The
question has to be asked – what will happen AFTER the presidential
elections in the US.
Massive
Cyberattack: Act 1 Of Israeli Strike On Iran?
NPR,
24
August, 2012
Talk
in Israel of a military strike on Iranian nuclear facilities has
reached a fever pitch. Last week brought the news of an alleged "war
plan"leaked
to a blogger.
This week, a well-informed military correspondent in Jerusalem
reported that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is
"determined" to attack Iran before the U.S. election. Two
weeks ago, an outgoing government minister told Israelis to prepare
for a war that would
last 30 days.
Some
analysts dismiss the speculation as an effort to intimidate Iran or
put pressure on the U.S. to get tough on Tehran.
David
Makovsky of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy has his
own contacts in the Israeli leadership. He says there's more going
on here than just war talk.
"I
think there's a 50-50 chance before the U.S. election of an Israeli
strike," he says.
In
any case, it's clear there's a lot of war thinking going on in
Jerusalem.
The
alleged war plan that was recently leaked said an Israeli strike
would begin with an unprecedented cyberattack designed to paralyze
the Iranian regime and blind it to what was happening on its
territory. The Internet, telephones, radio and television
transmissions, the electrical grid would all be taken out.
That's
an attention grabber: The world has never seen a cyberattack
remotely that dramatic.
John
Bumgarner, chief technology officer at the U.S. Cyber Consequences
Unit, says the plan does make sense, at least in theory.
"Israel
has very good cybercapabilities. Some of the best computer
scientists in the world come out of the Israeli military and
intelligence branch," he says. "Some of the best
cybertools that are currently used in the world come out of Israel."
But
could the Israelis actually pull off a nationwide cyberattack in
Iran?
Bumgarner is skeptical.
Security
analyst Jeffrey Carr, the author of Inside
Cyber Warfare, says
he doubts the Israelis could even take down Iran's power grid, let
alone its entire high-tech sector. A grid, Carr points out, is made
up of multiple power plants, each with its own network
configuration.
"An
attacker has to map out the network before it can plan an attack.
The scenario that's been described on this war plan, or whatever you
would call this, is just fantasy," he says. "There's no
way that anyone could create a piece of software or weaponized
malware that could just wipe out multiple power plants and multiple
grids with one strike. It's nonsense."
So,
some of the war talk in Israel is apparently exaggerated. But this
may only reflect the debate going on in the country. Someone could
circulate a poorly thought-out scenario to discredit the Netanyahu
government's war planning.
Makovsky
says the volume and variety of speculation about an Israeli strike
on Iran just underscore how seriously the idea is taken. Even
apparently outlandish plans, he says, should not be discarded out of
hand.
"You're
going to see all sorts of things out there, and some of it might be
disinformation or psychological warfare. There's no way we're going
to know," he says. "The Israelis do pride themselves on,
you know, surprise elements that no one is thinking about."
After
all, three years ago, Israel and the U.S. joined in the Stuxnet
cyberattack against
an Iranian nuclear facility in Natanz — a surprise to many.
Seemingly
far-fetched war talk could amount to propaganda and little else, but
it could also mean an Israeli strike on Iran is around the corner.
The decision may not yet be made.
Someone has done a video depicting their idea of what the opening moments of war might look like.
Fantastical? I'll leave it up to you.
Fantastical? I'll leave it up to you.
very possible and so few realise it.
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