As Iran’s technological
capabilities improve, the Israeli military is warning of the looming dangers
posed by the Islamic Republic’s agents in cyberspace.
The head of Israel’s
military command, control, computer, communications and intelligence (C4I) plus
cyber division runs one of the most crucial forces in the IDF, one that works
24/7 to defend the country from all attacks through cyberspace.
At the Reuters Cyber
Security Summit held in Tel Aviv recently, the head of the C41 division stated outright
that the IDF faces thousands of cyber attacks a day, many of which are
orchestrated by Iran, with the help of proxies like the terrorist organization,
Hezbollah.
Just five or six years
ago, many of the attacks against IDF servers, and Israeli networks in general,
were DDOS (denial of service) attacks, where hackers try by sheer quantity of
Internet connections to slow or halt operations on systems. Another common
tactic was phishing — deceitful attempts to obtain personal information. The
threats today are much more sophisticated.
“They are not the
state-of-the-art, they are not the strongest superpower in the cyber dimension,
but they are getting better and better,” said.the division head
On the other hand, he
also said that “Nobody has been able to penetrate our operational systems,”
although he did qualify the statement with the words, “as far as we know.”
The C4I division was
established in 2015, with the goal of bringing all units dealing with cyber threats under
one roof, with a single command structure. It protects systems that control
everything, from communications to Iron Dome rockets, all of which communicate
with servers that remain hackers’ targets.
This would seem to point
to C4I being essentially defensive in nature, it was made clear that
responsibilities did not include offensive cyber tactics. However, it is
commonly accepted that Israel, working secretly with the United States,
developed the Stuxnet virus in 2010 that targeted machines controlling
centrifuges in Iran that were being used to enrich uranium for Iran’s nuclear
program.
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