The FBI released FBI Director Christopher Wray’s prepared remarks regarding the indictment of Chinese hackers:
Thank you, Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein.
As evidenced by this investigation, the threats we face have never been more pervasive or more potentially damaging to our national security. And no country poses a broader, more severe, and long-term threat to our nation’s economy and cyber infrastructure than China.
As evidenced by this investigation, the threats we face have never been more pervasive or more potentially damaging to our national security. And no country poses a broader, more severe, and long-term threat to our nation’s economy and cyber infrastructure than China.
China’s goal, simply
put, is to replace the U.S. as the world’s leading superpower—and they’re
breaking the law to get there. They’re using an expanding set of
non-traditional and illegal methods. And Chinese state-sponsored actors are the
most active perpetrators of economic espionage against us.
In short, they seek to
strengthen themselves and weaken the United States. And while we welcome fair
competition, we cannot and will not tolerate illegal hacking, stealing, and
cheating.
Now, we’re not talking
about the Chinese people as a whole. We’re focused on state-sponsored actors
engaged in illegal behavior. These aren’t just Chinese officials, employed by
the Chinese government. They can be hackers, businessmen, researchers, or front
companies acting on behalf of state actors. And often they’re recruiting or
co-opting employees of American companies—people who are trusted insiders.
As noted, the actors
named in this indictment were members of a hacking group operating in China
that is associated with the Chinese Ministry of State Security—a group known as
APT 10. The members of APT 10 conducted major computer intrusion campaigns,
targeting U.S. government agencies and companies both in the U.S. and around
the world, and stealing hundreds of gigabytes of intellectual property and
confidential business information.
FBI
Director Christopher Wray speaks at a December 20, 2018 press conference at the
Department of Justice announcing charges against Zhu Hua and Zhang Shilong,
both Chinese nationals and members of the APT 10 hacking group, as Deputy
Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein looks on.
The list of victim
companies reads like a “Who’s Who” of the global economy—from biotechnology to
agriculture to health care, and from oil and gas exploration to NASA.
Healthy competition is
good for the global economy. Criminal conduct is not. Rampant theft is not.
Cheating is not.
There’s no light on
this issue between the United States and our law-abiding international
partners. We’re all standing shoulder-to-shoulder to condemn this conduct.
The scope of this
investigation was broad, as you might imagine, including our FBI field offices
in New Orleans, New York, Sacramento, San Antonio, and Houston.
And we’re incredibly
grateful not only to our DOJ colleagues, but to our partners at the Naval
Criminal Investigative Service, the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, and
the Department of Homeland Security for their work. We also appreciate our
partners in the Department of Defense’s Computer Forensic Laboratory, who
worked with us as we analyzed hundreds of malware samples. With this malware,
FBI and NCIS investigators found key links between major victims and APT 10’s
“command and control” infrastructure.
After identifying
additional victims here in the United States and around the world, the FBI’s
Cyber Action Team—our elite rapid deployment unit—and our cyber counterparts at
DHS deployed to multiple locations to provide technical support and
investigative assistance. And we worked with our counterparts in the NCIS to
investigate APT 10’s theft of personally identifiable information from more
than 100,000 U.S. Naval service members.
We’re deeply concerned
about American innovation ending up in the wrong hands, including by
nation-states like China, intent on stealing the fruits of our research, our
economic investment, our development, and our hard work for their own gain.
This is conduct that
hurts American businesses, American jobs, and American consumers. The Chinese
government’s not pulling any punches. They want what we have so they can get
the upper hand on us. And they’re highly strategic in their approach—they’re
playing the long game.
But let me make it
perfectly clear: No country should be able to flout the rule of law So we’re
going to keep tackling this illegal behavior with everything we’ve got—every
investigative technique, every piece of intelligence, and every partnership,
from our federal, state, local, and international partners, to our private
sector, community, and academic partners.
And we’re going to keep
calling out this state-sponsored behavior for what it is—illegal, unethical,
and unfair.
It’s going to take all
of us working together to protect our economic security and our way of life.
The American people expect and deserve no less.
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