Anonymous ID: de948d Oct. 4, 2018, 11:17 p.m. No.3343120   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3167 >>3180

‘World knows who truly violates sovereignties’: Beijing blasts Pence’s speech on ‘Chinese meddling

 

China has slammed the US Vice President’s attack on its domestic and foreign policies as a total “slander” and a “very ridiculous” attempt by Washington to shift focus from its own meddling and infringement on others’ sovereignty.

 

Mike Pence was “speaking on hearsay evidence, confusing right and wrong and creating something out of thin air,” the Foreign Ministry saidFriday, condemning the speech by the US second in command at the Hudson Institute on Thursday. “Any malicious slander on China is futile.”

 

Amid unprecedented tensions between the two nations, Pence accusedChina of trying, among other things, to influence the midterm elections to the extent that all the efforts perpetually undertaken by malicious Russian actors to obfuscate American minds and undermine US democracy “pales”in comparison. The Vice President also challenged Beijing’s vision for the Chinese people’s future, noting that Taiwan’s “embrace of democracy”shows a “better path” for the entire Asian nation.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/440374-china-pence-speech-slander/

Anonymous ID: de948d Oct. 4, 2018, 11:21 p.m. No.3343148   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3164 >>3182

US & allies hit Russia with coordinated avalanche of hacking accusations. Here are the allegations

 

Russia on Thursday faced a coordinated barrage of accusations from the United States and its NATO allies, that claimed Moscow was behind a slew of recent malicious cyber attacks around the world.

 

The accusations were levelled almost simultaneously by the US, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Canada – and included charges about alleged attacks on the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and the World Anti-Doping Agency, among others.

 

US indictments

 

The US Justice Department indicted seven Russian military intelligence figures, claiming they had targeted the Organization for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) – the watchdog agency that has been responsible for investigating the poisoning of ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in March. They also claimed the seven men were involved in leaking Olympic athletes’ drug-test data and in an attack on a Pennsylvania nuclear energy company.

 

US prosecutors say that the alleged Russian cyber attackers were targeting officials who supported a ban on Russian athletes competing in international sporting events.

 

British accusations

 

The British Foreign Office attributed six attacks to Russia, including the World Anti-Doping Agency attacks of 2017, the theft of emails from a UK television station in 2015 and the alleged hack of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) in 2016 during the US presidential election campaign.

 

They also blamed Russia for the 2017 'BadRabbit' attack which caused disruption at metro stations and an airport in Ukraine, as well as at Russian media outlets and the Russian central bank.

 

In a characteristically dramatic statement, British foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt said “the ability of people around the world to go about their daily lives free from interference, and even their ability to enjoy sport” was under threat due to Russian attacks.

 

Netherlands expels four ‘GRU agents’

 

The Netherlands got in on the action, too, announcing that it had expelled four Russian intelligence officers back in April, claiming they too had been targeting the Hague-based OPCW. The Dutch defense minister Ank Bijleveld said the agents worked for the Russian military intelligence GRU agency and that they had used diplomatic passports to enter the country, where they allegedly took pictures of the OPCW’s surroundings in The Hague and hacked into the organization’s WiFi network from a car parked outside the building.

 

Appearing at the Dutch media conference, the UK ambassador to the Netherlands Peter Wilson also alleged that Russia had targeted the UK Foreign Office and Porton Down Defense and Science Laboratory. The four men expelled by the Netherlands are included in the list of seven men the US announced indictments against.

 

Canada under threat?

 

Not wanting to feel left out, Canada also joined the chorus of accusations on Thursday, saying that their intelligence agencies agreed with assessments from the other NATO countries and that Russia had been acting “outside the bounds of appropriate behavior”.

 

The statement from Global Affairs Canada said that some of the alleged Russian attacks “have a connection with Canada” and cited a 2016 attack on the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport which had its systems compromised by a malware attack.

 

Canada said it had assessed with “high confidence” that GRU was responsible for the attack.

 

Russia has dismissed the allegations as a coordinated media attack timed to coincide with a NATO meeting on cyber-warfare. The Russian ambassador to Britain, Alexander Yakovenko, said that the accusations, together with a lack of proof, are intended to tarnish Russia's reputation.

 

“We see a well-coordinated campaign to discredit Russia. Of course, from my point of view that’s unacceptable,” he said.

 

Reacting directly to Hunt’s accusations, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said the "diabolical perfume cocktail" of new allegations must be the product of someone with a “rich imagination"