When he arrived in New York in March 2002, Sanchez had offices at both the NYPD and the CIA’s station in New York, one former official said. Sanchez interviewed police officers for newly defined intelligence jobs. He guided and mentored officers, schooling them in the art of gathering information. He also directed their efforts, another said.
There had never been an arrangement like it, and some senior CIA officials soon began questioning whether Tenet was allowing Sanchez to operate on both sides of the wall that’s supposed to keep the CIA out of the domestic intelligence business.
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CHINESE CYBER SPYING
Chinese computer hackers, some linked to the military, engaged in an aggressive international campaign of electronic espionage through the Internet from 2003 through at least 2009, according to documents obtained by Inside the Ring.
The electronic spying campaign targeted large amounts of data and information from U.S. government and private sector networks, as well as from the French and German governments, other states and international organizations.
The documents, labeled âsecret,â provide some of the first details to be made public on Chinese cyberspying and reveal a U.S. government program to monitor and halt the activity that was code-named âByzantine Hades.â
A State Department cable dated April 2, 2009, states that Byzantine Hades activity appeared linked to the Chinese military in Chengdu. The cable was a department Diplomatic Security Bureau report that discussed the findings of Canadian security researchers, who dubbed the worldwide Chinese intrusions âGhostNet.â
The researchers identified four Internet domains that âwere involved in Byzantine Hades intrusion activity in 2006,â the cable says.
âSubsequent analysis of registration information also leads to a tenuous connection between these hostile domains and the Peopleâs Liberation Army [PLA] Chengdu Military Region First Technical Reconnaissance Bureau [TRB].â
The disclosure is the first official U.S. government report linking global computer hacking to China’s military.
According to the cable, a Chengdu hacker named Chen Xingpeng was linked to the PLA Technical Reconnaissance Bureau, which also is called the Military Unit Cover Designator 78006.
The cable says there was no official link between Byzantine Hades spying and the PLA reconnaissance bureau, but noted âmuch of the intrusion activity traced to Chengdu is similar in tactics, techniques, and procedures to BH activity attributed to other PLA [Technical Reconnaissance Bureaus].â
The link between Mr. Chen and the Chinese military âfurther emphasizes the idea that this clandestine âcyber-spyingâ network may in fact be a state-sponsored intelligence-gathering operation,â the cable says.
The documents were first disclosed by the Reuters news agency.
Further signs of Chinaâs Byzantine Hades activities surfaced in the past two weeks in a report by the McAfee computer security firm, which dubbed unidentified computer intrusions in more than 71 networks âShady Rat.â
The McAfee report did not name China in the computer attacks, but other experts said all indications pointed to Beijingâs involvement and methods similar to those used in the governmentâs Byzantine Hades intelligence.
A Nov. 5, 2008, State Department cable disclosing international talks in Berlin on cyber-espionage also provide new details of Byzantine Hades computer strikes.
The military and intelligence services of Russia and China are conducting a sustained campaign to steal American commercial and military secrets through cyber espionage, according to the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, and he warned that sophisticated computer hacking poses a major danger to U.S. interests.
“Nation states are investing huge amounts of time, personnel and money to steal our data,” Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) said Friday in a speech to an association of retired U.S. intelligence officers. “We are not as prepared as we need to be.”
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A court in Uzbekistan has sentenced a former employee of British mining company Oxus Gold to 12 years in prison on charges of industrial espionage.
The company said in a statement Thursday that a military court convicted Said Ashurov, who worked as chief metallurgist at a joint venture, which is at a center of dispute between the British company and Uzbekistan authorities.
The Amantaytau Goldfields joint venture is developing some of the world’s most promising gold fields in the central Asian country.
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Other targets included the networks of the International Olympic Committee, the United Nations secretariat, a U.S. Energy Department lab, and a dozen U.S. defense firms, according to a report released Wednesday by McAfee, a security firm that monitors network intrusions around the world.
McAfee said hundreds of other servers have been used by the same adversary, which the company did not identify.
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