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While U.S. officials talk frequently about America's vulnerability to cyber attack, they seldom discuss the country's offensive cyber weapons capability. The U.S. is thought to be the world's leader in cyber warfare, both defensive and offensive. U.S. officials and others long have feared that future wars will include cyber attacks on the industries and economies of adversaries, and the potential targets include power plants, pipelines and air traffic control systems. Cyber warfare also would likely target military control systems, including for communications, radar and advanced weaponry. Because of its advanced industrial base, the U.S. is thought to be among the countries most vulnerable to a cyber attack on its infrastructure. In a 2007 test at the Idaho National Laboratory, government hackers were able to break into the control system running a large diesel generator, causing it to self-destruct. A video of the test, called Aurora, still posted on YouTube, shows parts flying off the generator as it shakes, shudders and finally halts in a cloud of smoke. James Lewis, a former State Department official now with the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, said in an interview that the Aurora test ushered in a new era of electronic warfare. Before the test, the notion of cyber warfare "was mainly smoke and mirrors,"
he said. "But the Aurora tests showed that, you know what? We have a new kind of weapon." Homeland Security officials said they have not conducted such a test on that scale since. But they demonstrated Thursday how a hacker could tunnel under firewalls in computer systems to take command of industrial processes. "All systems deployed have vulnerabilities," said Edwards, the control systems security chief. Schaffer said that not all attempts to take over control systems are reported to the department's security program, but he said they typically hear of them at some point through other channels.
[Associated
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