Free Headline Alerts     
Worldwide Web WorldTribune.com
  • U.S. Pacific Command prevailed over NSC in urgent push for Taiwan arms sale
  • Korean spy agencies in secret talks to organize summit
  • Hizbullah defeated in 2009 elections, but maintains power over Beirut
  • FBI's Washington office botched interrogation of airline bomb suspect

  •   breaking... 


    Thursday, May 15, 2008      East-Asia-Intel.com

    FBI: China may use counterfeit Cisco routers to penetrate U.S. networks

    An FBI presentation states that China has counterfeited Cisco Systems network routers and may be using the equipment to penetrate U.S. government and private sector computer networks.

    Federal authorities in February seized some 400 counterfeit Cisco Systems knockoffs worth $76 million. The equipment included routers, switches, gigabit interface converters and WAN interface cards.

    Among the purchasers of the fake equipment were the U.S. Naval Academy, U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center, U.S. Naval Undersea Warfare Center, U.S. Air Base at Spangdahelm, Germany, the Bonneville Power Administration, General Services Administration, and the defense contractor Raytheon, which makes key missile and weapons systems.

    Also In This Edition

    NORTHEAST ASIA:

    China overtakes EU as Iran’s top trade partner

    Mideast / S. Asia:

    Khamenei: Iran anniversary 'punch' will stun West

    AFRICA/EUROPE:

    Sudan's Beshir quits army to run again for presidency

    The FBI briefing slides on the case stated that while there are “intelligence gaps” on why the Chinese made the counterfeit equipment it could have been for profit or as part of a state-sponsored operation.

    Additionally the scope of the Chinese counterfeit equipment may extend beyond routers to include fake IT equipment such as PCs and printers.

    Under a section titled “The Threat,” the FBI described the effort as “IT subversion/supply chain attack” that could “cause immediate or premature system failure during usage.”

    The counterfeit equipment also could be used to “gain access to otherwise secure systems” and to “weaken cryptographic systems.”

    The briefing slide said the Chinese information warfare efforts require “intimate access to target systems.”


    About Us     l    Contact Us     l    Geostrategy-Direct.com     l    East-Asia-Intel.com
    Copyright © 2008    East West Services, Inc.    All rights reserved.