Top White House cyber aide says recent Iran hack on water system is call to tighten cybersecurity

FILE - Anne Neuberger, Deputy 春色直播 Security Advisor for Cyber and Emerging Technology, speaks during a news briefing at the White House, Monday, March 21, 2022, in Washington. Neuberger said recent attacks on American water authorities by Iranian-aligned hackers, as well as a separate spate of ransomware incidents hitting the U.S. health care system, are a call to action. Neuberger in an AP interview Friday, Dec. 8, 2023, said local and state governments as well as companies will need to tighten cybersecurity efforts as they face 鈥減ersistent and capable cyber attacks from hostile countries and criminals." (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 A top White House national security official said recent cyber attacks by Iranian hackers on U.S. water authorities 鈥 as well as a separate spate of ransomware attacks on the health care industry 鈥 should be seen as a call to action by utilities and industry to tighten cybersecurity.

Deputy national security adviser Anne Neuberger said in an interview on Friday that recent attacks on multiple American organizations by the Iranian hacker group 鈥淐yber Av3ngers" were 鈥渦nsophisticated鈥 and had 鈥渕inimal impact鈥 on operations. But the attacks, Neuberger said, offered a fresh warning that American companies and operators of critical infrastructure 鈥渁re facing persistent and capable cyber attacks from hostile countries and criminals鈥 that are not going away.

鈥淪ome pretty basic practices would have made a big difference there,鈥 said Neuberger, who serves as a top adviser to on cyber and emerging technology issues. 鈥淲e need to be locking our digital doors. There are significant criminal threats, as well as capable countries 鈥 but particularly criminal threats 鈥 that are costing our economy a lot.鈥

The hackers, who U.S. and Israeli officials said are tied to Tehran's breached multiple organizations in several states including a small municipal water authority in the western Pennsylvania town of Aliquippa. The hackers said they were specifically targeting organizations that used programmable logic controllers made by the Israeli company Unitronics, commonly used by water and water treatment utilities.

Matthew Mottes, the chairman of the Municipal Water Authority of Aliquippa, which discovered it had been hacked on Nov. 25, said that federal officials had told him the same group also breached four other utilities and an aquarium.

The Aliquippa hack prompted workers to temporarily halt pumping in a remote station that regulates water pressure for two nearby towns, leading crews to switch to manual operation.

The hacks, which authorities said began on Nov. 22, come as already fraught tensions between the U.S. and Iran have been heightened by the two-month-old . The White House said that Tehran has who have carried out and have .

Iran is the chief sponsor of both Hamas, the militant group which controls Gaza, as well as the Houthi rebels in Yemen.

The U.S. has said they have uncovered no information that Iran was directly involved in Hamas' Oct. 7 attack on Israel that triggered the massive retaliatory operation by Israeli Defense Forces in Gaza. But the Biden administration is increasingly voicing concern about Iran attempting to broaden the Israeli-Hamas conflict through proxy groups and publicly warned Tehran about the .

鈥淭hey鈥檙e the ones with their finger on the trigger,鈥 White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters earlier this week. 鈥淏ut that gun 鈥 the weapons here are being supplied by Iran. And Iran, we believe, is the ultimate party responsible for this.鈥

Neuberger declined to comment on whether the recent cyber attack by the Iranian hacker group could portend more hacks by Tehran on U.S. infrastructure and companies. Still, she said the moment underscored the need to step up cybersecurity efforts.

The Iranian 鈥淐yber Av3ngers鈥 attack came after a federal appeals court decision in October prompted the EPA to rescind a rule that would have obliged U.S public water systems to include cybersecurity testing in their regular federally mandated audits. The rollback was triggered by a federal appeals court decision in a case brought by Missouri, Arkansas and Iowa, and joined by a water utility trade group.

Neuberger said that measures spelled out in the scrapped rule to beef up cybersecurity for water systems could have "identified vulnerabilities that were targeted in recent weeks.鈥

The administration, earlier this year, a wide-ranging plan that called for bolstering protections on critical sectors and making software companies legally liable when their products don鈥檛 meet basic standards.

Neuberger also noted recent criminal ransomware attacks that have devastated health care systems, arguing those attacks spotlight the need for government and industry to take steps to tighten cyber security.

prompted the health care chain that operates 30 hospitals in six states to divert patients from some of its emergency rooms to other hospitals while postponing certain elective procedures. Ardent said it was forced to take its network offline after the Nov. 23 cyberattack.

A recent global study by the cybersecurity firm Sophos found nearly two-thirds of health care organizations were hit by ransomware attacks in the year ending in March, double the rate from two years earlier but dipping slightly from 2022.

鈥淭he president鈥檚 made it a priority. We鈥檙e pushing out actionable information. We鈥檙e pushing out advice,鈥 Neuberger said. 鈥淎nd we really need the partnership of state and local governments and of companies who are operating critical services to take and implement that advice quickly.鈥

Associated Press writers Frank Bajak in Boston and Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Pa., contributed reporting.

The 春色直播 Press. All rights reserved.

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