Britain, the United States and Canada on Thursday risked worsening fraught diplomatic ties with Russia by accusing Moscow-linked hackers of targeting labs in their countries conducting coronavirus vaccine research. A hacking group from Russia, APT29, has been accused of hacking into covid vaccine research by these countries, but the Kremlin has refuted these claims as absurd.
The three governments pointed the finger at the Kremlin, saying that a hacking group called APT29 was “almost certainly” linked to Russian intelligence.
Russia accused of hacking covid research by the West
In a separate claim, London said “Russian actors” sought to disrupt last year’s UK general election by circulating leaked trade documents between Britain and the United States.
Both accusations came even before the publication in the coming days of a long-awaited British parliamentary report into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 Brexit vote.
Russia quickly rejected the accusations as “groundless”.
The United Kingdom’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) and Canada’s Communications Security Establishment (CSE) said Thursday that APT29 was “a cyber espionage group, almost certainly part of the Russian intelligence services,” adding their the assessment was endorsed by their US counterpart.
Govt Minister on R4 now talking about Russian intelligence trying to hack UK Covid research. Keeps talking about "calling this out" (10 plus times). Spot the #cummings narrative developing : "Russia hacks us all the time. They are the enemy.We are the good guys calling them out "
— El#FBPE 🕷️🇪🇺 🐟 3.5% (@El86562179) July 17, 2020
“Throughout 2020, APT29 has targeted various organisations involved in COVID-19 vaccine development in Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom, highly likely with the intention of stealing information and intellectual property relating to the development and testing of COVID-19 vaccines,” it said.
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The group was “likely to continue to target organisations involved in COVID-19 vaccine research and development, as they seek to answer additional intelligence questions relating to the pandemic”.
In a separate statement, the US National Security Agency repeated the accusations and said that APT29 “uses a variety of tools and techniques to predominantly target governmental, diplomatic, think-tank, healthcare and energy targets for intelligence gain”.
Russia and Britain have been at loggerheads since Moscow was accused of trying to kill double agent Sergei Skripal with a powerful military-grade nerve agent in 2018.
The attack in Salisbury, southwest England, came 12 years after the radiation poisoning of former spy Alexander Litvinenko in London. Again, Russia denied involvement.
Russia hacking of covid research is ‘completely unacceptable’
Britain is one of a number of countries conducting human vaccine trials for COVID-19. One, at the University of Oxford, showed potential positive results, media reports said on Thursday.
But the National Cyber Security Centre, part of Britain’s GCHQ electronic eavesdropping agency, said labs were among those targeted “to steal valuable intellectual property”.
NCSC director of operations Paul Chichester said known targets included UK, US and Canadian vaccine research and development organisations using techniques including malware.
Read more: Russian Hackers: The shadowy world of US and Gulf hacks just got murkier
APT29 — also known as “The Dukes” or “Cozy Bear” — had also tried to hack government, diplomatic, think-tank and energy groups, it added.
Nearly 600,000 people have died and more than 13.5 million infected in the coronavirus outbreak this year.
https://twitter.com/squadronuk/status/1283836644077051910
Britain’s Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said that targeting those working to find a vaccine was “completely unacceptable”.
“While others pursue their selfish interests with reckless behaviour, the UK and its allies are getting on with the hard work of finding a vaccine and protecting global health,” he added.
Is Russia also meddling in Western elections?
Earlier, the government said there were strong suspicions of a Russian link to the leak of classified documents about a possible post-Brexit trade deal with the United States.
An investigation was launched after files were published on the social media site Reddit and were later picked up by the main opposition Labour party.
The party used them in its campaign for the December 12 election, claiming they proved Prime Minister Boris Johnson would “sell-out” the state-run health sector to US President Donald Trump.
Health funding was a key campaign issue, and Johnson was repeatedly forced to deny the claim.
Read more: U.S indicts 12 Russian spies for hacking 2016 presidential campaign before Trump-Putin meeting
Labour’s then leader Jeremy Corbyn dismissed claims the leak was put online by Russia as a “conspiracy theory”.
Raab stopped short of accusing Moscow of direct involvement.
But he said it was “almost certain… that Russian actors” were involved by putting the leaked documents online.
Johnson and his ruling Conservative party won a huge majority in the election, allowing him to push through his Brexit deal to take Britain out of the European Union.
Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee launched a probe into suspicions of Russian interference in the 2016 Brexit vote after concerns sparked by claims of meddling in the US presidential election won by Trump.
It completed the report last year but publication was delayed first by the election, and then Johnson’s failure to nominate new members to the committee.
This finally happened last week and members had their first meeting on Thursday, where they agreed to publish the Russia report before next Wednesday.
AFP with additional input by GVS News Desk