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CYBER WARS
Cyber attacks on Israel traced to Gaza: researchers
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 17, 2015


Libya air force chief says '50 killed' in strikes
Cairo (AFP) Feb 16, 2015 - Libya's air force chief said Monday that at least 50 people had been killed in air strikes by Egyptian and Libyan warplanes launched after jihadists beheaded a group of Egyptian Christians.

There was no way to independently confirm the claim made by Libyan air force chief Saqr al-Jaroushi to Egyptian television.

Jaroushi told the private CBC Extra broadcaster that Egyptian and Libyan warplanes had struck Islamic State group targets in the country including bases and weapons depots.

"Egypt has the right to defend its children and has struck in Derna... the number of those killed is at least 50," he told CBC Extra in response to a question on the number of militants killed.

Egypt's military earlier said it had launched the strikes in Libya in response to a video released by the jihadists showing the beheadings of 21 Egyptian Copts.

Jaroushi said there is a "high level of coordination" between Libyan and Egyptian forces, especially regarding intelligence.

He suggested the raids had hit areas where the Libyan military has been unable to target jihadists.

"We just want air strikes to hit some of the targets that are out of our reach," Jaroushi said.

Oil-rich Libya has slipped into chaos since Moamer Kadhafi was killed in 2011 during a NATO-backed revolt, with its elected government losing control of the capital.

Pro-government forces have been battling Islamist militias who took control of the country's biggest cities last summer after their defeat in elections.

A series of cyber attacks against Israel since mid-2013 appears to be coming from "Arab parties located in the Gaza Strip" and elsewhere, US security researchers say.

A research report by Trend Micro said the effort appears to be using "spear phishing" emails with an attachment disguised as a pornographic video.

When a user clicks on the attachment, it installs malware that allows for remote access of documents on the infected computer, the report said.

The researchers said in a report released Sunday that this highly targeted campaign dubbed "Arid Viper" is a sort of "smash-and-grab" first seen in the middle of 2013, and which uses network infrastructure located in Germany.

The security firm said those behind the scheme are using sophisticated methods with the goal of stealing sensitive data from Israeli-based organizations -- government, transport, military and academia and one organization based in Kuwait.

A similar campaign which uses some of the same techniques and infrastructure has also been hitting targets in Egypt. This less sophisticated effort has been called Operation Advtravel by Trend Micro.

The researchers said both campaigns are hosted on the same servers in Germany and can be tied back to activity from Gaza.

"On one hand, we have a sophisticated targeted attack, and on the other a less skilled attack that has all the hallmarks of beginner hackers. So why would these groups be working together?" Trend Micro said in a blog post.

"Our working theory (and subject of continuing investigation) is that there may be an overarching organization or underground community that helps support Arab hackers fight back against perceived enemies of Islam. They may do this by helping set up infrastructures, suggest targets and so on."

The report suggests there will be an increase of such "cyber militia" activity in the Arab world, where non-state actors fight against other organizations that would traditionally be considered enemies.

A separate report by the Russian security firm Kaspersky said it had uncovered "the first known Arabic group of cyber mercenaries to develop and run full-scale cyber-espionage operations."

Kaspersky said the group has targeted military and government entities, media outlets, security companies and other organizations.

Kaspersky said it identified more than 3,000 victims in 50 countries, with more than one million files stolen by the group it called "Desert Falcons."

Activity was found mainly in Egypt, Palestinian territories, Israel and Jordan, but also in Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Algeria, Lebanon, Norway, Turkey, Sweden, France, the United States and Russia.

The Falcons used emails secretly loaded with malware to infect computers for the scheme, Kaspersky said.

The Islamic State group's catalogue of killings
Cairo (AFP) Feb 16, 2015 - Here is a list of known killings by militants or movements linked to the jihadist Islamic State group, which announced Sunday it had beheaded 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians in Libya.

The IS, accused of crimes against humanity by the United Nations, has stepped up atrocities, including beheadings, abductions and crucifixions, in the regions of Iraq and Syria it controls.

2014

- August 19: IS posts a video of the decapitation of US freelance photojournalist James Foley, 40, who was seized in northern Syria in November 2012. It threatens to execute a second US journalist, Steven Sotloff, 31, in response to US strikes on jihadist positions in Iraq, which began in August.

- September 2: IS says in another propaganda video that it has beheaded Sotloff, a freelance reporter kidnapped on August 4, 2013, in Aleppo.

- September 13: IS claims to have beheaded British aid worker David Haines, 44, who was seized in March 2013 while working for a Paris-based non-governmental organisation.

- September 24: The IS-linked Jund al-Khilifa, or "Soldiers of the Caliphate," says in a video it has decapitated French tourist Herve Gourdel, 55, who was abducted in Algeria.

- October 3: An IS video says it has beheaded British aid volunteer Alan Henning, 47, in Syria, in revenge for British strikes on jihadist positions in Iraq.

- November 16: The IS claims to have killed Peter Kassig, 26, an American aid worker kidnapped in Syria, as a warning to Washington.

The same video shows the gruesome simultaneous beheadings of around 15 men described as Syrian military personnel.

2015

- January 8: The Libyan branch of IS says it has killed Tunisian journalists Sofiene Chourabi and Nadhir Ktari, missing in eastern Libya since September.

- January 24 and 31: IS videos claim the beheading of Japan's Haruna Yukawa, 42, and his friend and fellow captive, journalist Kenji Goto, 47.

- February 3: Jordanian pilot Maaz al-Kassasbeh, 26, is shown in an IS video being burned alive in a cage after being captured in December when his F-16 crashed in Syria during a mission with the US-led coalition.

- February 15: the IS posts a video showing the beheading of 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians in Libya, saying they had been killed for their faith.

In addition, on February 6, IS announced the death of American aid worker Kayla Mueller, 26, saying she had been killed in a coalition air strike in northern Syria. On February 10 her death was confirmed by her family and the White House, which denied that she was killed in a raid.

SYRIA: The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says that from June to November, 2014, IS killed nearly 1,500 people, mostly civilians.

LEBANON: the army has fought jihadists from neighbouring Syria in the east. Twenty-five soldiers and police were abducted in August 2014 by IS and Al-Nusra Front, the Syrian branch of Al-Qaeda. Four have been murdered.

IRAQ: the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in January denounced the "monstrous" contempt for human life there of IS, which has killed dozens of civilians this year.


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