A spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin warned the United States should it retaliate for the alleged SolarWinds hack.
“The Russian state has never had anything to do with cybercrimes and cyberterrorism it is being accused of,” Peskov stated.
Peskov, in reference to the NY Times’ article, stated that “these reports are alarming” and said the cyber attack would be “nothing but international cybercrime.”
In a rare joint statement in January, the FBI, National Security Administration (NSA), the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said the SolarWinds hack was “likely Russian in origin.”
The departments said it’s “responsible for most or all of the recently discovered, ongoing cyber compromises of both government and non-governmental networks.” They added: “At this time, we believe this was, and continues to be, an intelligence-gathering effort. We are taking all necessary steps to understand the full scope of this campaign and respond accordingly.”
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and FBI Director Christopher Wray in recent days have suggested harsh punishments would be meted out against Russia.
In recent days, cybersecurity experts blamed the Chinese regime for a hack that exposed tens of thousands of servers running Microsoft’s Exchange email program to possible security breaches.
They said the Chinese regime also unleashed an indiscriminate, automated second wave of hacking that opened the way for ransomware and other cyberattacks. The second wave, which began Feb. 26, is highly uncharacteristic of Beijing’s elite cyber spies and far exceeds the norms of espionage, said Kevin Mandia of FireEye.
“You never want to see a modern nation like China that has an offense capability—that they usually control with discipline—suddenly hit potentially a hundred thousand systems,” Mandia said Tuesday in an interview with The Associated Press.