6 Russian military officers charged in vast hacking campaign
Six Russian military officers sought to disrupt
through computer hacking the French election, the Winter Olympics and U.S.
businesses, according to a Justice Department indictment unsealed Monday that
details attacks on a broad range of political, financial and athletic targets.
The indictment also accuses the defendants, all
alleged officers in the Russian military agency known as the GRU, in
destructive attacks on Ukraine’s power grid and in a hack-and-leak effort
directed at the political party of French President Emmanuel Macron during the
2017 election.
The indictment does not charge the defendants in
connection with interference in American elections, focusing instead on attacks
that prosecutors said were aimed at promoting Russian’s own geopolitical
interests. Those include cyberattacks that targeted the 2018 Winter Olympics in
South Korea, where Russian athletes were banned because of a state-sponsored
doping effort.
“No country
has weaponized its cyber capabilities as maliciously or irresponsibly as
Russia, wantonly causing unprecedented damage to pursue small tactical
advantages and to satisfy fits of spite,” said Assistant Attorney General John
Demers, the Justice Department’s top national security official.
He called it “the most disruptive and destructive
series of computer attacks ever attributed to a single group.”



