Formation of Ukrainian cyber warfare team – Targets Russian electricity grid and railway

A Ukrainian cyber-warfare group is planning to carry out digital sabotage attacks on key Russian infrastructure, such as railways and electricity distribution networks, in order to retaliate against Moscow for the incursion of Russian troops into Ukraine, according to a Reuters report. .

Ukrainian Defense Ministry officials have approached Ukrainian businessmen and local cybersecurity expert Igor Uchev to help set up a hacker group for digital cyber defense against Russia, Reuters reported earlier.

On Monday, Uchev said he planned to launch cyber-attacks that could disrupt any infrastructure that helps advance Russian troops and weapons into Ukraine.

“Anything can stop the war. The goal is to make it impossible to transfer these weapons to our country.”

He added that his team had already shut down or rendered useless dozens of Russian government and banking sites, sometimes replacing their content with images of war violence. THE

Russia describes its actions in Ukraine as a “special operation” which it says was not designed to occupy Ukrainian territory, but to destroy Ukraine’s defense capabilities, but also to arrest those whom Moscow describes as dangerous nationalists.

A Ukrainian defense attorney in Washington declined to comment on the actions of Ustev’s group or its relationship with the country’s defense ministry.

Uchev said that his team has grown to date, with the participation of more than 1,000 Ukrainians, as well as foreign volunteers.

The group has already coordinated with a foreign cyber-espionage group, attacking a railway system.

Following the news of Uchev’s group, the Belarusian Cyber ​​Partisans, which carried out attacks in Belarus, volunteered to carry out a cyber-attack on Belarus’s railways, which they said were used to transport Russian troops. The team turned off transportation systems and shut down the ticketing page, according to Bloomberg News on Sunday.

A Cyber ​​Partisans spokeswoman told Reuters on Monday that the group had carried out the attacks, confirming its cooperation with Ucev’s group.

She said that because her team had disabled the ticket reservation system, passengers could only travel by issuing paper tickets, and sent Reuters a photo of a paper ticket that had been hand-issued on Monday.

“We are fully on the side of the Ukrainians. Now they are fighting not only for their own freedom, but for ours as well. Without an independent Ukraine, Belarus has no hope,” she said.

Reuters could not confirm the attacks on the railway system in Belarus. The ticket website was down yesterday afternoon. A spokesman for the railways did not respond to a request for comment.

Officials at the Russian embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told Russian media yesterday that Russian embassies were being attacked by “Ukrainian cyber-terrorists.”

Ahead of retaliatory cyber-attacks in Moscow, Uchev said his team would help the Ukrainian armed forces identify secret Russian groups invading cities and regions of Ukraine.

Uchev said his team had discovered a way to use cell phone tracking technology to detect and identify secret Russian military groups moving inside Ukraine, without giving further details.

The Russian military is using commercial mobile phones to communicate in Ukraine, according to multiple media reports.

Source: AMPE

Source: Capital

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