embassy said in a statement. “It is the world champion of malicious cyber attacks.”
Biden, like his predecessor Donald Trump, has ramped up pressure on China, seeing the rising Asian power’s increasingly assertive moves at home and abroad as the main long-term threat to the United States. Allies backed up the castigation of China, with British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab describing the cyberattack as “reckless”.
Nato offered “solidarity” over the Microsoft hacking without directly assigning blame. State Department spokesman Ned Price said it was the first time that Nato—the Western military alliance whose members include Hungary and Turkey, which have comparatively cordial relations with Beijing—has condemned cyber activity from China.
The Microsoft hack, which exploited flaws in the Microsoft Exchange service, affected at least 30,000 US organisations including local governments as well as organisations worldwide. Accusations of cyberattacks against the United States have recently focused on Russia, rather than China.
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