ICH
(Cont'd) Cyber-Attacks by Al Qaeda Feared
Tue Aug 19 03:28:22 2003
64.140.158.34

(Cont'd)

In a book-length Electricity Infrastructure Security Assessment, the industry concluded on Jan. 7 that "it may not be possible to provide sufficient security when using the Internet for power system control." Power companies, it said, will probably have to build a parallel private network for themselves.

'Where Their Crown Jewels Are'

The U.S. government may never have fought a war with so little power in the battlefield. That became clear again on Feb. 7, when Clarke and his vice-chairman at the critical infrastructure board, Howard A. Schmidt, arrived in the Oval Office.

They told the president that researchers in Finland had identified a serious security hole in the Internet's standard language for routing data through switches. A government threat team found implications -- for air traffic control and civilian and military phone links, among others -- that were more serious still.

"We've got troops on the ground in Afghanistan and we've got communication systems that we all depend on that, at that time, were vulnerable," Schmidt recalled.

Bush ordered the Pentagon and key federal agencies to patch their systems. But most of the vulnerable networks were not government-owned. Since Feb. 12, "those who have the fix in their power are in the private sector," Schmidt said. Asked about progress, he said: "I don't know that we'd ever get to 100 percent."

Frustrated at the pace of repairs, Clarke traveled to San Jose on Feb. 19 and accused industry leaders of spending more on coffee than on information security. "You will be hacked," he told them. "What's more, you deserve to be hacked."

Tritak, at the Commerce Department, appealed to patriotism. Speaking of al Qaeda, he said: "When you've got people who are saying, 'We're coming after your economy,' everyone has a responsibility to do their bit to safeguard against it."

New public-private partnerships are helping, but the government case remains a tough sell. Alan Paller, director of research at the SANS Institute in Bethesda, said not even banks and brokerages, considered the most security-conscious businesses, tell the government when their systems are attacked. Sources said the government did not learn crucial details about September's Nimda worm, which caused an estimated $530 million in damage, until the stricken companies began firing their security executives.

Experts said public companies worry about the loss of customer confidence and the legal liability to shareholders or security vendors when they report flaws.

The FBI is having even less success with its "key asset initiative," an attempt to identify the most dangerous points of vulnerability in 5,700 companies deemed essential to national security.

"What we really want to drill down to, eventually, is not the companies but the actual things themselves, the actual switches . . . that are vital to [a firm's] continued operations," Dick said. He acknowledged a rocky start: "For them to tell us where their crown jewels are is not reasonable until you've built up trust."

Michehl R. Gent, president of the North American Electric Reliability Council, said last month it will not happen. "We're not going to build such a list. . . . We have no confidence that the government can keep that a secret."

For fear of terrorist infiltration, Clarke's critical infrastructure board and Tom Ridge's homeland security office are now exploring whether private companies would consider telling the government the names of employees with access to sensitive sites.

"Obviously, the ability to check intelligence records from the terrorist standpoint would be the goal," Dick said.

There is no precedent for that. The FBI screens bank employees but has no statutory authority in other industries. Using classified intelligence databases, such as the Visa Viper list of suspected terrorists, would mean the results could not be shared with the employers. Bobby Gillham, manager of global security at oil giant Conoco Inc., said he doubts his industry will go along with that.

"You have Privacy Act concerns," he said in an interview. "And just to get feedback that there's nothing here, or there's something here but we can't share it with you, doesn't do us a lot of good. Most of our companies would not [remove an employee] in a frivolous way, on a wink."

Exasperated by companies seeking proof that they are targets, Clarke has stopped talking about threats at all.

"It doesn't matter whether it's al Qaeda or a nation-state or the teenage kid up the street," he said. "Who does the damage to you is far less important than the fact that damage can be done. You've got to focus on your vulnerability . . . and not wait for the FBI to tell you that al Qaeda has you in its sights."

Staff researcher Robert Thomason contributed to this report.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company
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Background: Strategic War . . . in Cyberspace
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4481.htm

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Blair knew: Iraq no threat:
One of the prime minister's closest advisers issued a private warning that it would be wrong for Tony Blair to claim Iraq's banned weapons programme showed Saddam Hussein presented an "imminent threat" to the west or even his Arab neighbours.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4480.htm

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The e-mails, the rewritten dossier and how No 10 made its case for war
The extent to which Downing Street sought to convince a doubting British public of the need to go to war in Iraq was exposed before the Hutton inquiry yesterday.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4479.htm

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America Kicks Back:
A people at peace with their soldiers at war Deep down, Americans do not feel this is America's war.
http://www.interventionmag.com/cms/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=474

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Saudis in Iraq ' preparing for a holy war'
Increasing numbers of Saudi Arabian Islamists are crossing the border into Iraq in preparation for a jihad, or holy war, against US and UK forces, security and Islamist sources have warned.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4477.htm

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Another US soldier killed in Iraq
http://www.thecouriermail.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,6999255^1702,00.html

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Taleban rebel storm Afghan security post: 3 killed:
Hours earlier, at least 22 people died in a gun battle in nearby Birmal district, six of them Afghan troops.
http://www.matamat.com/fullstory.php?gd=20&cd=2003-08-18

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12 believed dead in Iraq ammo dump blast:
Two other Iraqis were gunned down by US forces after ignoring warning shots in two separate incidents.
http://sg.news.yahoo.com/030818/1/3dhbr.html

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Captured in the name of terror :
It might make for good sound bites and keep the numbers up, but of the more than 10,000 people rounded up in the past two years in the "war on terror", a number of those arrested are anything but "hardcore al-Qaeda" members
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4474.htm

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Phoenix Gas Tight After Pipeline Shut Down:
The pipeline between Phoenix and Tucson ruptured July 30, spilling about 12,000 gallons of fuel, and the operator shut it down Aug. 8.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uslatest/story/0,1282,-3042039,00.html

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Blackout Validates Morgan Stanley, Goldman Energy Bet:
It's like a second gold rush,'' said Philip Flynn, vice president of Alaron Trading Corp., a commodities trader in Chicago. ``With the projected demand for the next 20 years, what we saw in New York last week and in California last year won't be freak occurrences but the norm.''
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000085&sid=ab9RCghYtj4w&refer=europe

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Canada: The next oil superpower?
The largest deposits of oil in the world are not in the Middle East -- or in Russia or off West Africa or in the Caspian Sea area, for that matter. They are in two Western Hemisphere countries: Venezuela and Canada.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4476.htm

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Oil Near $31 After Iraq Pipeline Blasts:
U.S. oil prices held near $31 a barrel on Monday after two explosions on Iraq's main northern crude pipeline dashed hopes that the war-torn country would reach its oil export target by year's end.
http://reuters.com/financeNewsArticle.jhtml?type=businessNews&storyID=3295862

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What Will War Cost?
At a time when President Bush's tax cuts for the wealthy have caused budget deficits that are approaching $500 billion, the prospect of spending an even greater amount to force people to conform to George W. Bush's idea of proper political and economic behavior is a daunting one.
http://www.madison.com/captimes/opinion/editorial/54847.php

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Raiders of the night find the pickings are slim:
The Americans are accompanied by a masked Iraqi interpreter, but as the house is searched, the most frequent sound barked from within is an aggressive and very American: "Shut the f--- up."
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4471.htm

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Science Without Scruples
They say one should not speak ill of the dead. And yet I propose to do precisely that about the late Dr David Kelly. The `shy, mild mannered, dignified’ and now mysteriously DEAD British scientist.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4473.htm

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Uri Avnery: Hero in War and Peace:
Sometimes a single sentence is enough to reveal a person’s mental world and intellectual profundity. Such a sentence was uttered by Shaul Mofaz, the Minister of Defense, some days ago during a visit to the Israeli troops in the Gaza Strip.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4472.htm

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Liberty can not be preserved without general knowledge among people." (August 1765) John Adams


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