Iran stages cyber warfare drill alongside Hormuz naval exercise
Iranian forces have conducted a cyber-warfare drill for the first time as their naval forces conducts major exercises in the Strait of Hormuz, testing a brand new air defense missile system.
A
picture dated September 21, 2012, shows a Raad air defense system
carrying Taer missiles being displayed by Iran's Revolutionary Guard,
during an annual military parade which marks Iran's eight-year war
with Iraq, in the capital Tehran. Iranian forces have carried out
what they called cyber warfare tactics for the first time as the
Islamic republic's naval units staged manoeuvres in the key Strait of
Hormuz, media reports said on December 31, 2012.(AFP Photo / Atta
Kenare)
RT,
31
December, 2012
The
Iranian navy has staged a cyber-attack against the computer network
of its defene forces in order to simulate a hack or a virus
infiltration of a foreign aggressor, the English language Iran Daily
reported, quoting Rear Admiral Amir Rastegari.
The
Rear Admiral continued that the fake cyber-attack was successfully
blocked by Iranian forces.
Tehran
has developed military and civil cyber units in the past few years to
counter cyber-attacks on its nuclear sites, oil and industrial
facilities, its communications network and banking systems.
Tehran
has allegedly been attacked by the Fame, Stuxnet and Gauss viruses,
which managed to gather sensitive information about Iranian equipment
and have hampered the work of its nuclear centrifuges. The US and
Israel have been tacitly implicated in the virus attacks.
Naval
exercises are also taking place in the Strait of Hormuz and the
Gulf of Oman, which Iranian military officials have stressed are for
showing off the country’s “defensive
naval capabilities and sending a message of peace and friendship to
regional countries.”
Several
submarine based missiles were tested during the attack, according to
Iranian media sources. These included an Iranian made air defence
system called Raad, or Thunder and domestically produced hovercraft.
Iran
says the Raad system is more advanced than the Russian one it
replaced and can knock out fighter jets, cruise missiles and drones
at a height of up to 23 km.
Tehran
has been trying to build up a self-sufficient military in particular
its navy since 1992,as Iran believes any future conflict will be
fought on the sea and in the air.
The
drills come at the same time as the West is increasing pressure on
Iran over its nuclear program which it suspects is aimed at producing
a bomb. Iran insists it is purely for the peaceful production of
electricity.
The
west has slapped sanctions on Iran for its nuclear program which they
maintain is for the production of nuclear weapons. The west argues
that imposing sanctions will make it harder for Iran to acquire the
money and materials to develop a bomb. Iran has threatened to
retaliate by closing the Strait of Hormuz
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