Archive for April 7, 2013

Strategic affairs minister: Iran must halt enrichment within weeks

April 7, 2013

Israel Hayom | Strategic affairs minister: Iran must halt enrichment within weeks.

Strategic Affairs, Intelligence and International Relations Minister Yuval Steinitz calls on world powers to place a red line before Iran • Says action should be taken within “a few weeks, a month” if Iran does not halt uranium enrichment.

Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Strategic Affairs, Intelligence and International Relations Minister Yuval Steinitz says Iran is buying time to build a nuclear weapon.

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Photo credit: Lior Mizrahi

Iran taking a page out of N. Korea’s book

April 7, 2013

Israel Hayom | Iran taking a page out of N. Korea’s book.

Over the past few days it has become clear to the world that a nation’s nuclear capabilities do not guarantee that it will have peaceful intentions. On the contrary, North Korea is using its nuclear capabilities to further escalate tensions with the U.S., and Tehran is watching these events with satisfaction.

The nuclear negotiations held in Kazakhstan, between Iran and the six world powers — the U.S., Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany — have only promoted Iran to the same status North Korea is in today — a deranged regime with nuclear capabilities. This time, the world will not be able to remain oblivious to it.

We may have become accustomed to North Korea’s belligerent rhetoric, but there isn’t one capital in the world today that is indifferent to Pyongyang’s threats. Kim Jong Un backs his statements with actions: reopening the nuclear reactor in Yongbyon, deploying ballistic missiles across his eastern border and recommending that Russia and Britain evacuate their embassies. These actions have prompted even the most serious commentators to review every possible scenario, even a nuclear attack against the U.S.

Several weeks ago, former U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta admitted that Washington does not have a clear picture of the situation in North Korea. So who does? China?

China has assumed a significant role in the unfolding crisis and may very well be the key to the North Korean riddle. It seems that Beijing — Pyongyang’s babysitter, as far as the international community is concerned — can no longer keep Kim under control. This drama is unfolding in their own backyard.

The Americans are surprised by North Korea’s ability to exercise such maneuvers freely, but at some point China is likely to grow tired of these antics. China and the U.S. do not share regional interests and China also has its own problems with Japan — the Diaoyu-Senkaku island dispute in the East China Sea — so there is a method to the North Korean madness: Pyongyang is trying to play both ends against the middle.

Beijing does not want to see the North Korean regime collapse, which may result in an influx of North Korean refugees; nor does it want to see South Korea and the U.S. become even stronger allies. It therefore has to assume some responsibility in this crisis. Pyongyang may be cut off from the rest of the world, but it is not oblivious to it. Its nuclear capabilities have given it the ability to intimidate the world, and it is trying to capitalize on the differences between the regional players to get ahead.

There are many similarities between the North Korean and Iranian nuclear issues. The six powers held futile nuclear talks with North Korea as well, just as they did with Iran in Kazakhstan.

Being an optimist has its advantages. Some 20 years ago, U.S. President Bill Clinton was sure that he could begin a normalization process with North Korea. President Barack Obama would like to believe that he can normalize ties with Iran, but this game is played according to a different set of rules.

Botched mission? #OpIsrael cyberattack fails to frustrate Israeli govt – Alarabiya.net

April 7, 2013

Botched mission? #OpIsrael cyberattack fails to frustrate Israeli govt – Alarabiya.net English | Front Page.

Sunday, 7 April 2013
Posters using the name of the hacking group Anonymous had warned they would launch a massive attack on Israeli sites in a strike they called #OpIsrael starting April 7. (Courtesy: Anonymous)
Al Arabiya with Agencies –

A cyberattack campaign, dubbed #OpIsrael by hacking group “Anonymous,” appeared to have failed in its mission to target the Israeli government over the weekend.

The attack had aimed to cause serious disruption to government’s online operations by shutting down key sites.

But the hackers had mostly failed to do so, said Yitzhak Ben Yisrael, of the government’s National Cyber Bureau

“So far it is as was expected, there is hardly any real damage,” Ben Yisrael said. “Anonymous doesn’t have the skills to damage the country’s vital infrastructure. And if that was its intention, then it wouldn’t have announced the attack of time. It wants to create noise in the media about issues that are close to its heart,” he said, as quoted by the Associated Press news agency.

Posters using the name of the hacking group Anonymous had warned they would launch a massive attack on Israeli sites in a strike they called #OpIsrael starting April 7.

Last week,  a leading hacker going by the handle of “Anon Ghost” said that “the hacking teams have decided to unite against Israel as one entity…Israel should be getting prepared to be erased from the Internet,” according to Israeli media reports.

Israel’s Bureau of Statistics was down on Sunday morning but it was unclear if it was hacked. Media said the sites of the Defense and Education Ministry as well as banks had come under attack the night before but they were mostly repelled.

Israeli sites reported brief cyberattacks on the stock market website and the Finance Ministry website Saturday night. But the two institutions denied the reports.

Israeli media said small business had been targeted. Some homepage messages were replaced with anti-Israel slogans, media said. In retaliation, Israeli activists hacked sites of radical Islamist groups and splashed them with pro-Israel messages, media said.

Hackers have tried before to topple Israeli sites.

In January last year, a hacker network that claimed to be based in Saudi Arabia paralyzed the websites of Israel’s stock exchange and national airline and claimed to have published details of thousands of Israeli credit cards.

A concerted effort to cripple Israeli websites during November fighting in Gaza failed to cause serious disruption. Israel said at the time that protesters barraged Israel with more than 60 million hacking attempt.

Gaza rocket hits south of Israel; none hurt

April 7, 2013

Gaza rocket hits south of Israel; none hurt | JPost | Israel News.

Kassam rocket falls in an open area in the South as Israel begins its annual Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony.

Gaza escalation

Gaza escalation Photo: Nikola Solic / Reuters

 

A Kassam rocket fired from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel on Sunday landed in an open area of the Sha’ar Hanegev Regional Council.

No injuries or damage were reported in the attack.

Security forces were searching the area for the remains of the rocket.

The attack came on the heels of a rise in attacks in the South which was marked by two straight days of rocket fire last week, which lead to an Israeli strike at targets in the Gaza Strip. It was Israel’s first retaliation since a truce was implemented following an eight-day flare up last November that nearly lead to an Israeli ground invasion.

Reports of the rocket on sunday were received at the same time that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was delivering a Holocaust Remembrance Day speech at Yad Vashem.

The increase in attacks has raised tension in the south, as residents geared themselves for possibly another round of violence from the Gaza Strip.

As cyber-war begins, Israeli hackers hit back

April 7, 2013

As cyber-war begins, Israeli hackers hit back | The Times of Israel.

Anti-Israel groups start predicted hacking operation, with little initial major success. An Israeli ‘strike force’ responds with pro-Israel content on a resonant domain name

April 7, 2013, 1:37 am
Screenshot of a Turkish site hacked by Israeli Elite Strike Force (Photo credit: Screenshot)

Screenshot of a Turkish site hacked by Israeli Elite Strike Force

Anti-Israel hackers stepped up their attempts to pull down Israeli sites over the weekend, with numerous attempted denial of service (DDoS) attacks against Israeli government sites. Hacker sites listed numerous websites they claimed to have disabled, and several sites reported slowdowns on Saturday night, but nearly all the sites the hackers claimed to have taken down were operating normally.

Among the sites that appeared to be down due to attacks were those of Israel’s Education Ministry and Central Bureau of Statistics.

Meanwhile, Israeli hackers began to retaliate against the anti-Israel hack attacks, called #OpIsrael, with an operation of their own against sites in countries associated with the anti-Israel groups. A group called the Israeli Elite Strike Force over the weekend disabled dozens of sites in Pakistan, Iran, Syria, and several north African countries – and even acquired a domain name associated with the OpIsrael attack — opisrael.com. Instead of listing the sites anti-Israel hackers have defaced, that site features educational facts about Israel and the Jewish people, and a warning to anti-Israel groups that Israeli hackers were ready to fight fire with fire.

opsirael.com on Saturday night

opsirael.com on Saturday night

Israeli Elite Strike Force seems to have been organized quickly in the past few days, in response to the threat by anti-Israel hackers to “erase Israel from the Internet” on April 7. The hackers released a list of some 1,300 Israeli sites that they planned to strike, claiming to have begun their attacks already on Saturday. But a check of most of the sites that the hackers claimed to have disabled – sites belonging to the Bank of Israel, the Tax Authority, the Central Bureau of Statistics, and other government agencies – showed they were operating normally. Several sites were hacked by groups associated with OpIsrael, but most of those were privately owned sites.

The hackers claimed to be identified with Anonymous, but Dr. Tal Pavel of MiddleEasterNet said that the group behind OpIsrael was most likely an ad-hoc assembly of Arab hacktivists calling themselves “Dangerous Hackers.” The group was not necessarily associated with international hacking group Anonymous, Pavel said, and on Saturday, individuals claiming to be members of Anonymous posted on the forum site 4Chan that they were not associated with OpIsrael. However, another alleged Anonymous site, possibly located in Sweden, on Saturday night claimed that Anonymous hackers were involved in the anti-Israel cyber attack.

A Twitter feed, ostensibly by Anonymous hackers, claimed it had stolen passwords and information from Israeli sites, including the Facebook account login data for Israeli government officials. However, Pavel said, such claims could not be trusted, because hacker groups often recycled old information from previously leaked databases, claiming it was fresh, in order to score a public relations victory. In several instances in recent days, said Pavel, he discovered that names and passwords hackers claimed to have stolen from Israeli servers last week were several years old.

Meanwhile, Israeli Elite Strike Force worked on Saturday night to pull down more sites. The group started attacking sites in Pakistan Friday but took off for Shabbat.

“We wish all our JEWISH brothers a Shabbat Shalom,” the group said in its Twitter feed. “This was just a little taste before the day of rest. Hell’s Fire To Come.”

Israeli cyber activists attack anti-Israel hackers

April 7, 2013

Israeli cyber activists attack anti-Israel hackers | JPost | Israel News.

Israeli hackers break into website coordinating an online attack on Israeli websites, target Pakistani websites.

Hacking [illustrative]

Hacking [illustrative] Photo: REUTERS/Thomas Peter

Israeli hackers responding to a campaign to launch cyber-attacks on the country’s websites and Facebook accounts responded by breaking into the server hosting a major anti-Israeli hacking nerve center.

The website, OpIsrael.com, which was run by the Anonghost hacking group to help coordinate an online attack on Israel, was taken over by an Israeli hacker calling himself EhIsR. Under the heading “A few forgotten facts,” the hacker posted content such as “Israel became a nation in 1312 BCE, 2,000 years before the rise of Islam.”

A video interview of Wafa Sultan, a Syrian critic of Islam, was also posted. Earlier, hackers operating under the name of “Israeli Elite” broke into websites in Pakistan and installed images of IDF soldiers and the Israeli flag.

On the other side of the cyber-divide, anti-Israel hackers claimed to have broken into hundreds of Israeli Facebook accounts, and updated their Twitter account with a list of Israeli websites they said have been hacked.

Roni Becher, who heads the cyber-attack division of the Avnet information security company said, “At this stage, we are mainly seeing a buildup of tension and power struggles between Israeli hackers and hackers from various groups who have joined Anonymous. Anonymous hackers are updating lists of websites they intend to attack.”

“In general, it is apparent that many organizations are making efforts to stop the attack, or at least to minimize damages,” he added.

Meanwhile, a list began circulating the internet Saturday of official Israeli websites that are currently either already under attack by the anti-Israel group, or sites they plan to bring down as part of their OpIsrael internet operation. The list includes the official website of the Prime Minister’s Office, the Israeli Defense Forces website, and more. Already under siege by the group is the official site of the Ministry of Education which came under attack early Sunday.

The Anonymous group’s took to their official OpIsrael Twitter account to send a personal message to members of Israel’s government:

“To the government of Israel: Welcome to the Hackintifada #FreePalestine.”

These statements follow an ongoing threat from Internet hackers belonging to the Anonymous group to launch a massive cyber-attack on Israel Sunday, which is Holocaust Memorial Day.

Nir Gaist, chief technology officer and founder of the Nyotron computer security firm, told The Jerusalem Post last week that the attack is not a national security issue, but called on home users to increase awareness, change passwords and not open strange or suspicious emails.

To avoid Facebook viruses, users should be on the lookout for strange messages on the social networking site, or avoid going on it altogether for the next day or two.

Iran taking lessons from Turkey in combating Israel

April 7, 2013

Iran taking lessons from Turkey in combating Israel | JPost | Israel News.

Kerry arrives in an Ankara eager for role in Mideast diplomatic process; Iranian ambassador says Turkey’s constant resistance proves “we can take what we want to take from Israel.”

US Secretary of State John Kerry, February 8, 2013.

US Secretary of State John Kerry, February 8, 2013. Photo: REUTERS/Jason Reed

When apologizing last month for operational errors that might have led to the loss of life on the Mavi Marmara flotilla, Israel realized this would be perceived by some in the region as weakness, but decided a wider array of factors had to be weighed in, a government source said Saturday.

The source was responding to a comment carried by the Turkish Anadolu news agency on Saturday by Alireza Bikedeli, Iran’s ambassador to Ankara, saying that “in the past three years, Turkey, with its constant resistance, showed us we can take what we want to take from Israel.” The source said that in government meetings over the last few years dealing with whether to apologize to Turkey for the May 2010 incident, the question of how an apology would be perceived in the region was always taken into consideration.

But, the official said, there was “a wide array” of other factors to think about as well.

“If the decision leads to a thawing of relations with Turkey, then the Iranians won’t be happy,” the official added.

Meanwhile, US Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in Turkey Saturday night on the first stop of a six-country tour that will take him to Jerusalem and Ramallah on Sunday through Tuesday.

The Turkish media said that the visit to Istanbul, Kerry’s second visit to Turkey in two months, is coming amid expectations he will offer Turkey a role in the Middle East diplomatic process.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said at a press briefing last week that Kerry would meet Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and discuss the “complex issues surrounding Middle East peace.”

In the past, she said, they have discussed Fatah-Hamas reconciliation, “and our insistence that Quartet principles need to be abided by if this is going to serve the cause of peace.”

While not directly referring to Erdogan’s announced intention to visit the Gaza Strip this month, Nuland said that in the past the US has urged senior Turkish officials that any contact with Hamas be “in service to the greater issue of stability and peace, and that the fundamental underlying tenets of the Quartet principles be reiterated as the necessary precondition.” The Quartet principles are that Hamas recognize Israel, forswear terrorism and accept previous Israeli-Palestinian agreements.

The prospect of Erdogan indeed going ahead with a trip to Gaza, which he has threatened to do a number of times in the past, seemed to fade somewhat with the announcement that he will be meeting US President Barack Obama in the White House on May 16. The US has in the past urged Erdogan to refrain from making that trip, arguing it would undercut Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and strengthen Hamas.

Asked whether Turkey could play a role in the Israeli-Palestinian diplomatic process, something Ankara has expressed an interest in doing, Nuland said Turkey certainly “has significant influence with the Palestinians. It has the ability to encourage Palestinians of all stripes to accept Quartet principles and move forward on that basis.”

One Israeli official said that Turkey is one of any number of international actors – the EU, the French, British, Russians and the UN – which would like to have a larger role in the diplomatic process. “We are ready for countries to play a positive role in the peace process, the official said, adding that to do so these countries “have to have the confidence of both sides.”