Low-tech infiltration, high-stakes loss: Questions mount over China’s cybersecurity after massive defense leak
BEIJING: A major cyber attack has reportedly compromised China’s strategic supercomputer network, resulting in the theft of highly sensitive defense secrets. Major news outlets, including CNN, have reported on the infiltration, with early indications suggesting this is the largest cyber attack in the nation's history. The hacker successfully penetrated a supercomputer at the government-run National Supercomputing Center (NSCC) in Tianjin.
Sources indicate that the compromised documents contain critical information regarding China's defense sector, including missile designs, technical data related to fighter jets, classified defense research, and strategic war plans. The breach is staggering in scale, with an estimated one million gigabytes of data exfiltrated. The Chinese government is reportedly in a state of shock, as the leak represents a direct and severe threat to national security.
The NSCC in Tianjin is a cornerstone of China's technological infrastructure, supporting the computing operations of more than 6,000 institutions. Perhaps more alarming than the theft itself is the ease with which it was executed. Reports suggest the infiltration went unnoticed for several months, allowing the hackers to slowly siphon data without triggering alarms.
Cybersecurity experts who have examined samples of the leaked data noted that the hackers did not employ particularly sophisticated technology. This revelation has sparked intense debate over the perceived strength of China’s strategic networks. By opting for a slow and steady exfiltration process rather than a massive, sudden data dump, the hackers effectively bypassed detection systems. The incident raises urgent questions about whether China’s internal cybersecurity protocols are fundamentally flawed and how such a strategic target could be penetrated so easily.