Perhaps they should start with sanctions against themselves?
White House announces online espionage response policy
RT,
20
February, 2013
In
response to a report published this week about the emerging cyber
threat posed by Chinese hackers, the White House has unveiled a new
policy that will impose sanctions and other punishments on foreign
nations engaged in online espionage
According
to a detailed threat analysis published this
week by Northern Virginia’s Mandiant, hackers employed by the
Chinese government have waged a sophisticated cyberwar against
entities in the United States and elsewhere, compromising over 100
computer networks over a few short years and attacking networks
belonging to the public and private sector alike. Now, only days
after that report was released, the administration of US President
Barack Obama has published a 141-page
documentoutlining
plans to implement harsh penalties on nation-states caught pilfering
American computer systems for trade secrets and other intelligence.
The
plan increases the threat of new trade restrictions on products and
services made by foreign companies on the basis of information stolen
in hacking operations or other similar online raids. White House
officials also named a series of diplomatic measures meant to back up
their promise to take such thefts seriously. The report recommends
that various government agencies review current legislation to
determine whether new laws need to be written to protect American
corporate secrets.
It
also outlines Washington's plan, led by the State Department,
Commerce Department and US Trade Representative, to coordinate with
allied governments on pressure strategies against countries it says
are stealing its intellectual property.
"Trade-secret
theft threatens American businesses, undermines national security,
and places the security of the U.S. economy in jeopardy,"
the report reads. "These acts also diminish U.S. export
prospects around the globe and put American jobs at risk."
Though
the report does not exactly rebuke China or threaten action against
it in plain language, it does name several examples of Chinese thefts
of American corporate secrets.
During
the State of the Union address earlier this month, President Obama
weighed in briefly on “the
rapidly growing threat from cyber-attacks,” claiming “foreign
countries and companies swipe our corporate secrets” and
that America’s “enemies
are also seeking the ability to sabotage our power grid, our
financial institutions [and] our air traffic control system.” Only
hours before his address, Obama signed an executive
order designed
to create a cyber-infrastructure that will better manage future
attacks against the US, and the next day two members of Congress
reintroduced a bill, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection
Act, or CISPA,
which will thrive to correct security concerns that the executive
order cannot.
"This
is happening thousands of times a day,” former-FBI
Executive Assistant Director Shawn Henry told the AP of the
cyberattacks. “There needs to be some definition of where
the red line is and what the repercussions would be."
"If
the Chinese government flew planes into our airspace, our planes
would escort them away. If it happened two, three or four times, the
president would be on the phone and there would be threats of
retaliation,” he adds.
The
Chinese government, though, has largely disavowed cybercrimes against
America. In response to the Mandiant report, a spokesman for China’s
foreign ministry said it was ripe with “groundless criticism”
that was both irresponsible and unprofessional.
Nevertheless,
on Tuesday White House press secretary Jay Carney hinted at what
would be coming from the Obama administration on Wednesday. "I
can tell you that we have repeatedly raised our concerns at the
highest levels about cyber-theft with senior Chinese officials,
including in the military, and we will continue to do so," he
told members of the media.
According
to the Washington Post, former-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
said before her recent resignation that “We have to begin
making it clear to the Chinese that the United States is going to
have to take action to protect not only our government, but our
private sector, from this kind of illegal intrusions.”
Mandiant’s
report, published earlier this week, suggests that hackers employed
by the People’s Liberation Army in China have targeted computers
used by major Pentagon contractor Lockheed Martin and soft-drink
giant Coca-Cola. A State Department diplomatic cable about the
hackers from 2008, published two years later by whistleblower website
WikiLeaks, says the Chinese hackers have also waged attacks on
computers belonging to the Department of Defense, the State
Department and other government agencies, occasionally with success.
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