NSA
chief warns Chinese cyber attacks could shut U.S. infrastructure
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[November 21, 2014]
By Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - China and "probably
one or two" other countries have the ability to invade and possibly shut
down computer systems of U.S. power utilities, aviation networks and
financial companies, Admiral Mike Rogers, the director of the U.S.
National Security Agency, said on Thursday.
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Testifying to the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee
on cyber threats, Rogers said digital attackers have been able to
penetrate such systems and perform "reconnaissance" missions to
determine how the networks are put together.
"What concerns us is that access, that capability, can be used by
nation-states, groups or individuals to take down that capability,"
he said.
Rogers said China was one of the countries with that capability, but
that there were others.
"There's probably one or two others," he said, declining to
elaborate in a public setting.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said the Chinese
government "forbids" cyber hacking and that it is often a victim of
such attacks that originate from the United States.
"The Chinese government resolutely cracks down on these activities.
This reality is irrefutable," Hong told reporters at a regular press
briefing on Friday.
Rogers testified two days after a bill to overhaul the NSA's bulk
collection of telephone records failed in the Senate. Privacy
advocates will probably now have to start over to pass a law to
reform U.S. surveillance rules.
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He said at the hearing that telephone companies are still providing
those records to the NSA, but under stricter rules than when the
program was exposed in 2013 by former contractor Edward Snowden.
Rogers said the agency, anticipating passage of a new law, would
wait before moving forward with technological changes. He said the
agency, and telephone companies, would rather wait and see what
might be included in any new law.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by David Gregorio)
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