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Cyberwarfare and Iran

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Cyberwarfare is a part of Iran's "soft war" military strategy. Being both a victim and wager of cyberwarfare,[1] Iran is considered an emerging military power in the field.[2]

Since November 2010, an organization called "The Cyber Defense Command" (Persian: قرارگاه دفاع سایبری; Gharargah-e Defa-e Saiberi) has been operating in Iran under the supervision of the country's "Passive Civil Defense Organization" (Persian: سازمان پدافند غیرعامل; Sazeman-e Padafand-e Gheyr-e Amel) which is itself a subdivision of the Joint Staff of Iranian Armed Forces.[3]

According to a 2014 report by Institute for National Security Studies, Iran is "one of the most active players in the international cyber arena".[4] In 2013, a Revolutionary Guards general stated that Iran has "the 4th biggest cyber power among the world's cyber armies."[5][6]

According to a 2021 report by a cyber-security company, "Iran is running two surveillance operations in cyber-space, targeting more than 1,000 dissidents".[7]

NIN

Iranian cyber defense system - digital fortress part of national information network (national internet) - is developed for thwarting attacks and engaging attackers.[8] In November 2022, the Iranian Majlis Islamic Consultative Assembly recommended a Passive Defence Incorporation.[9]

Attacks against Iran

In June 2010, Iran was the victim of a cyber-attack when its nuclear facility in Natanz was infiltrated by the cyber-worm 'Stuxnet'.[10] Reportedly a combined effort by the United States and Israel,[11] Stuxnet destroyed perhaps over 1,000 nuclear centrifuges and, according to a Business Insider article, "[set] Tehran's atomic programme back by at least two years."[12] The worm spread beyond the plant to allegedly infect over 60,000 computers, but the government of Iran indicates it caused no significant damage. Iran crowdsourced solutions to the worm and is purportedly now better positioned in terms of cyber warfare technology.[10] No government has claimed responsibility for the worm.[12] The cyber-worm was also used against North Korea.[citation needed]

Events

  • In October 2013, media reported Mojtaba Ahmadi, who served as commander of the "Cyber War Headquarters" was found dead wounded by bullets in Karaj.[13]
  • Israel  November 2018: The Iranian telecommunication minister Mohammad-Javad Azari Jahromi accuses Israel of a failed cyberattack on its telecommunications infrastructure, and vows to respond with legal action.[14][15]
  • October 2021: An attack paralyzed gas stations across the country, preventing users from purchasing fuel using state-issued cards and digital billboards displaying antigovernment messages
  • In September, October and November 2022, Iranian state networks and emails came under attack by Anonymous and other hacking groups acting in solidarity with Iranian protestors.[16]
  • In the year 2023 several government ministries were fully hacked by multiple people including Ministry of Science research and technology on September 23.[17][18][19] Veterans affairs[20] Ministry of foreign affairs(50TB)[21] Central Insurance and 19 subsidiary corporations(119 million lines records)[22][23][24] City of Tehran municipality , State news bulletin[25] National Civil Registration vital records organization database(20TB)[26] Atomic Energy Organization[27] Presidency[28] Ridesharing company Tapsi was hacked as well.
  • December 2023 seventy percent of entire national Iranian fuel pumps taken out, Predators Sparrow took responsibility[29]

Attacks by Iran

The Iranian government has been accused by Western analysts of its own cyber-attacks against the United States, Israel and Persian Gulf Arab countries, but denied this, including specific allegations of 2012 involvement in hacking into American banks.[12] The conflict between Iran and the United States has been called "history's first known cyber-war" by Michael Joseph Gross in mid-2013.[30]

Events

  • Israel  August 2014: An IDF official told the press that Iran has launched numerous significant attacks against Israel's Internet infrastructure.[31]
  • Turkey  31 March 2015: There was a massive power outage for 12 hours in 44 of 81 provinces of Turkey, holding 40 million people. Istanbul and Ankara were among the places suffering blackouts. According to Observer.com, Iranian hackers, possibly the Iranian Cyber Army, were behind the power outage.[32]
  • United Kingdom  June 2017: The Daily Telegraph reported that intelligence officials concluded that Iran was responsible for a cyberattack on the British Parliament lasting 12 hours that compromised around 90 email accounts of MPs. The motive for the attack is unknown but experts suggested that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps could be using cyberwarfare to undermine the Iran nuclear deal.[33]
  • Israel  January 2022: The website of Israel's Jerusalem Post newspaper and the Twitter account of Maariv newspaper are hacked by suspected Iranian hackers. The website's content was replaced with a threat to target the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center, and an apparent reference to Qasem Soleimani who was assassinated exactly two years earlier in Baghdad, Iraq.[34][35]
  • Israel  March 2022: Large-scale cyberattacks were launched against multiple Israeli government websites, allegedly by Iran as retaliation for failed Mossad operations, though neither the attack attribution nor the purported Mossad operations could be confirmed as of March 2022. The National Cyber Directorate declared a state of emergency as a result of the attacks and unnamed defense sources told media outlets it was possibly the largest-ever cyberattack against Israel.[36][37]
  • Albania  November 2022: Iranian hackers attacked Albanian networks.[38][39]
  • United States  November seventeen American networks system were turned into mining crypto because of existing undefended vulnerability.[40]
  • 2023 Moneybird ransomware was used by Agrius against Israeli people.[41] Cyberattack on Israeli university was blamed on Iranian ministry of intelligence.[42] Attacks attributed to Iranians targeted Israeli ports and Haifa harbors.[43]
  • Disinformation en masse sponsored by state targeted Iranians in 2023.[44]
  • 2023 IRGC Cybersecurity command attacked dissidents according to German state[45]
  • A U.S. Pennsylvania water network[46]
  • Sophos and Zimperium report Iranian citizens credentials hacked by Iranian hackers , with Firebase , C2 (C&C) iOS , Android malware apps called Bank Saderat , Central Bank and Bank Mellat [47]
  • December 14th 2023 ESET documented OilRig group which is state sponsored use C&C attacks [48]
  • In February 2024, OpenAI announced that it had shut down accounts used by the Crimson Sandstorm hacking group. The group had been using OpenAI services to research evasion techniques, write and refactor code, and create phishing campaign content.[49][50]

Command and control

Iranian armed forces install malware apps for espionage on android phones.[51] They could steal victims identity according to Microsoft.[52]

Suspended Iranian accounts

On May 5, 2020, Reuters reported, quoting a monthly Facebook report, that Iranian state-run media had targeted hundreds of fake social media accounts to covertly spread pro-Iranian messaging, online since at least 2011, for secretly broadcasting online promotional messages in favor of Iran in order targeting voters in countries including Britain and the United States.[53] Accounts were suspended for coordinated inauthentic behavior, which removed eight networks in recent weeks, including one with links to the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting.[53]

See also

Alleged operations and malware against Iran
Alleged operations and malware by Iran

References

  1. ^ Joshi, Shashank. "Iran, the Mossad and the power of cyber-warfare". Archived from the original on October 3, 2013. Retrieved March 18, 2015.
  2. ^ "Iran's military is preparing for cyber warfare". The Telegraph. October 3, 2013. Archived from the original on August 10, 2018. Retrieved March 18, 2015.
  3. ^ Bastani, Hossein (December 13, 2012). "Structure of Iran's Cyber Warfare". Institut Français d’Analyse Stratégique. Archived from the original on May 23, 2019. Retrieved March 18, 2015.
  4. ^ Siboni, Gabi; Kronenfeld, Sami (April 3, 2014). "Developments in Iranian Cyber Warfare, 2013–2014". INSS Insight. Institute for National Security Studies. Archived from the original on January 5, 2020. Retrieved March 18, 2015.
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