BERLIN (Reuters)
- Russian intelligence agencies were probably responsible for a massive cyber
attack on Germany's lower house of parliament last year which forced its
computer systems to be shut down for days, Germany's domestic intelligence
agency said on Friday.
The
agency, known as the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution
(BfV), said a hacker group known as "Sofacy" was behind the attack.
"The
BfV has indications that it is being steered by the Russian state and has been
monitoring it for years," the agency said in a statement.
The
unusually strong comments come at a time when relations between Berlin and
Moscow have sunk to their lowest point since the end of the Cold War following
Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea and its intervention in Syria.
Hans-Georg
Maassen, president of the BfV, said that government, corporate and educational
facilities in Germany were under "permanent threat", with critical
infrastructure in areas like energy and telecommunications in particular focus.
"The
campaigns that the BfV has observed in the past have generally been focused on
obtaining information, in other words spying," Maassen said. "But
lately Russian intelligence agencies have also shown a willingness to conduct
sabotage."
Earlier
this week, security research firm Trend Micro said a group of hackers that
target critics of the Russian government had been trying since April to attack
the computer systems of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative party.
The
attack on the Bundestag lower house, first reported in May of last year, caused
severe damage, forcing authorities to shut down the computer system for days in
order to repair the network.
(Reporting
by Noah Barkin and Sabine Siebold; Editing by Richard Balmforth)
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