As the whole world is now aware, Beirut was thrown into chaos yesterday by 5,000 exploding weaponized pagers, leaving 900 people dead and a further 300 in critical condition. Iran’s ambassador to Lebanon, Mojtaba Amani, sustained injuries to his face and hand. Lebanon-based Islamist and paramilitary group Hezbollah claims that Israel was responsible. If so, then yesterday afternoon’s event in Beirut will have global repercussions for cyber warfare and targeted cyber-attacks. The idea of weaponizing communications devices is hardly new. Over a decade ago, for example, former US Vice President Dick Cheney disabled a function that allowed the pacemaker regulating his heart to be administered wirelessly. Because he believed terrorists might hack the device to deliver a fatal shock. Israel has also been previously accused of killing Hamas terrorists with booby-trapped cellphones.
Hackers with close ties to the intelligence arm of Iran’s military, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, are now personally targeting journalists, professors, and researchers. According to Microsoft, which detected the new activity, Iran is anxious to gather information on the entire range of Western views regarding the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. “Based on the identities of the targets observed in this campaign and the use of lures related to the Israel-Hamas war, this campaign may be an attempt to gather perspectives on events related to the war from individuals across the ideological spectrum,” says Microsoft. The Iran-backed hackers, known as Mint Sandstorm, a composite name used to describe several subgroups of activity with ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, use a range of new techniques. For example, the hackers use legitimate but compromised email accounts to conduct highly planned phishing attacks against key journalists.
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