US President Donald Trump has said it "may be China" who was behind the embedded malware found in US government networks and elsewhere around the world earlier this week.
Trump's comments on
Twitter came after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blamed the hacking
attack on Moscow. Speaking with US talk show host Mark Levin on Friday,
Pompeo said the embedded malware was"pretty clearly" the work of "the
Russians."
But on Saturday, Trump posted on Twitter
that "Russia is the priority chant when anything happens" because the
media is afraid of discussing the possibility of Beijing's involvement.
He did not cite his reasons for suspecting China.
Russia denies involvement
On
Friday, Pompeo said private companies and governments around the world
had been targeted using third-party software to embed code in their
systems.
"This was a very significant effort, and I think it's the case that now we can say pretty clearly that it was the Russians that engaged in this activity," he said, adding that the outgoing Trump administration had kept mute as a "wiser course of action" to allow investigations to unfold following the initial alert made last Sunday.
Russia has already denied involvement, with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissing the allegations.
US President-elect Joe Biden, meanwhile, has expressed "great concern" over the hacking attack.
18,000 accounts infected
On
Monday, Texas firm SolarWinds disclosed that up to 18,000 users of its
popular Orion network-management software had been unwittingly infected,
blaming what it termed an "outside nation-state."
Microsoft
President Brad Smith, in a blog post Friday, said roughly 80 per cent of
affected customers were located inside the United States. Others were
located in the UK, Belgium, Canada, Israel, Mexico, Spain and the United
Arab Emirates.
Reuters, citing a British security source,
said a small number of British organisations had been compromised but
"not in the public sector."
"The scale is daunting," said James
Lewis, vice president of the US Center for Strategic and International
Studies, commenting on the disclosures.
"We also don't know
what's been left behind. The normal practice is to leave something
behind so they can get back in, in the future," Lewis told a news
agency.
"This will be a long ride," said Dmitri Alperovitch,
former chief technical officer of cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, in an
interview with The Associated Press. He added that networks would need
to be redesigned. "Clean-up is just phase one."
'Complex' intrusions as early as March
The
US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) said
intrusions had begun as early as March this year, and the actor behind
them had "demonstrated patience, operational security and complex
tradecraft."
CISA said the hack had not reached the US nuclear
arsenal but only "business networks" linked to the Department of
Energy, which have since been disconnected.
The US government
agencies that were reportedly breached include the Department of
Homeland Security, the Treasury Department and the State Department.
Some
breaches enabled emails to be monitored, but it was unclear what the
hackers were seeking and what they did while infiltrating networks, said
Reuters.
US to close last consulates in Russia
Before
he leaves office in January, President Donald Trump is planning to
close the two remaining US consulates in Russia, the State Department
said on Saturday, amid escalating tensions between Moscow and
Washington.
The US will suspend operations at its posts in the
city of Vladivostok and in Yekaterinburg, leaving the embassy in Moscow
as the last US diplomatic mission in Russia.
Ten diplomats will reportedly be relocated to the embassy in Moscow, while 33 local staff will lose their jobs.
The
decision was part of "efforts to ensure the safe and secure operation
of the US diplomatic mission in the Russian Federation," a department
spokesperson told Agence France-Presse.
Moving the employees to Moscow "will allow us to advance our foreign policy interests in Russia in the most effective and safe manner possible," according to the State Department.