Suspected
cyber-attack hits Iran’s oil sector
A
virus has been discovered in computers running key parts of Iran's
oil sector, forcing authorities to unplug its main oil export
terminal from the Internet.
RT,
23
April, 2012
The
country’s oil ministry, national oil company and a number of other
companies affiliated with the ministry were hit by a cyber-attack on
Sunday, according to Iranian news agency Mehr.
Iran’s
deputy oil minister said the facilities were taken offline and a
special cyber response team was set up.
Around
80 per cent of Iran's daily 2.2 million barrels of crude export goes
through Kharg Island, located off Iran’s southern coast, which was
one of the facilities attacked.
Iran
has often claimed it is involved in a long-running technological war
with the United States and Israel. The most recent similar attack
happened in 2010, when the country’s nuclear program suffered a big
blow from a worm called Stuxnet.
Stuxnet,
many experts claimed, focused precisely on the computers running
uranium enrichment centrifuges at Iran's nuclear facility in Natanz,
destroying thousands of them and setting the atomic program back
months.
Both
Iranian officials and Western computer techs said that because of the
complexity of the virus and the fact it had an “expiry date”,
rendering it harmless after a while, it was most likely created by a
government.
Fingers
were pointed by Tehran at the United States, possibly with help
from Israel.
The
US and EU are trying to cut the country’s oil exports through a ban
on the import of its crude, as well as with financial sanctions
against Iran’s trade partners. Their stated goal is to force Tehran
to freeze its controversial nuclear program.
Europe
was among the largest buyers of Iranian crude, but is now trying to
replace it with fuel from other sources. Japan and South Korea are
also trying to reduce imports from Iran, although unlike the EU they
haven’t set a deadline for stopping all oil imports from
Iran.China, India and other refused to side with the US-sponsored
effort, saying only a UN Security Council resolution would make them
stop buying Iranian oil.
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