Intel vice chair says government agency cyber attack ‘may have started earlier’

Aaron Schwartz

Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said on Wednesday that the cyberattacks on U.S. government agencies reported in December may have begun earlier than previously believed.

“The initial burrowing in may have started earlier,” Warner told Reuters in an interview on Wednesday.

Warner told the outlet that no evidence has been discovered that suggests classified government secrets were breached.

“The amount of time it’s taking to assess the [latest] attack, it’s taking longer than we would like to take,” Warner said.

The Virginia senator said gaps in U.S, and international law are making it difficult for the government to prevent large-scale hacks and called for tighter controls to be enacted.

Resistance to heightened cyberspace legal controls dates back to the Obama administration, Warner told Reuters, saying people from both the government and private sector “pushed back ferociously” at such suggestions.

The attacks came through a software update sent out by Texas-based software company SolarWinds, which counts multiple U.S. government agencies as customers.

As Reuters noted, the hack was done through what is called a “supply chain attack,” in which malicious code is hidden in legitimate software updates and meant to target third parties, in this case the U.S. government.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has said that Russia is the most likely suspect behind the attacks. President Trump, however, has pointed a finger at China. A Chinese official shot down the suggestions, saying the U.S. had “politicized” the issue without “conclusive evidence.”

“We hope the United States will take a more responsible attitude on cyber security,” Wang Wenbin of the Chinese foreign ministry told reporters.

“There has been obviously a reluctance out of this White House to call out Russia repeatedly,” Warner said. “I don’t believe that is a problem of the intelligence community. I think that is a problem of the White House.”

President-elect Joe Biden called for modernizing U.S. defenses last week in light of the attacks.

“We have to be able to innovate and reimagine our defenses against growing threats in new realms like cyberspace,” Biden said.

Tags China cyberattacks cybersecurity Defense Donald Trump Joe Biden Mark Warner Mark Warner Mike Pompeo Russia Senate Intelligence Commitee SolarWinds hack

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