Pro-Iranian
Hackers Infiltrate Top Nuclear Watchdog And Call For Investigation Of
Israel
Pro-Iranian
hackers claim to have seized personal information of nearly 200
scientists and officials affiliated with the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA), Adam Kredo of The Washington Free Beacon
reports.
23
November, 2012
A
group calling itself Parastoo published
email addresses—reportedly found within the IAEA's
internal computer systems—and threatened
to post personal information unless the world’s chief nuclear
watchdog investigates Israel’s nuclear program.
“Israel
owns a practical nuclear arsenal, tied to a growing military body and
it is not a member of international respected nuclear, biochemical
and chemical agreements,” the group wrote. “We ask these
individuals to sign a petition demanding an open IAEA investigation
into activities at [Israel’s Negev Nuclear Research Center located
near the southern city of] Dimona."
The
leaked email addresses appear to be associated with various academics
and government officials across the globe and include one employee in
the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.
An
IAEA spokesperson told the Beacon that the organization is “not
giving any on-record comment on this right now.”
The
IAEA has been investigating Iran’s nuclear enrichment activity,
which Israel and the U.S. claim is being undertaken in pursuit of a
nuclear weapon while Iran says it's for peaceful purposes. It's
widely believed that Israel has more than a hundred nuclear weapons,
but neither Israel nor the U.S. officially acknowledge the program.
“The
above list who technically help IAEA could be considered a partner in
crime should an accident happen there,” the group wrote. “In such
case ... Parastoo will publish whereabouts of every single one of
these individuals alongside with bits of helpful personal and
professional details.”
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