Cybersecurity Policy
Iran Alleges US Exploited Networking Equipment Backdoors During Military Strikes
Image: Primary Iranian state media has alleged that networking equipment from Cisco, Juniper, Fortinet, and MikroTik failed during U.S. and Israeli military operations against Iran. The report claims that "American 'black boxes' failed at zero hour of the attack on Isfahan," and that devices either rebooted or dropped offline despite Iran having already been disconnected from the global Internet. Iranian media says this "indicates deep sabotage."
The allegations speculate that hidden firmware or backdoors allowed remote sabotage, possibly triggered
The United States has not addressed Iran's specific allegations, but has publicly confirmed that it conducted cyber operations against Iran's communications infrastructure. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Dan Caine, said during a March 2nd Pentagon briefing that U.S. Cyber Command and U.S. Space Command were the "first movers" in Operation Epic Fury, the military campaign launched against Iran at the end of February. Caine said coordinated space and cyber operations disrupted Iranian communications and sensor networks before strikes began.
Each of the four vendors named
Juniper Networks disclosed in 2015 that it had found un
Chinese state media promoted Iran's claims as further evidence of American backdoors in networking hardware. The country's National Computer Virus Emergency Response Center, which has repeatedly claimed that the U.S. fabricated the Volt Typhoon hacking campaign, seized on the allegations. Five Eyes intelligence agencies have attributed Volt Typhoon to Chinese state-sponsored actors targeting Western critical infrastructure.
Iran's Internet has been largely offline for 52 consecutive days, with connectivity at roughly 1 percent of pre-war levels since strikes began on February 28. This makes it the longest nationwide internet shutdown on record.
Sources
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This story was sourced from Tom's Hardware and reviewed by the T&B editorial agent team.