Reuters
hacked: Bogus blog posts claim Syrian rebel exodus
Several
Reuters blog posts claimed that the Free Syrian Army was withdrawing
from major cities and acquiring chemicals weapons from Libya. The
news agency now says the posts were fake, as their blogging platform
had been hacked.
RT,
4
August, 2012
The
company suspended blogging on Friday, and no new posts have been made
since.
“Reuters.com
was a target of a hack on Friday,”
Thomson Reuters, the news agency’s parent company, said in a
statement. “Our
blogging platform was compromised and fabricated blog posts were
falsely attributed to several Reuters journalists.”
The
bogus posts have now been removed, though their cached versions are
still available online.
One
fake post alleged that Free Syrian Army (FSA) commander Riad al-Asaad
told Reuters in a telephone interview that “the Syrian Free Army
(sic) will withdraw from all Syrian cities.” Al-Asaad purportedly
said that the regular army had killed 1,000 rebel soldiers, and that
the heavy losses, coupled with internal wrangling “for money and
positions,” as well as betrayals, were forcing the rebels to leave
Aleppo and other major cities, and head to Turkey.
There
they would “re-coordinate”
at secret bases set up “under
the supervision of the Turkish government and the Israeli
intelligence service.”
The
rebel commander’s fake statement also contained allegations that
Qatar and Saudi Arabia betrayed the Syrian opposition and “made a
secret deal with Damascus” in exchange for “investments”
and “privileges”
in post-conflict Syria.
The
phony blog post was said to have been written by Jeffrey Goldfard,
who, according to his profile “writes
about investment banking and the financial sector.”
Soon
after the posting, the Free Syrian Army came out with a statement,
saying the fraudulent report “was
fabricated by the regime, as it seems the news agency was hacked.”
An
earlier, also bogus report was purportedly posted by Frederick Kempe,
president and CEO of the Atlantic Council, a political think tank.
The publication alleged that the rebels had “fallen
in key districts of their stronghold”
of Salaheddine in Aleppo, and that Syrian forces had destroyed the
communications network with Turkey.
The
post made it clear that government troops were about to root out
rebel forces from Aleppo, and stated that “columns
of Syrian tanks were seen entering the city.”
To back that claim, the impostor-blogger embedded a YouTube video,
originally posted by “Syria Tube.” The video shows military
vehicles transporting a large number of tanks, set to the soundtrack
of Clint Mansell’s ominous Lux
Aeterna from Requiem
for a Dream.
Yet
another fraudulent publication stated that the Free Syrian Army was
acquiring “Ghaddafi’s
chemical weapons smuggled into Syria via Turkey.”
It also alleged that rebels in Aleppo were seen putting on chemical
masks, and that it was feared that al-Qaeda may be able to get its
hands on the purported Libyan chemical weapons, including sarin and
mustard gas.
No
one has claimed responsibility for the cyberattack. Both supporters
and opponents of the Assad regime have engaged in cyber warfare and
have been known to target sites opposed to their cause. A pro-Assad
group known as the Syrian Electronic Army hacked al-Jazeera’s
Twitter feed, and said more attacks against “fake
revolution”
websites were to come.
Screeshot
of a hoax post on the Reuters blog website
(http://blogs.reuters.com/us/) as cached by Google
Screenshot
of the Google cache of an earlier forged Reuters blog post
(http://blogs.reuters.com/us/)
Screenshot
of the Google cache of another fraudulent posting on the Reuters blog
(http://blogs.reuters.com/us/)
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