European, U.S. regulators tell banks to prepare for Russian cyberattack
threat
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[February 09, 2022] By
John O'Donnell and Huw Jones
FRANKFURT/
LONDON (Reuters) -The European
Central Bank is preparing banks for a possible Russian-sponsored cyber
attack as tensions with Ukraine mount, two people with knowledge of the
matter said, as the region braces for the financial fallout of any
conflict.
The stand-off between Russia and Ukraine
https://www.reuters.com/business/
energy/
eu-us-set-pledge-gas-cooperation-russian-tensions-rise-2022-02-07 has
rattled Europe's political and business leaders, who fear an invasion
that would inflict damage on the entire region.
Earlier this week, French President Emmanuel Macron shuttled from Moscow
to Kyiv in a bid to act as a mediator after Russia massed troops
https://www.reuters.com/world/
europe/kremlin-denies-putin-told-macron-there-will-be-no-new-manoeuvres-near-ukraine-2022-02-08
near Ukraine.
Now the European Central Bank, led by former French minister Christine
Lagarde
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/
lagarde-comments-ecb-press-conference-2022-02-03 and which has oversight
of Europe's biggest lenders, is on alert for the threat of cyber attacks
on banks launched from Russia, the people said.
While the regulator had been focused on ordinary scams that boomed
during the pandemic, the Ukraine crisis has diverted its attention to
cyber attacks launched from Russia, said one of the people, adding that
the ECB has questioned banks about their defences.
Banks were conducting cyber war games to test their ability to fend off
an attack, the person said.
The ECB, which has singled out addressing cybersecurity https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ecb-cyber-tests-idINKBN1I31H5
vulnerability as one of its priorities, declined to comment.
Its concerns are mirrored around the world.
The New York Department of Financial Services issued an alert to
financial institutions in late January, warning of retaliatory cyber
attacks should Russia invade Ukraine and trigger U.S. sanctions,
according to Thomson Reuters' Regulatory Intelligence.
HIGH ALERT
The United States, the European Union and Britain have repeatedly warned
Putin against attacking Ukraine after Russia deployed around 100,000
troops near the border with its former Soviet neighbour.
Earlier this year, multiple Ukrainian websites were hit by a cyber
strike that left a warning to "be afraid and expect the worst", as
Russia had amassed troops near Ukraine's borders.
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Military personnel with the 82nd Airborne Division load a HMMWV
aboard a C-17 transport plane for deployment to Eastern Europe amid
escalating tensions between Ukraine and Russia, at Fort Bragg, North
Carolina, U.S., February 6, 2022. REUTERS/Bryan Woolston/File Photo
Ukraine's state security service SBU said it saw signs the attack was linked to
hacker groups associated with Russian intelligence services.
Russian officials say the West is gripped by Russophobia and has no right to
lecture Moscow on how to act after it expanded the NATO military alliance
eastwards since the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union.
The Kremlin has also repeatedly denied the Russian state has anything to do with
hacking around the world and said it is ready to cooperate with the United
States and others to crack down on cyber crime.
Nonetheless, regulators in Europe are on high alert.
Britain's National Cyber Security Centre warned large organisations to bolster
their cyber security resilience amid the deepening tensions over Ukraine.
On Tuesday, Mark Branson, the head of German supervisor BaFin, told an online
conference that cyberwarfare was interconnected with geopolitics and security.
The White House
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/
white-house-official-discuss-ukraine-cyber-security-with-european-allies-2022-02-01
has also blamed Russia for the devastating ‘NotPetya’ cyber attack in 2017, when
a virus crippled parts of Ukraine’s infrastructure, taking down thousands of
computers in dozens of countries.
The vulnerability was underscored again last year, when one of the globe's
largest-yet hacking campaigns used a U.S. tech company as a springboard to
compromise a raft of U.S. government agencies, an attack the White House blamed
on Russia’s foreign intelligence services.
The attack breached software made by SolarWinds Corp, giving hackers access to
thousands of companies using its products, rippling through Europe, where
Denmark's central bank said that the country's "financial infrastructure" had
been hit.
Some, however, believe the Ukraine crisis has been blown out of proportion.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/
ukraine-looking-actions-not-words-putin-zelenskiy-says-2022-02-08 accused
Washington and media of fuelling panic.
(Writing By John O'Donnell; additional reporting by Pete Schroeder in
Washington, Tom Sims in Frankfurt and Stine Jacobsen in Copenhagen)
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