Israeli
cyber attacks targeted offshore oil, gas platforms – Iran IT head
Iran’s
offshore oil and gas platforms were the targets of the cyber attacks
aimed at crippling the country. All threats were repelled and Israel
was behind them, according to head of IT at the Iranian Offshore Oil
Company, Mohammad Reza Golshani.
RT,
8
October 2012
Golshani
told Reuters that the attack happened over the past couple of weeks,
was routed through China, and affected only the communications
systems of the network.
It
is almost two weeks since the managing director of the National
Iranian Offshore Oil Company Mahmoud Zirakchianzadeh announced his
company’s negotiations over deals worth US$14 billion.
Iran
is currently under pressure from the international sanctions, mainly
in oil exports, imposed by the UN Security council, the US, and the
EU.
On
Saturday, the EU threatened to ban Iran’s natural gas export to put
pressure on the country’s nuclear program. Iran’s now exporting
to Turkey and has swap deals with Armenia and Azerbaijan.
The
possible ban was described by a spokesman of the oil ministry Alireza
Nikzad-Rahbar as a "propaganda campaign" because “right
now no EU member imports Iranian gas supply.”
The
UN Security Council imposed four rounds of sanctions in efforts to
pressure Tehran to give up its nuclear program, which the West fears
is aimed at creating a nuclear weapon. Iran insists its nuclear
ambitions are peaceful. The sanctions targeted Iran’s oil exports
and cut off access to international banking networks.
Tehran
is being pressured not only with sanctions: the country has been
variously attacked by Flame, Stuxnet and Gauss, three viruses that
gathered information on sensitive Iranian equipment and slowed down
its nuclear centrifuges. They were tacitly confirmed to have been
launched by the US and Israel, as a way of slowing down the country’s
atomic program, which the West says is aimed at eventually producing
nuclear weapons. A claim Iran emphatically denies.
Iran
has reported several computer attacks in recent months and a
Revolutionary Guard commander said last month the country would
defend itself in case of a "cyber war".
Tehran
is seeking to developing a national Internet system, which it says
would improve cyber security. But many Iranians say the plan is the
latest way to control their access to the Web, which is already
highly censored.

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