China summons US envoy over cyber-spying charges, vows retaliation
China summons US envoy over cyber-spying charges, vows
retaliation
China has dismissed all US accusations of industrial cyber-espionage against five of its
military officials and published proof that Washington is actually stealing data from
China. Beijing also summoned the US ambassador for an explanation.
Beijing reacted to Washington’s recent round of industrial espionage accusations by
publishing its latest data on US cyber-attacks against China.
China’s National Computer Network Emergency Response Technical Team Coordination
Center of China (NCNERTTCC) reported that during just two months, from March 19
to May 18, the US directly controlled 1.18 million host computers in China using
2,077 Trojan horse networks or botnet servers.
According to the NCNERTTCC, over the last two months 135 host computers stationed
in the US conducted 14,000 phishing operations against Chinese websites using for
the attacks 563 phishing pages. The other hacking activities through the same period of
time included 57,000 backdoor attacks, performed from 2,016 IP addresses in the US
through backdoors implanted on 1,754 Chinese websites.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry summoned the American ambassador to China for an
explanation, urging him to drop all charges against China’s military officers. The meeting
between Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Zheng Zeguang and US Ambassador
Max Baucus took place on Monday night, reported Xinhua.
Depending on further developments, China “will take further action on the so-called
charges by the United States,” Zheng told Baucus.
“The Chinese government and military and its associated personnel have never
conducted or participated in the theft of trade secrets over the internet,” Zheng
reportedly told Baucus as quoted by Xinhua.
America’s attitude to internet security is “overbearing and hypocritical,” Zheng told
Baucus, urging the US to finally give a clear explanation on multiple reports that
America’s National Security Agency is spying after Chinese government, businesses,
universities and individuals.
On the other side of the Pacific, China's Ambassador to the US Cui Tiankai "made
solemn representations" to the US State Department, China News Service reported
on Tuesday.
“The accusations that the United States have made against these Chinese officials are
purely fictitious and extremely absurd,"Chinese ambassador to the US is quoted as saying.
Geng Yansheng, spokesman for China’s Ministry of National Defense, accused Washington
of hypocrisy and damaging bilateral military ties.
“From 'WikiLeaks' to the 'Snowden' affairs, the hypocrisy and double standards of the
US side on the issue of internet security has been clear for a long time,” said the
spokesman as cited by the Wall Street Journal.
Beijing insists that while the US accused China of industrial cyber-spying on multiple
occasions, America itself is waging unprecedented cyber warfare against China,
infiltrating all kinds of the country’s networks - government and business alike -
also targeting both civilians and officials through mobile phones.
After the revelations of former NSA contractor Edward Snowden the US has been
criticized by most of the world powers, as it turned out that America is spying after
literally every state and every person found necessary.
For example back in 2012 Washington accused Chinese telecom giants, including
the world’s second-largest global supplier of telecommunications equipment,
Huawei, of posing a threat to America’s national security through ‘tapping’ their
routers, switches and other telecoms equipment.
from the US.
On Monday, the US personalized accusations of industrial cyber-espionage against
China, charging five military officials with hacking attacks against American companies.
Beijing dismissed all the accusations as groundless and based on fabricated facts,
blaming Washington of imperiling China-US “cooperation and mutual trust” in a
released statement.
“China is steadfast in upholding cyber-security,” the statement maintains. “The Chinese
government, the Chinese military and their relevant personnel have never engaged or
participated in cyber-theft of trade secrets. The US accusation against Chinese
personnel is purely ungrounded and absurd,” the document said.
US attorney General Eric Holder leveled charges against China of stealing confidential
data and business secrets in order to give Chinese companies competitive advantage
over American corporations in the nuclear and solar technology sectors.
According to the Justice Department, the grand jury’s indictment must become a
“wake-up call” for the American nation to realize the scale of cyber intrusions.
The companies that allegedly suffered from espionage are such industrial giants as
Alcoa World Alumina, Allegheny Technologies, SolarWorld, US Steel Corporation,
the United Steelworkers Union and Westinghouse Electric.
http://rt.com/news/160080-us-china-cyber-espionage/
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