January 5, 2025

German foreign minister says Russian cyber attacks will have consequences

Foreign Affairs Minister Annalena Baerbock (90 Alliance/Green Party) looks at a screen showing the cyber exercise at the Australian Cyber ​​Cooperation Center.

Sina Schulte | Image Alliance | Getty Images

German Foreign Minister Annalena Berbock said on Friday that Russia would face the consequences of a cyberattack allegedly carried out by a group with links to Russian military intelligence.

Germany said Russian hackers shut down several German websites in early 2023 following Germany’s decision to supply tanks to Ukraine.

“We can now clearly attribute last year’s attacks to the Russian group APT28, which is controlled by Russia’s military intelligence service GRU,” Bellbok said at a press conference in Australia, according to Reuters.

Belbock added that this meant Russian state hackers had attacked Germany in cyberspace, which was “completely unacceptable and will not go without consequences.”

This is not the only time Germany has faced cyberattacks from Russia. Google’s online unit Mandiant said earlier this year it had detected a phishing campaign by Russian hackers targeting a German political party.

Several other countries and companies have also claimed that Russian hackers have targeted them since the war began.

Late last year, Britain’s National Cyber ​​Security Center said British politicians, civil servants and journalists had been targeted by hackers by a group possibly linked to Moscow’s FSB spy agency, which aims to undermine British democracy. Microsoft said in March that it was facing months of attempts by Russian hackers to gain access to its internal systems and source code repositories.

——Sophie Kidlin

Russia destroyed six Ukrainian drones overnight, the Russian Defense Ministry said

Russia’s Defense Ministry said on Friday it destroyed six drones from Ukraine overnight, according to Google Translate postal Published by the Ministry on Telegram.

Five drones were destroyed over the Belgorod region near the Russian-Ukrainian border, and one drone was destroyed over the Crimean peninsula on the Black Sea currently occupied by Russia.

CNBC could not independently verify developments on the ground.

——Sophie Kidlin

Ukrainian President Zelensky says Britain’s promised weapons are needed as soon as possible

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Friday he met with British Foreign Secretary David Cameron to discuss the situation on the front lines and British support for Ukraine.

“It is important that the weapons included in the support package announced by the UK last week arrive as soon as possible. This starts with armored vehicles, ammunition and various types of missiles,” Zelensky said in a statement. postal on social media platform X.

The British Foreign Office said in a statement that Cameron visited Ukraine on Thursday statementIt added that the visit comes after the British government pledged 3 billion pounds ($3.7 billion) a year to support Ukrainian forces.

British Foreign Secretary David Cameron walks past destroyed Russian military vehicles on display in St. Michael’s Square during the Russian attack on Ukraine, May 2, 2024, in Kiev, Ukraine.

Thomas Peter Pool | Getty Images News | Getty Images

The British Ministry of Defense said that the UK will provide “precision guided bombs, anti-aircraft missiles and equipment” to 100 mobile air defense teams.

Cameron told Reuters late on Thursday that the support would continue “as long as necessary,” the news agency reported. He added that Ukraine has the right to use weapons donated by Britain to attack targets in Russia.

——Sophie Kidlin

Top US spy says war ‘unlikely to end anytime soon’

Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines testifies before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Capitol Hill on May 2, 2024 in Washington, DC.

Win McNamee | Getty Images News | Getty Images

The top U.S. intelligence official said on Thursday that the war in Ukraine was “unlikely to end anytime soon” as Russia stepped up efforts to weaken Kiev’s defenses, Reuters reported.

Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee that Moscow is increasingly attacking Ukraine’s infrastructure to limit its ability to transport weapons and troops while also hampering its defense production.

Haines reportedly said: “Putin’s increasingly aggressive tactics against Ukraine, such as attacks on Ukraine’s power infrastructure, are designed to let Ukraine know that continuing the fight will only increase the damage to Ukraine and will not provide visibility. A seemingly reasonable path to victory.

“These aggressive tactics are likely to continue and the war is unlikely to end anytime soon,” she added.

— Karen Gilchrist

Zelensky says thousands of bombs, drones and missiles hit Ukraine in April

President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Thursday that Russian forces attacked Ukraine in April with thousands of guided bombs and hundreds of missiles and drones.

In April this year alone, Russian terrorists used more than 300 missiles of various types, nearly 300 “Shahid” drones, and more than 3,200 guided aerial bombs against Ukraine. said on social media platform X.

He said: “From the Sumy region to the Odessa region, the Dnipropetrovsk region, the Kharkiv region, the Donetsk region, Nikolaev and Kherson, our cities and communities They are all suffering from this deliberate and evil terrorist attack.

Firefighters work among the rubble of severely damaged buildings after Russian missiles struck Chernihiv, Ukraine, on April 17, 2024, with some buildings collapsing.

Vyacheslav Ratinsky | Anadolu | Getty Images

“Unfortunately, these attacks claimed many lives. Only through strength can we stop this terror. The strength of our people, the strength of world unity, the strength of pressure on Russia, the provision of air defense systems to Ukraine It’s the strength of our soldiers on the front lines,” he said.

CNBC was unable to verify the data used in Zelensky’s post. Ukraine frequently describes Russia as a terrorist state and accuses it of war crimes. Russia has leveled similar criticisms of Ukraine, saying it did not intentionally target civilians or civilian infrastructure.

— Holly Elliot

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