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Cyber Kim

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Crosswords in Pyongyang.  

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New video from Pyongyang on the occasion of the death of the Great Leader that shows the 97 pound superman Kim Jong Il in the Great Hall at the palace. In celebration, worthy but clearly undereducated hackers from the Kim regime are said to have launched crude, persistent and widespread cyber (denial of service) attacks against targets in US government and South Korea government. U.S. government sites: The White House (www.whitehouse.gov) Dept. of Homeland Security (www.dhs.gov) State Department (www.state.gov).   U.S. commercial sites: NYSE Euronext (www.nyse.com) U.S. Bancorp (www.usbank.com) Washington Post (www.washingtonpost.com).   South Korean Sites: Office of the President (www.president.go.kr) National Assembly (www.assembly.go.kr) Korea Exchange Bank (ebank.keb.co.kr).   The NYT was not attacked.   Was this an oversight?   The possibilites are endless as to how the Kimsters cooked up this list.  No POTUS favorite, Huffpo?   It may be as simple as the Kim hackers only went after sites they don't need for gaming or crosswords.

Dear Leader Melting.

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Kim (above) appears frail, numb, medicated, shrunken even more than the last occasion.  The succession struggle continues.  Perhaps the phenomenon of Iran in turmoil, Xinjiang wrecking Hu's mission to the G8 (G39) and rushing home, the failed cyber censorship for the Green Dam Youth Escort, the condemnation of the American journalists, the nuke test and ICBM firing -- perhaps all these events are coincidental.  Not a pattern.  Not dots to connect.   Perhaps.   Sunday 12 am gathering a roundtable on the Kim regime's latest provocation for the week with Evan Ramstad, Wall Street Journal, at Seoul, and Gordon Chang, author, Showdown.   Evan Ramstad reported Sunday 5 that the parts for ICMBs have been seen at two different launch sites in North Korea.  The expectation is for a launch toward Hawaii sometime this summer.  The cyber attacks were not anticipated.  The South Korean special ops (above) are practicing an intervention at sea to intercept suspect North Korean shipping with contraband.   The PR for the op means that the Kim regime is warned and threatened.  It may well respond. 

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I've just gotta say "Uh Oh" ICQ


CHINESE INTERNAL SECURITY CHIEF FLIES TO URUMQI: TRANSPARENCY CONTINUES

B.RAMAN

The situation in Urumqi, the capital of the Xinjiang Province of China, continues to be tense with sporadic acts of violence of a

minor nature as compared to what happened on the night of July 5,2009, and the next day. The violent incidents reported on July 8 were mainly in the form of small groups of angry Han Chinese trying to attack individual Uighurs.
2.In all instances, the police promptly intervened and persuaded the Han Chinese to disperse and not to take the law into their own hands. The police have mobilised the support of some members of the Han Chinese community, who are in a preponderant majority in Urumqi, to go round the Han Chinese areas and appeal to them not to take the law into their own hands. They have also been promising the Han Chinese that all Uighurs who were involved in the attacks on the Han Chinese will be prosecuted and promptly executed if found guilty of violent crimes.

3. More Army reinforcements have been moved into Urumqi and other areas of the province from Sichuan. They have undertaken a vigorous patrolling of the areas in order to help the police maintain law and order. Helicopter patrols have also been pressed into service. While violence is down, tension and nervousness continue. Many shops remained closed on July 8 and there was a rush at the local airport due to the anxiety of many Han Chinese to leave Xinjiang. All flights going out of Urumqi are packed and Han Chinese, not able to get a seat in the

flights, have been staying in hotels near the airport, hoping to get a place in subsequent flights.
4. Meng Jianzhu, State Councillor, who is the Minister for Public Security and in that capacity is the chief of China's internal intelligence and homeland security set-up, has flown into Urumqi from Beijing and has been going round the city along with officials of the local Government and party appealing for calm and assuring the Han Chinese that the laws will be applied firmly against those who indulged in violence. In an unusual move, the People's Daily of China, owned by the Chinese Communist Party, asked its readers in advance to look out for an editorial

on July 9 in which it would call for the strict application of the laws against those found guilty and for strict measures to restore social order.

5. Even after the surprise return of President Hu Jintao from Italy on the morning of July 8 after cancelling his participation in the G-8 summit, the Chinese have continued with their policy of transparency in order to let the world know about the kind of brutalities allegedly committed by the Uighurs on July 5 and 6,2009.This would probably show that the policy of transparency, which was reportedly ordered by Prime Minister Wen Jiabao in the absence of Hu in Italy, had the support of Hu.

6.The way the Chinese have handled the aftermath has been refreshingly different from the way they reacted after the Lhasa uprising of March 2008. After the Lhasa uprising, they ordered all foreign journalists and tourists in Tibet to leave and stopped permitting foreign journalists to visit Tibet for nearly three months. Now, the Chinese Foreign and Information offices in Beijing have been taking the initiative in contacting foreign journalists and requesting them to go to Urumqi to report on the situation. It has been reported that many journalists are already in Urumqi.
7. The only common factor in the way the Chinese handled the aftermath of the Lhasa uprising and are now handling the Urumqi uprising is the virulent demonisation of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan Youth Congress last year and a similar demonisation of the World Uighur Congress (WUC) and its leaders.
8. The immediate priority for the Chinese, as seen by them, is to address the Han Chinese anger over the alleged failure of the Police to protect them on July 5 and 6,2009. The next priority is to arrest and prosecute all those involved in acts of violence.

9. The ground situation in Xinjiang is qualitatively different from that in Tibet. In Tibet, the Tibetans are in a decisive majority still despite the settlement of a large number of Han Chinese. In Xinjiang, the Uighurs are not in a decisive majority. Muslims constitute about 60 per cent of the Xinjiang population, but not all of them are Uighurs. The Uighutrs constitute only 45 per cent of the Xinjiang population and the Han Chinese 40 per cent. The remaining 15 per cent are Muslims of non-Uighur origin. These non-Uighur Muslims have kept away from the protests.

10.Moreover, during the uprising in Lhasa, the Tibetans did not indulge in the kind of physical brutalities against the Han Chinese similar to the brutalities allegedly inflicted by some Uighurs on the Han Chinese. From the latest reports received from Urumqi, it would appear that the protest movement was initially started by a group of secular Uighurs, owing loyalty to the Munich-based WUC, but subsequently some of the jihadi fundamentalist elements owing loyalty to the Islamic Movement of Eastern Turkestan, allied to Al Qaeda, infiltrated into their ranks and indulged in an orgy of violence against the Han Chinese. However, the Chinese authorities continue to project the Urumqi uprising as the handiwork of ethnic separatist terrorists. They are not talking of jihadi terrorists.

11. There is more than meets the eye in the Urumqi uprising. It took place a little more than a year after the Holland-based Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation, jointly with the WUC and the USA's National Endowment for Democracy (NED), had organised a training course----the second one--- for a group of Uighurs from the diaspora. The reported theme of the training course was "the right of self-determination". Annexed is a press statement issued on this subject at that time by the UNPO. The uprising took place less than two months after the WUC held its third world assembly in Washington DC in May,2009.

12. It is not clear why Hu had to cancel his participation in the G-8 summit and fly back almost in panic to Beijing. Was it because of the Han Chinese anger or was it because of differences in the party leadership over how to handle it? (9-7-09)

( The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also associated with the Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com )

ANNEXURE

TRAINING OF UIGHURS BY NED AND UNPO ( PRESS STATEMEMENT BY UNPO)

21 April 2008

The World Uyghur Congress (WUC) together with the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO) and support of the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) organized their second leadership training seminar in two years, which opened today the 21st of April 2008. Over 50 members of the Uyghur Diaspora from around the world together with prominent academics, government representatives and

members of the civil society gathered in Berlin Germany to discuss this year’s topic “Self-Determination under International Law”.

Mr. Dolkun Isa, Secretary General of the World Uyghur Congress, opened the occasion, welcoming participants to the training seminar, manyof whom traveled some distance to attend the event, including from Australia, Canada, Kazakhstan, Norway and the United States.

President of the WUC and internationally renowned advocate of the Uyghur cause, Ms. Rebiya Kadeer, warmly greeted the audience with great energy, enthusiasm and determination. Ms. Kadeer spoke on the lack of freedom afflicting Uyghurs since the communist clamp of power in 1949, including a constant constriction of human rights by Chinese authorities. People in East Turkestan cannot imagine the amount of freedom people in the western world enjoy, explained Ms. Kadeer, and individuals in the west cannot imagine the extent of suppression people in East Turkestan are experiencing.

The international community is very familiar with the situation of Tibet, however knowledge of the situation of East Turkestan is quite limited in comparison. Nonetheless, the last two years have seen many efforts to educate the world on the poor human rights situation in East Turkestan. It is therefore essential, reminded Ms. Kadeer, to continue to educate and inform all about the Uyghur situation.

Mr. Marino Busdachin, UNPO General Secretary, further noted that survival of the Uyghur culture and identity are vital issues Uyghurs arefaced with today. Introducing the topic of self-determination, Mr. Busdachin recognized the difficulty and controversy surrounding the subject. It is important to recognize that Chinese authorities are not willing to grant full autonomy or full federal solutions to East Turkestan, he explained, however we should stay positive in the situation and focus on means of raising awareness for the Uyghur cause and on the survival of their culture. Members of the Diaspora should be weary of tendencies towards radicalization and need to stay in constant

dialogue with the people in East Turkestan so as not to become estranged by their position.
UNPO and WUC were thrilled to welcome multiple guests of honour on the opening day, including Mr. Günther Nooke, Federal Commissioner for Human Rights Policy and Humanitarian Aid at the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Dirk Pleiter of Amnesty International, Ms. Frances Eqerer, representative of Mr. Margarete Bause from the Green Party of the Bavarian Parliament, and Mr. Feruk Unsal, Member of

Parliament in Turkey.
Mr. Nooke spoke of the importance of pursuing a nonviolent path and avoiding any further escalation within minority groups in China. He called for an analysis into the roots of recent uprisings in China and reminded China that it is in their interest to review their policies towards minority groups. These actions would then necessitate a dialogue between the government and minorities – the exact path which could nonviolently reach a solution.
Furthermore, Mr. Nooke touched upon the situation of the Uyghurs currently incarcerated in Guantanamo Bay, individuals who have been found not guilty of any charges and are ready to be released immediately. The Uyhgurs cannot however return to China, as they will undoubtedly suffer severe persecution. Ironically, Mr. Nooke points out, they are largely safer in prison than they would be in China. He therefore called for civil courage in Europe and the United States to grant these individuals immigration visas. Ms. Seema Saifee, pro bono attorney for several Uyghurs at Guantanamo, confirmed this argument, underlining that they could be released tomorrow as long as a

country will admit them.
Following a lively and well-attended press conference, to which members of various media sources including Deutsche Welle TV, WDR and the Associated Press attended, participants dove right into their training material.

With the aid of moderators Mr. Ulrich Delius of the Society for Threatened Peoples and Senator Marco Perduca, newly elected Member of the Italian Parliament, participants were guided through an introductory series of lectures on the concepts of international law, avenues of self-determination and case studies of such.

Ms. Anna Batalla, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mr. Hans-Joachim Heintze, Institute of International Law of Peace and Armed Conflict, Mr. Michael Gibb, Oxford University, Mr. Pedro Pinto Leite, International Platform for Jurists for East Timor, and Mr. Mohamoud Daar, Somaliland Ambassador to the European Union provided participants with a series of insightful and informative lectures which sparked dynamic discussion from all present.

PRC has claimed the resources of Xinjiang for their own. Not much else has to be said. The expats can be offended and raise issues of human rights and indigenous propriety, but, none can effectively come against the stalwarts. The region is won and it is a crucial victory.

They will not relinquish the trillion dollar investment in development and another trillion in promotions to an ungrateful native population. In 1958, there were no Chinese in the province when the Tamir Basin was discovered. Subsequent discoveries of heavy oil and natural gas plays, as well as the Central Asian investments, prove out Xinjiang as being integral to sustained growth and security of the PRC. This is the policy from Beijing.

The military presence will only grow, bringing in more and more Chinese into the region with the mission of securing the fields and suppressing the Turkman. The door has opened and fully armed PLA will be tasked with unhinging it.

Xinjiang has become China. They have the numbers. Regardless of the degree of unrest, freedom is lost for the Uyghers in their land and forced migration is the ploy.

Having worked as a Security Specialist for a telecom provider,a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack can be thwarted by using specialized Cisco and other networking equipment. If a specific series of IP addresses (IE 12.34.56.78) are the cause, the telecom provider can block them at the country's entry points.

I'm certain all of NK's Internet circuits go through China. If these attacks originated in NK, China would have to be complicit. If NK used a zombie network around the world, China would still see the traffic directing the zombies. Considering the poverty and lack of internet equipment in NK. I tend to believe this attack was directed by China from NK. I don't think NK has enough technical people to sufficiently perform a DDoS attack

China has gotten a bad rap recently about hacking. Perhaps they are using NK as a Internet Proxy.

Wisdom

IF A MISSILE IS SHOT DOWN IN THE MIDDLE OF THE PACIFIC
AND NO ONE SEES IT, DOES IT CREATE AN EXPLOSION?

What I'm suggesting is this: Why not use our anti-missile missiles to shoot down any North Korean missile fired into the Pacific -- only don't publicize it. Just shoot it down. Since these missile shots are nothing more than public relations stunts to help North Korea sell its missile technology, shooting down a missile will accomplish three things: 1) It will stop North Korea from gaining any further knowledge from its missile launch; 2) It will be good training for our own anti-missile technology; 3) It may cause the North to lose sales, as well as face. It may even cause the North to try more missile tests, which we can also shoot down. Since a missile launch is expensive, it may also help keep North Korea bankrupt.
And what kind of explosion from the North can we expect from such an action? Well, if we have a ship in the area and scoop up the missile and anti-missile remains, the North can only guess what happened, but won't have any proof. If we shoot down additional missiles, and say nothing (yes, that's the impossible part), North Korea may be too embarrassed to say anything, either. REMEMBER THE PUEBLO. Pussyfooting around hasn't gotten us anywhere in the peace process. Maybe being a little aggressive will. It's change the North Koreans may be afraid of.

The unoffical Russian Hacker's manual says--use the simplest way to hack first and go from there.

It makes sense if you are trying to antagonize or annoy or simple stop systems dead to start simple and see what happens. DDoS should be easily blocked--it's interesting to see that some federal public sites and some commercial sites don't use the fairly easy means to stop this. (ok, maybe its not a surprise that a gigantic bureaucracy can't in the last 10 years or so figure out how to stop a DDoS).

So the question remains--who? I agree with Sapientia, if it is NK then China knows but I understood what I read in the media that it was a global set of zombies--very Russian in flavor to me. I am not saying this is the Russian State but rather just fun from hackers in Russia....with the State interested in what the results might be but not willing to do more.

In either case, China and Russia are not our cyber friends.

I like it, I like it... but, wouldn't that be a provocation and a warlike posture?

Kim Jong Il, says "three main fools of the 21st century" are those who don't use computers, those who smoke, and them who don't appreciate music. BRILLIANT!!!

"I am the object of criticism around the world. But I think that since I am being discussed, then I am on the right track." Kim Jong Il [in "Orient Express" by Konstantin Pulikovsky]


From Global Firepower:

PERSONNEL
Total Population: 23,479,088 [2008]
Population Available: 12,414,017 [2008]
Fit for Military Service: 10,280,687 [2008]
Reaching Military Age Annually: 392,016 [2008]
Active Military Personnel: 1,170,000 [2008]
Active Military Reserve: 4,700,000 [2008]
Active Paramilitary Units: 189,000 [2008]

ARMY
Total Land-Based Weapons: 16,400
Tanks: 3,500 [2006]
Armored Personnel Carriers: 2,500 [2006]
Towed Artillery: 3,500 [2006]
Self-Propelled Guns: 4,400 [2006]
Multiple Rocket Launch Systems: 2,500 [2006]
Mortars: 7,500 [2006]
Anti-Aircraft Weapons: 11,000 [2006]

NAVY
Total Navy Ships: 708
Merchant Marine Strength: 167 [2008]
Major Ports and Harbors: 12
Aircraft Carriers: 0 [2008]
Destroyers: 0 [2008]
Submarines: 97 [2008]
Frigates: 3 [2006]
Patrol & Coastal Craft: 492 [2006]
Mine Warfare Craft: 23 [2006]
Amphibious Craft: 140 [2006]

AIR FORCE
Total Aircraft: 1,778 [2006]
Helicopters: 612 [2006]
Serviceable Airports: 77 [2007]

To the gentiles out there:

Zombies: PCs (very few Macs JB) infected with virus/spyware which can remotely perform an action via remote commands from an old internet chat protocol (ICQ)

DDOS: Distributed Denial of Service attack, an army of zombies is told to attack a specific point on the Internet, typically a web site. The distributed part is hard to control, since thousands of PCs are very discretely sending a stream of packets to these web sites. Another problem is ATT could block the attacks on their backbone network, but Sprint and Verizon may not, so the traffic still gets through. The Internet is a spaghetti explosion with a million different routes from me to you.

This is not the end of the world, it happens every day. Our Internet service providers find a solution and implement it. Web sites improve their security.

NK and China should tread carefully here, they are playing with fire.

From reading the newspapers this morning, it seems that White House computers don't even have spell check.

IF THE GOVERNMENT CAN'T PROTECT ITS OWN
COMPUTERS HOW CAN IT PROTECT THE COUNTRY?

A US government official goes to China w/a computer filled w/high level, possibly top secret, information. He leaves this computer in his hotel room when he goes out and the computer is compromised. What was lost? Who can say. What was learned? Well, I learned that this official, probably an expert on China, had no idea of the threat of China. He had no real knowledge of who he was dealing with. And neither did the person who sent him. And neither did the person who hired him.

Unfortunately, we're not smart enough to be afraid. And we should be.

Sapientia, why should NK, China or even Russia tread carefully here? Every cyber attack, like every missile launch, provides information on how to do it better -- and even more valuable info is gained by the reaction to the attack. I still say that Bear Stearns and Lehman were brought down by cyber attacks -- even if the cyber attacks were backed by untraceable money. John McCain was brought down by the same cyber attacks. As bad as he and his campaign was. he might have won in a good economy.

Last Fall, conventional wisdom said (or was it a gov't investigation?) that the oil market was too complex to be manipulated. Well, we now know that that was wrong. Enron proved a few years ago that the market for natural gas could be manipulated and I wouldn't be surprised if some of the same people were involved in both. In the 19th Century, Gould cornered the gold market. Anything can be done if you think big enough.

Let's take bankrupt California, the computer minds in Silicon Valley, add a few billion dollars and see what happens. I'm hoping for a government computer that can't be hacked.
And jobs.

Mike, Government employees should know better, and they should be brought up on charges! Anyone traveling abroad should know better. Leaving any confidential data in a Hotel room should be grounds for immediate dismissal. Blaming the computer is typical laziness from a government bureaucrat.

Family works on wall street, they brought themselves down. JB has well documented how the house of cards came down.

Security is more than applying patches and AV software, it is enforcing policy and writing good rules. You wouldn't leave your wallet or passport in your Hotel room, would you? Layered security is the best approach.

The problem is security is very expensive, and always will be. Agencies and Companies would rather spend money on other things like Bonuses rather than security. I once met with a *major* retailer who would not buy even basic security, they said they were "comfortable with the risk" (their exact words) 40 million credit card numbers were stolen (including mine and my mothers). Our Credit card infrastructure is running on ancient technology, yet the banking industry refuses to impose more secure standards on the themselves, Europe did it over twenty years ago.

Sapientia -- Sorry I wasn't clear. I was writing about computer security -- both when on the internet (as in the DDOS attack in JB's article), as well as when a computer is not in use. I was suggesting that stimulus money (billions, if necessary) should be spent on all kinds of computer security -- giving jobs to Silicon Valley computer wiz kids. My thinking is that this is the one time when throwing money at a problem might actually be able to solve it. This should be a Manhattan Project style operation. It needs to be big: Guarding computers and computer infomation needs to be solved.

Sapientia, Mike - Haven't you heard? Obama is president now. There are no more threats. Those who think there are, are simply paranoid or doing (or thinking) something untoward. Honestly, I don't see how in the present climate we can deal with any external threat. Obama can't even spell the names of most countries. Might as well close down the State Department (to save on greenhouse gasses) and concentrate on domestic issues - like Michael Jackson.

I really think you should go try this free website filled with numerous crossword puzzle games :)

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