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Serb supporters sock it to NATO and U.S. computers

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BRUSSELS, BELGIUM - Today's news is filled with images of downed planes, captured soldiers, and refugees in Kosovo. But there is another war being waged, one that pits pro-Serbian hackers against U.S. and NATO computers.

The same week a U.S. F-117A stealth fighter was lost over Yugoslavia, a NATO Web server here was shot down by denial-of-service attacks, which NATO sources strongly suspect came from the Serbian military, not independent hackers.

In the U.S., the Navy's Web site was hacked, reportedly by Russians who support the Serbs. Erasing the Navy's information, they left blisteringly obscene insults against the U.S.

Russian hackers - or people claiming to be Russian hackers - also struck Web sites such as one maintained by Orange Coast College, leaving the messages "Asses out of Serbia" and "Russian hackers demand to stop terrorist aggression against Yugoslavia." They also lobbed a few insults at Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky.

All week at NATO headquarters here, the network staff was countering Serbian assaults on the NATO.int Web site and the e-mail server. After a denial-of-service attack based on "ping" saturations launched from Serbia brought down the NATO server, NATO personnel took evasive action.

A ping attack is a malicious saturation of a server with messages that overwhelm the server's capacity to respond. To counter it, the NATO network crew swapped out a Sun SPARC 20 for the more powerful UltraSPARC for faster processing of the Serbian pings. And NATO switched from a 256K bit/sec access line to the European equivalent of a T-1 to keep the pings from eating up bandwidth.

"We have about 100 servers, and we're afraid all the NATO sites have been attacked," says NATO's Webmaster, Baul Magis. Though NATO's public server was knocked out, no internal part of the NATO intranet is believed to have been compromised. But NATO's mail servers are taking a beating, getting hit with more than 10,000 e-mails per day - many with dangerous computer viruses.

NATO is bombing Serbia, a Yugoslavian republic, to stop the Serbs from forcing ethnic Albanians from Kosovo. Magis said most of the e-mail NATO is getting, particularly from Serbia and Russia, expresses opposition to the airstrikes. "But we're also getting messages from Kosovars that express support for NATO," he adds.

Magis says NATO headquarters won't launch an electronic counterstrike. "We want to show we're more civilized," he says. "We believe in freedom of speech." NATO is even discussing the possibility of hosting Serbian information on the Web so the Serbs can share their views.

The attack on the U.S. Navy hit the Navy's Medical Information Management page at navy.mil, says Alan Goldstein, the Navy's director of technology integration in Bethesda, Md.

No one apparently got any farther into Navy systems, but no one there is resting. "This is going to go on for quite a while," Goldstein says. o



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NATO Web site

Serbian Ministry of Information

Serbian hackers take their war to the Internet
Nando.Net, 10/22/98.

Croats, Serbs Wage War on Internet
Reuters, 11/2/98.

Sun Tzu Art of War in Information Warfare
Hypothetical case study showing how a group of Serbian hackers could get the U.S. out of the Balkans. From the Institute for National Strategic Studies.

Electronic Civil Defense
Links to articles on online terrorism and attacks.

National Security and the Internet
Paper by Gary Chapman, director of the University of Texas' 21st Century Project.

The New Face of War
America's dependence on technology exposes our infrastructure to cyberterrorism. TechWeek, 11/2/98.


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