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China 'Vulnerable' in Cyberspace, US Cyber Chief Warns

F-22Raptor

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HALIFAX — The head of US Cyber Command said China is as vulnerable to cyber attacks as any other nation, offering a veiled suggestion that further malicious hacks by the Chinese could result in reprisals in the cyber realm.

Speaking Saturday at the Halifax Security Forum, National Security Agency Director Adm. Mike Rogers, who also heads US Cyber Command, hinted that China might find itself the target of unwelcome cyber intrusions.

“To my Chinese counterparts, I would remind them, increasingly you are as vulnerable as any other major industrialized nation state. The idea that you can somehow exist outside the broader global cyber challenges I don’t think is workable,” Rogers said.

China uses state capabilities to hack private companies and steal intellectual property, then shares the stolen information with Chinese companies, something the US doesn’t do, he said. As head of the NSA, Rogers tries to learn what he can about foreign capabilities, but he doesn’t turn around and share them with Boeing or Lockheed Martin, he said.

“None of us wants behavior on either side that ends up accelerating or precipitating a crisis. That’s in no one’s interests,” he said.

Adm. Harry Harris, commander of US Pacific Command, also served notice that the US will continue its decades-long practice of navigating international waters, even as China continues to build what he termed its “Great Wall of Sand” on artificial islands in disputed waters in the South China Sea.

“We will not simply agree to disagree with destabilizing actions taken by China. That’s why the United States will continue to sail, fly and operate anywhere international law allows. The South China Sea is not and will not be an exception,” Harris said.

“There is one global standard for freedom of navigation, not a double standard where China can fly, sail and operate wherever international law allows while other nations cannot. International seas and airspace belong to everyone, and not the dominion of any single nation.”

The US has routinely navigated international waters for decades, so the practice should not come as a surprise, he said.

The relative peace and security in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region over the last 70 years has produced some of the world’s largest economies, even in a region that has seven of the world’s 10 largest armies, he said.

The Philippines has filed a legal objection to China’s activities in the South China Sea, noted Antonio Carpio, a justice on the Supreme Court of the Philippines. Militarily, the Philippines is no match for China, so it brought the dispute to a forum where armaments don’t count, he said.

“We cannot live with a dispute where China claims everything,” he said.

How China responds to the tribunal’s decision will show its commitment – or lack thereof – to peace and security, Harris said.

In the meantime, US commanders are working with Chinese commanders to ensure any contact at sea and in air does not escalate, or result in a military mishap, he said.

“American and Chinese commanders have a responsibility to ensure frictions points in policy don’t become friction points in the sea and air,” he said.

Harris does not believe that conflict with China is inevitable, he said. The two countries have cooperated on several regional security issues, including medical efforts to prevent pandemics, peaceful denuclearization efforts on the Korean peninsula, and fighting piracy off the Horn of Africa and in the Straits of Malacca.

Looking ahead, the two countries will need to coexist in the shared domains of air, sea, outer space and cyberspace, he said.

“These spaces enable the free flow of goods, services, thoughts and ideas. They are the connective tissue that holds together the global economy and more importantly civil society,” Harris said. “Access to shared thoroughfares is at risk due to increasing competition, and unfortunately, the provocative actions of nations like China.”

China 'Vulnerable' in Cyberspace, US Cyber Chief Warns
 
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US was just being nice by giving them a warning.
 
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Make no mistake, US control the internet. From the Hosting Address (IP address) to Domain Naming Service to the actual communication protocol. They are all under US control under contract to US company.

Which then make everyone American or Not, vulnerable to cyber attack by the US.
 
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It's blatant and ignorant to underestimate the US's capabilities.
 
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First america is crying about how they are being hacked easily by the Chinese and now they are saying China is vulnerable.
So what's the truth, americans probably gone crazy in trying to spread their propaganda. :lol:
 
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Make no mistake, US control the internet. From the Hosting Address (IP address) to Domain Naming Service to the actual communication protocol. They are all under US control under contract to US company.

Which then make everyone American or Not, vulnerable to cyber attack by the US.

Weren't the Americans the original inventors of the Internet, originally for military purposes, specifically the ARPANET
 
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Weren't the Americans the original inventors of the Internet, originally for military purposes, specifically the ARPANET

Yes, in fact, what we known as Internet is actually still part of the ARPANET system. All the protocol and addresses were piggybacked by the US military before 2000 and afterward contracted to US company. And the fact is, although I cannot tell you much, the US Military can get into any one of the internet address had they know who/what to look for.

But it is the US that has F-35 blue prints stolen, or so it claimed?

Well, if you want t believe that.

I can tell you this, all sensitive information or military secret are store in SCIF (sensitive compartmentalized information facilities) and those are not available over the internet. They are basically an office with small internal network that did not connect to any internet gateway, all sensitive information stored there. The only way you can hack a SCIF is with you physical sit in front of a computer inside a SCIF. You cannot remotely hack a SCIF because it was not connected to any internet nor wifi.

If you can hack the information over the internet. Then that mean they are not sensitive information or TS clearance. Either that piece of information is fake which was use to detect the leak, or they think F-35 blue print et el were not sensitive enough to store them securely. Whichever you think is more sensible.

Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

PS. I used to work in a SCIF when I was attached to a Military Intelligence battalion.
 
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Inconclusive remarks. The US has been involved in cyber-attacks against China for a long time.

When China responds half in kind, it becomes an international whining day.

Being the largest trading power in the world, China has the responsibility to protect itself from cyber attacks, wherever it originates from.
 
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“To my Chinese counterparts, I would remind them, increasingly you are as vulnerable as any other major industrialized nation state. The idea that you can somehow exist outside the broader global cyber challenges I don’t think is workable,” Rogers said.


Since when has CHina become a "major industrialzied nation state"?

According to the most CHinese people, China is always a part of the 3rd world.
 
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