Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United Kingdom Security

The UK is Practicing Cyberattacks That Could Black Out Moscow (qz.com) 153

British defense officials say they have practiced cyber war games that could shut off electricity in Russia's capital, the Sunday Times (paywall) reports. From a report: The measures are part of a wider range of strategies to hit back at an increasingly assertive Russia -- accused of interfering with US elections, cyberattacks on Western targets, and poisoning a former spy on UK soil -- without resorting to a full-blown nuclear attack. "If they sank our aircraft carrier with a nuclear-tipped torpedo, what is our response? There's nothing between sinking their submarine and dropping a nuclear weapon on northern Kamchatka," one senior source told the Sunday Times. "This is why cyber is so important; you can go on the offensive and turn off the lights in Moscow to tell them that they are not doing the right things." Military planners are looking for options if Russian president Vladimir Putin tests NATO's resolve by seizing small islands belonging to Estonia, taking control of Libya's oil reserves, or using "irregular forces" to attack troops, according to the report.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

The UK is Practicing Cyberattacks That Could Black Out Moscow

Comments Filter:
  • Great News (Score:1, Flamebait)

    by Jzanu ( 668651 )
    Certainly increasing granularity allows for better proportional response, even on the military side. Also, its a good chance this is significantly developed as policy since it has been made public. The UK would be within its rights to straight out assassinate Vladimir Putin (and that is my preference for a solution, from any party) but diplomacy requires more responses before that to check aggression. War is almost inevitable with Putin in power, but maybe taking out the lights (and blowing up a few oil and
    • How the fuck would the UK be within its rights to assassinate a head of state?
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Jzanu ( 668651 )
        Putin personally authorized military attack by officers against UK civilians with a chemical weapon, and while it only injured the targets due to the ineptitude of the assassins their rushed ditching of evidence resulted in actual civilian deaths. Putin authorized it without declaring war, so an equal action assassinating him by any means necessary is simply proportional response. And no need to declare war either.
        • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

          Add in a polonium poisoning that left a trail of radioactive material all over London. Then there where the British citizen's killed in the downing of MH17. Plenty of grounds for a proportionate response of getting ride of the bastard before he authorizes any more actions which kill British citizens.

          • The MH17 events are more disputable. There was no good reason for Russia to down it. Most likely it was a mistake caused by their need to maintain some level of deniability in the conflict.

            There's no real dispute over the polonium poisoning, though. Russia may deny it, but the poison used was something so exotic and hard to manufacture that only a state actor with nuclear power or weapons capability could produce it. If they wanted real deniability, they could have just used a car 'accident.' Polonium was c

        • by umghhh ( 965931 )
          Putin did all. We did nothing. Nothing has changed then and there is no need to wake up. I just wonder how can you be so sure that Putin authorizes all shit that happens (assuming that Russians did it which it may be but I have there my doubts). I mean already the Russian Federation is big so he would have problem authorizing all what happens there. Here again I am not saying this did not happen only that all this optimism about accuracy of our gooks and their good will is as history shows usually not justi
      • How the fuck would the UK be within its rights to assassinate a head of state?

        That's a difficult question. Officially they don't. Countries don't have the rights to assassinate heads of rival states... ... but then, what if that country didn't want that leader and he was a tyrant... well... probably still don't have the right, but fewer people will raise an eyebrow if you do it. Putin seems to have support in Russia so you can't apply that.

        Now, you could argue the Russian population are ill-informed because of propaganda and state run media that deliberately lies... Maybe just li

  • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Monday October 08, 2018 @11:38AM (#57445368)

    er no, using a nuke against a carrier is declaration of world war III and would be answered as such.

    get a clue, fuckwit "senior source"

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      A nuclear tipped anti-ship torpedo isn't a declaration of nuclear war.

      But in any case, a cyber attack is very risky. Russia would likely retaliate, and most of these attacks are against civilians. People will die in hospitals, in accidents, for lack of heat.

      So rather than being a tit-for-tat response against military targets, it's an escalation to attacking civilians. Possibly a war crime too, since there is a legal requirement to minimize civilian casualties.

      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Monday October 08, 2018 @12:58PM (#57445956)

        What the fuck did I just read? Usage of tactical nukes on biggest and most important ship in the fleet of peer competitor isn't a declaration of war in a world of MAD?

        Are you insane? Are you utterly stupid and ignorant? All of the above?

        Heck, even all of the above isn't enough to make that statement. What in the actual fuck?

        • What the fuck did I just read? Usage of tactical nukes on biggest and most important ship in the fleet of peer competitor isn't a declaration of war in a world of MAD?

          A nuclear tipped anti-ship torpedo isn't a declaration of nuclear war.

          I highlighted the part that I'm guessing is the important word that you missed. Firing torpedoes (of any variety) at a carrier would certainly be considered an act of war, but it wouldn't justify responding by turning the other country into a radioactive wasteland.

      • Possibly a war crime too, since there is a legal requirement to minimize civilian casualties.

        There is no law in war. I know you peace time snowflakes like to think that there is, but the truth is the winners simply put on a show afterward.

      • Concerns about war crimes are for those who are confident they can win while still playing by the rules. He who has the advantage can afford morality. He who is about to see his country invaded will feel rather less concern about enemy civilian deaths.

      • You are wrong and delusional. Use of a nuclear weapon against a U.S. carrier absolutely would cause strategic nuclear response of the USA against the aggressor, that is U.S. doctrine. It would be start of nuclear war.

  • That "Russian hackers" allegedly can change election results with impunity from the US to Gibraltar, or that the alleged "victims" of such yuuge machinations can fight back?

    The problem of the West is not "assertive Russia", the problem of the West is its weakening, sick democracy, which fell victim of its oligarchies and which is so impotent, that even with the technologies at its fingertips cannot solve elementary problems like decent education and healthcare for everyone.

    All this talk of "external enemies

    • That "Russian hackers" allegedly can change election results with impunity from the US to Gibraltar, or that the alleged "victims" of such yuuge machinations can fight back?

      The problem of the West is not "assertive Russia", the problem of the West is its weakening, sick democracy, which fell victim of its oligarchies and which is so impotent, that even with the technologies at its fingertips cannot solve elementary problems like decent education and healthcare for everyone.

      All this talk of "external enemies" is to cover up the failures at home.

      Which, incidentally, is the same thing Putin's doing.

      Healthcare for everyone was solved 50 years ago. Most Western countries enjoy a functioning health care that ensures wealth is not required to be properly looked after. The US is the only exception.

  • "This is why cyber is so important; you can go on the offensive and turn off the lights in Moscow to tell them that they are not doing the right things."

    So great to use non-conventional weapons. You blockout Moscow to tell them they are not doing the right things, and they won't be able to respond in kind. Then they just spread the black plague all over London and there will be just enough plausible deniability that you can't respond either. Everyone wins!

  • If a 900 day siege that largely destroyed one of their largest cities and killed over a million people wasn't able to bring Russia to its knees, surely an electrical blackout in Moscow will!

    • No one cares about a blackout too much... ... until their cellphone batteries die. If they can get power back on before the cellphone batteries die no one will mind.

  • by superwiz ( 655733 ) on Monday October 08, 2018 @12:10PM (#57445614) Journal

    I am going to tell a joke, but I'll give a warning before telling it. So until the warning, what I say is serious. Moscow residents may not view lights-out as a foreign action. They are much, much more likely to see it as a domestic failure. And if the domestic government-owned news channels subsequently report it as such, 85% of the population will believe it. The remaining 15% never believe anything that the government says, so they won't be a political loss for the RF administration.

    Here's the promised joke (because it's too close to the article itself). Question: how can you tell that the US government has fell behind the Russian government in its use of the Internet? Because, unlike the Moscow mayor's website, you can't find the scheduled water outages on the New York mayor's website. This is an actual meme that used to be popular in Russia just a few years ago. Well, it may still be popular, but I was told about it a few years ago.

    Now given that Moscow has scheduled water outages, how difficult will it be to explain away electric outages which were not scheduled?

  • Then put in place 10 trucks, each with a medieval trebuchet designed to fling a heavy-gauge metal cable over each of the high-voltage transmission lines to the city. to short them out.
    • for psychological effect,
      use a drone-swarm to carry each cable and drop it across the 3 phases of the power transmission line.
    • If I wanted to cause massive disruption to an electrical grid, I would use a combination of cyber and physical attacks. The key is in planning. I'd make sure I had a team who's job it was to constantly monitor the target - they would be probing for vulnerabilities, maintaining details of every utility employee from the chairman of the board to the meter readers for use in social engineering, watching satellite images for signs of cable laying. When it's time to launch the attack, I'd want my people to know

  • by Alain Williams ( 2972 ) <addw@phcomp.co.uk> on Monday October 08, 2018 @12:40PM (#57445842) Homepage

    seems to me to be the cause of many problems today. These are people who have got to the top in their country, they start by beating up political opponents, often ensure their position (head of state for a long time), then go into other countries and hurt people. I won't mention names, but there are plenty around.

  • Critical infrastructure should not be accessible from the internet.

    Yes, the previously mentioned trebuchet and drone attacks on 3-phase circuits still work but you need to be closer than a few hundred miles to pull this off without anyone noticing before it's too late.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Worked for NATO over Serbia.
      Now they really think they can scale that lights out method up for Russia.
  • No! UK is *Practising* Cyberattacks.
  • I'm off to buy a generator and a satellite internet connection...

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

Working...