http://www3.haaretz.co.il/eng/scripts/article.asp?id=52575&mador=1&datee=7/30/99
Ha'aretz, July 30, 1999
Hackers using Israeli 'net site to strike at Pentagon
By Nitzan Horowitz, Ha'aretz Correspondent
WASHINGTON - An Israeli Internet site is being used by international computer hackers as a base for electronic attacks on U.S. government and military computer systems, according to Pentagon officials who were quoted in a Washington Times report yesterday.
The paper said that the National Security Agency detected the hackers and warned government security officials last week about the electronic penetration attempts.
The warning was issued by the National Security Incident Response Center, an interagency group set up by the NSA to track computer attacks, the Washington Times explained. The attacks were traced to an Internet protocol (IP) address in Israel, said officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity. (An IP address is a number that identifies a computer connected to the Internet.)
Many probes of government and military computers were detected from the Israeli site, the agency noted, adding that the site is a popular "jump point" for hackers in Israel and other countries.
Hackers have also used the site to store hacker-related materials, such as software and database information, the Washington paper reported.
Such materials can include special password-breaking programs that are used to find entry points into Internet sites.
"There are some intrusions going on as we speak," Melissa Bohen, a spokeswoman for the Pentagon's Joint Task Force-Computer Network Defenses, told the paper. She said the Pentagon detects 60 to 80 attempted computer break-ins daily, though these target mainly unclassified information. Secret data is stored separately and is not easily penetrable.
Bohen said that the FBI is still investigating computer intrusions that occurred earlier this year, some of which were traced to an Israeli hacker.
According to the Washington Times, the real danger to U.S. national security is the threat posed by foreign intelligence services or governments that could launch electronic warfare against the United States.
The Clinton administration plans to set up a major government-wide security network to protect its computers from hackers, thieves, terrorists and hostile intelligence services.
According to the Associated Press, the plan calls for establishing a network of electronic barriers, monitors and analyzers to detect and check suspicious activity on government computer networks.
About 500 computer intrusion devices could already be functioning by next year, and the complete system will be in place by 2003.
According to Frank Cillufo, a computer-security specialist with the Center for Strategic and International Studies, most hackers engage in "Internet graffiti" by entering and defacing government Internet sites.
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