UN
aviation agency concealed serious hack: media
The Montreal-based International Civil Aviation
Organization
was the victim in November 2016 of the "most serious cyberattack in its
history," Radio-Canada said
The Montreal-based United Nations aviation agency concealed for months a hack
of its computers and allowed malware to spread throughout the airline industry,
Canada's public broadcaster reported Wednesday.
The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) had in November 2016 been
the victim of the "most serious cyberattack in its history,"
Radio-Canada said.
Internal documents obtained by the broadcaster revealed a flawed response to
the attack-believed to have been launched by a Chinese hacker group-mired in
delays, obstruction and negligence, and attempts by staff to hide their
incompetence.
American airplane maker and defense contractor Lockheed Martin was the first to
raise concerns, alerting the ICAO that its servers had been hijacked to spread
malware to government and airline computers.
In an email to the ICAO, the Lockheed Martin cyberintelligence analyst described
the attack as "a significant threat to the aviation industry." It had
the characteristics of a "watering hole attack" that targets visitors
to a website.
The UN agency, working with 192 member states and industry groups, is
responsible for setting international civil aviation standards, including for
safety and security.
The ICAO information technology team reached out to a New York-based IT agency
affiliated with the UN to analyze the attack, but then rejected its
expertise-not bothering to respond to emails for several days or transmitting
unusable data.
It would take a fortnight before an analysis revealed that the intrusion was
actually an even bigger problem.
Mail server, domain administrator and system administrator accounts were
affected, giving hackers access to the passwords of more than 2,000 ICAO users
to read, send or delete emails.
Within 30 minutes of the ICAO piracy, at least one member state's website,
Turkey, had been infected.
But the ICAO tech chief continued to downplay its seriousness.
An independent investigation in 2017 would conclude that the malicious software
used in the attack had been identified by ICAO antivirus software a year
earlier, but that the computers had still not been disinfected.
The ICAO told AFP that the Radio-Canada report contained "many erroneous
interpretations and conclusions," saying the gravity of the malware found
on its servers "has been greatly exaggerated."
"We're not aware of any serious cybersecurity ramifications for external
partners which resulted from this incident," it said.
"And as a standards-setting body, with no operational role or mandate in
aviation, the inference that our data security could pose risks to the combined
aviation and aerospace sectors, or the general public, is grossly
inaccurate."
The agency also has made "robust improvements to its cybersecurity posture
and approaches to mitigate further incidents," it said.
In Ottawa, Canadian Transportation Minister Marc Garneau called the revelations
"worrying" and vowed to discuss them with ICAO boss Fang Liu.
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