Stuxnet goes out of control: Chevron infected by anti-Iranian virus, others could be next
America’s
cyberwar is already seeing collateral damage, and it’s hitting the
country’s own billion-dollar companies. Oil giants Chevron say the
Stuxnet computer virus made by the US to target Iran infected their
systems as well.
RT,
9
Novemberl, 2012
America’s
cyberwar is already seeing collateral damage, and it’s hitting the
country’s own billion-dollar companies. Oil giants Chevron say the
Stuxnet computer virus made by the US to target Iran infected their
systems as well.
California-based
Chevron, a Fortune 500 company that’s among the biggest
corporations in the world, admits this week that they discovered the
Stuxnet worm on their systems back in 2010. Up until now, Chevron
managed to make their finding a well-kept secret, and their
disclosure published by the Wall Street Journal on Thursday marks the
first time a US company has come clean about being infected by the
virus intended for Iran’s nuclear enrichment program. Mark Koelmel
of the company’s earth sciences department says that they are
likely to not be the last, though.
“We’re
finding it in our systems and so are other companies,” says
Koelmel. “So
now we have to deal with this.”
Koelmel
claims that the virus did not have any adverse effects on his
company, which generated a quarter of a trillion dollars in revenue
during 2011. As soon as Chevron identified the infection, it was
taken care of immediately, he says. Other accidental targets might
not be so lucky though, and the computer worm’s complex coding
means it might be a while before anyone else becomes aware of the
damage.
“I
don’t think the US government even realized how far it had
spread,” Koelmel
adds.
Discovered
in 2010, the Stuxnet worm was reported with all but certainty to be
the creation of the United States, perhaps with the assistance of
Israel, to set back Iran’s nuclear enrichment program as a
preemptive measure against an eventual war. Only as recently as this
June, however, American officials with direct knowledge of the worm
went public with Uncle Sam’s involvement.
In
a June 2012 article published by The New York Times, government
agents with direct knowledge of Stuxnet claimed that first President
George W. Bush, then Barack Obama, oversaw the deployment of the worm
as part of a well-crafted cyberassault on Iran. Coupled with another
malicious program named Flame and
perhaps many more,
Stuxnet was waged against Iran as part of an initiative given the
codename “Olympic Games.” Rather than solely stealing
intelligence through use of computer coding, the endeavor was
believed to be the first cyberattack that intended to cause actual
hard damage.
“Previous
cyberattacks had effects limited to other computers,” Michael
Hayden, the former chief of the CIA, explained to the Times earlier
this year. “This
is the first attack of a major nature in which a cyberattack was used
to effect physical destruction.”
On
the record, the federal government maintains ignorance on the subject
of Stuxnet. With American companies perhaps soon coming out of the
woodwork to discuss how they were hit, though, the White House may
have to finally admit that they’ve had direct involvement.
After
the Times published their expose in June, Senator Dianne Feinstein,
chairwoman of Intelligence Committee, called for an investigation to
track down how the media was first made aware of America’s
involvement in Olympic Games.
"I
am deeply disturbed by the continuing leaks of classified information
to the media, most recently regarding alleged cyber efforts targeting
Iran's nuclear program,” Feinstein
said through a statement at the time. “I
made it clear that disclosures of this type endanger American lives
and undermine America's national security."
When
Feinstein spoke to DC’s The Hill newspaper, she said, "the
leak about the attack on Iran's nuclear program could 'to some
extent' provide justification for copycat attacks against the United
States." According
to the chairwoman,"This
is like an avalanche. It is very detrimental and, candidly, I found
it very concerning. There's no question that this kind of thing hurts
our country."
Just
last month, a shadowy Iranian-based hacking group called The Qassam
Cyber Fighters took credit for launching a cyberattack on
the servers of Capital One Financial Corp. and BB&T Corp., two of
the biggest names in the American banking industry. Days
earlier, Google informed
some of its American users that they may be targeted in a
state-sponsored cyberattack from abroad, and computer experts insist
that these assaults will only intensify over time.
“We
absolutely have seen more activity from the Middle East, and in
particular Iran has been increasingly active as they build up their
cyber capabilities,” CrowdStrike
Security President George Kurtz told the Times.
Speaking
of the accidental impact Stuxnet could soon have in the US, Chevron’s
Koelmel tells the Journal, "I
think the downside of what they did is going to be far worse than
what they actually accomplished.”
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