- A major data breach has occurred at the British Ministry of Defence (MoD), resulting in the unauthorized access and theft of personal information belonging to military personnel. Guardian (LR: 2 CP: 5)
- The MoD's third-party payroll system, which houses the bank account details and identities of both former and current armed service personnel, was the target of the hack. The department reportedly acted quickly and disconnected the contractor-run external network. Independent
- The identity of the breach's perpetrator is unknown. Previously, the UK government had accused both China and Russia of harmful cyber activity. BBC News
- Defense Secretary Grant Shapps is scheduled to provide a briefing to Parliament on Tuesday, where he is expected to present a comprehensive plan aimed at protecting service members' data from cyberattacks. He is reportedly not likely to hold anyone accountable for the attack. UPI
- In reaction to the UK claims, Lin Jian, a spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry, stated that Beijing opposes all types of cyberattacks. This was in response to speculation by some British officials about potential PRC involvement. Global Times
- As reported by the BBC, assailants managed to obtain unauthorized access to several years worth of data about both current and past Royal Air Force, Army, and Royal Navy personnel. BBC News
Anti-China narrative:
- China's cyberwarfare against the UK must be viewed as a hostile action and should be treated as such. Beijing has clearly demonstrated that it presents a fundamental risk to the UK, and this recent attack must result in a drastic policy shift. This reckless cyber behavior is utterly unacceptable.
UPI
Pro-China narrative:
- This is a deliberate and coordinated effort to tarnish China's reputation from beginning to end. The PRC was not involved in the hacking of the UK Ministry of Defense, and Beijing strongly rejects any unfounded allegations of cyberattacks driven by political motivations. This disinformation by the UK is unacceptable.
GLOBAL TIMES
Nerd narrative:
- There is a 44% chance China will carry out a cyberattack on Taiwan's electricity infrastructure before 2030, according to the Metaculus prediction community.
METACULUS (LR: 3 CP: 3)