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IAEA Hacked? Nuclear Agency Fears Iran Hackers: Diplomats

Iaea Iran Hack

GEORGE JAHN   05/18/11 05:10 PM ET   AP

VIENNA — The U.N. nuclear agency is investigating reports from its experts that their cellphones and laptops may have been hacked into by Iranian officials looking for confidential information while the equipment was left unattended during inspection tours in the Islamic Republic, diplomats have told The Associated Press.

One of the diplomats said the International Atomic Energy Agency is examining "a range of events, ranging from those where it is certain something has happened to suppositions," all in the first quarter of this year. He said the Vienna-based nuclear watchdog agency was alerted by inspectors reporting "unusual events," suggesting that outsiders had tampered with their electronic equipment.

Two other diplomats in senior positions confirmed the essence of the report but said they had no further information. All three envoys come from member nations of the International Atomic Energy Agency and spoke on condition of anonymity because their information was privileged.

Agency spokeswoman Gill Tudor said the IAEA had no comment on the issue. IAEA inspectors are in Iran touring various facilities every other week.

A woman answering the cell phone of Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran's senior envoy to the agency, said Soltanieh "wishes to give no interviews" after the caller identified himself as an AP reporter and before the reporter could say what the call was about.

An agency official, who also spoke on condition that he not be identified, said strict security measures included inspectors' placing their cellphones into seamless paper envelopes, then sealing these and writing across the seal and the envelope to spot any unauthorized opening while they were away.

He said inspectors are not allowed to take their cellphones with them while touring Iran's uranium enrichment facilities and other venues. Laptops, he said, are either locked in bags or sealed the same way as cellphones when they are left temporarily unattended by inspectors. The computers also are sometimes left unattended in hotel rooms at the end of a work day, he said.

But the diplomat who spoke at greatest length about the reported breach said the Iranians had found ways to overcome the security measures. He said he had no further details.

Iran has been under IAEA inspections for nearly a decade after revelations that it was running a secret uranium enrichment program and has been hit with four rounds of U.N. Security Council sanctions over its refusal to halt the activity.

Tehran insists it wants only to provide peaceful nuclear energy for its rising population and notes that the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty allows for enrichment as a source of fuel.

But international concerns have grown. The uranium enrichment program could also make fissile warhead material. Also, Iran refuses to cooperate with U.N. investigations of suspicions that it ran alleged experiments related to making nuclear weapons.

Low-enriched uranium can be used to fuel a reactor to generate electricity, which Iran says is the intention of its program. But if uranium is further enriched to around 90 percent purity, it can be used to develop a nuclear warhead.

Olli Heinonen, who stepped down last year as the IAEA's deputy director general in charge of investigating Iran's nuclear program, said information on the laptops is encrypted – and therefore difficult to decipher. Anybody gaining access to information on cellphones would find little sensitive material, he said.

Heinonen speculated that any attempt to access such equipment might have been meant to plant spyware designed to infect the IAEA computer network once the cellphones or laptops are connected and siphon off information.

"It's possible if there is tampering that something is planted in the computer and when you work with sensitive data it transmits it or it contaminates other computers with sensitive information – like Stuxnet," he said.

IAEA officials attribute a temporary breakdown of Iran's enrichment program late last year to the Stuxnet computer worm, and Tehran has acknowledged that Stuxnet affected a limited number of centrifuges – a key component in uranium enrichment – at its main uranium enrichment facility in the central city of Natanz. Tehran blames the United States and Israel for creating and planting the malware.

____

George Jahn is at http://twitter.com/georgejahn

(This version CORRECTS Corrects name, gender of IAEA spokeswoman.)

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VIENNA — The U.N. nuclear agency is investigating reports from its experts that their cellphones and laptops may have been hacked into by Iranian officials looking for confidential information w...
VIENNA — The U.N. nuclear agency is investigating reports from its experts that their cellphones and laptops may have been hacked into by Iranian officials looking for confidential information w...
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iflew
Dyno Remediator
10:03 AM on 05/21/2011
Very good intelligence move. Everyone expects to be bugged, hacked, data stolen etc. We do it. They do it.

When it's done right the planted information looks real. Put a little real stuff in that most intelligent third graders might know, and some fake information that builds up the case for the "Big One" you want them to find.

You have to make enough noise that they believe they really got something. Make it look like they had to pull a really tricky fast one to get it. If it's coded just right it will take a while to break and that adds to the look of authenticity.

If it was something real a worker carried around it was probably only e-mail from home and a list of in country restaurants where they might get some edible food that wouldn't make them ill.
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Calvin Chautine
01:00 PM on 05/19/2011
The Mississippi National Guard could over run Iran in half a day useing two flat bed wagons
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bad spelling grammar
Help save Big Cats from extinction!
01:19 PM on 05/20/2011
i suggest you go over there and try it, lets see how far you get
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gravescanada
Bipolar-Playing life on hard mode!
08:02 AM on 05/19/2011
How about they take a small security detail with them, that can stand gaurd over the equipment. This is just plain stupid. If I am at the mall, and want to use the washroom, I would have my friend watch my laptop. Its common sense.
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06:20 AM on 05/19/2011
If you believe anything from Iran, then you most likely believed the big lies from the old Soviet Union.
The article is news to me, but not surprising. I'll wait for other verification, from other news sources.
01:44 AM on 05/19/2011
Proof for accusations is something every American deserves. Crying wolf about WMDs again would be less sad if it was not the same people who blew it last time.

And no, the new Novaks and Millers staining the profession of journalism is not proof. The empty assertions card has been played.

Bulldozing homes would likewise be less abhorrent if the so called terrorists did not always coincidentally live right where settlements were expanding.

I believe the saying is don't piss on my leg and tell me it's raining.
12:09 AM on 05/19/2011
they were hacked by US government a long time ago...big deal...welcome to the party
10:54 PM on 05/18/2011
Wow, I never even thought about it like that. Wow.
www.internet-privacy.at.tc
08:58 PM on 05/18/2011
Isn't hacking business as usual for all countries' intelligence operations nowadays ?
I apologize, but I'm so naive.
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womenforaction
Julene Allen-Dell'Amor founder of Women for Action
07:07 PM on 05/18/2011
This is pretty silly. Did they know that they would have to leave tech equipment behind before hand?It's not like they were going on a tourist tour. They are visiting a nuclear energy plant for goodness sake. If they could run the risk of this sort of security breach while they are offsite then here was the solution. Do not take cell phones or any technological equipment that may contain secret data and contacts. Take laptops and cellphones that are exclusively for offsite purposes so it can be disposed of later. If they know they can run the risk of these things being tampered with, then they should take the necessary precautions. Personally I feel that if someone is not able to stand watch 24/7 of something that contains any sort of secret information, then they should not have it in their personal possession. If they had to leave it unattended because they had to abide by the regulations of foreign authorities, then surely they should not have it on them.
08:54 PM on 05/18/2011
Woman, you have to keep in mind, we're talking about the UN ,, not exctly a think tank or a bastion of common sense, it's the UN lol
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se72748
07:02 PM on 05/18/2011
Does Iran have any nukes yet? Do we know where they are?
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07:57 PM on 05/18/2011
It's a great pumpkin in the sky, Charlie Brown!
06:58 PM on 05/18/2011
What did I tell you, when you were celebrating your 'Stuxnet' victory!

OK...cyber-warfare is now out in the open. Digital attacks against military, industrial, and commercial establishments are all fair game. White Hats and Black Hats both displaying their prowess in digital terror. Defenses and offenses calculated to incapacitate the enemies digital infrastructure.

"Digital borders", like national borders, are being erected as quickly as governments can construct them, but unlike physical borders the illegals are all a potential killer. Variations of Stuxnet will appear everywhere; nothing breeds imitation like success.

Stuxnet was developed to impact Iran's nuclear capability. Given the ongoing Japanese nuclear nightmare, attacking nuclear facilities is the last thing the world needs. So, in its acquiescence to the digital attack on Iran, the IAEA opens itself up to digital terrorism.
06:57 PM on 05/18/2011
Seroously, Iran prolly heard they were next on Obama's list of things to do. Countries to invade.
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jflorish
06:19 PM on 05/18/2011
No way in heck should people leave technology around when they are targets like this. It would be easy to plant software to transmit everything, and it could go years undetected. People do anything to spy or steal, google "great seal bug president" sometime to read a great spy story between Russia and the U.S.
06:14 PM on 05/18/2011
what about north Korea are we just to take the wait in see aproch let them delvolpe long range and then worry ? I am not adovcating war but somthing has to be done about these lunatic nations