Politic?

This is a blog dedicated to a personal interpretation of political news of the day. I attempt to be as knowledgeable as possible before commenting and committing my thoughts to a day's communication.

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Weaponizing Ukraine

"Planes, shore-to-vessel missiles, personnel armoured vehicles, heavy air-defence systems [these are our indispensable needs]."
"Either you help us now -- and I'm speaking about days not weeks -- or your help will come too late and many people will die."
"[I have no doubt Ukraine will receive the arms needed, but] the question is the timeline."
Ukraine's Foreign Minister Drnytro Kuleba

"To enable this transfer and ensure the continued security of Slovakia, the United States will reposition a U.S. Patriot missile system to Slovakia. Now is no time for complacency."
"As the Russian military repositions for the next phase of this war, I have directed my administration to continue to spare no effort to identify and provide to the Ukrainian military the advanced weapons capabilities it needs to defend its country."
U.S. President Joe Biden
Ukrainian soldiers unload U.S. made Stinger missiles and the other military assistance shipped from Lithuania to Boryspil Airport in Kyiv before the Russian invasion.
Ukrainian soldiers unload U.S. made Stinger missiles and the other military assistance shipped from Lithuania to Boryspil Airport in Kyiv before the Russian invasion.

Dmytro Kuleba predicted speaking after a meeting with NATO counterparts in Brussels, that the coming battle for Ukraine's eastern regions would resemble battles of the Second World War with large-scale operations, thousands of tanks and artillery pieces. And Ukraine needed whatever it could get, and more, more heavier, deadlier equipment to meet the challenge of the much larger, better equipped, (but poorly trained) Russian military. In entering a new phase, the need for military equipment to meet the Russians at their own game was paramount.

Ukraine, he pointed out, has mere weeks to receive and prepare the use of newly-received weapons, the length of time it will take Russia to reconstitute units in preparation for a major assault in the Donbas and beyond where large areas remain in Ukrainian possession. "Allies should do more and are ready to do more to provide more equipment, and they realize and recognize the urgency. This war may last for weeks, but also months and possibly also for years", commented NATO Secretary-General Jens  Stoltenberg.

The U.S., U.K. and European Union have been galvanized anew by fresh exposure of Russian war crimes against civilians in reclaimed towns surrounding Kyiv. Leading the EU to agree to ban imports of Russian coal, and discussions to ensue of potential oil and natural gas embargoes that may follow. Since economic and isolation sanctions have produced no discernible impact to date, the focus on weapons capable of advantaging Ukraine as it faces "this next phase of the conflict" is in the balance, in the words of U.K.Armed Forces Minister James Heappey.
Modernized T-72 battle tanks at the Kyiv Armored Plant before a handing-over ceremony to the Ukrainian Armed Forces in Kyiv in February 2021.
Modernized T-72 battle tanks at the Kyiv Armored Plant before a handing-over ceremony to the Ukrainian Armed Forces in Kyiv in February 2021.
 
A group of senior Ukrainian officers were hosted by Minister Heappey, demonstrating "a range of equipment and options for further military support, including defensive missile systems and protected mobility vehicles" in introducing them to Ukrainian Deputy Defence Minister Volodymyr Havrylov, heading the Ukrainian group. The initial NATO reluctance to supply large offensive weaponry to Ukraine is being relaxed. Germany offered 100 Marder tanks that have been out in rain so long months of repair would be required for them to be operational. "While Berlin has time, Kyiv doesn't", commented Foreign Minister Kuleba.

When G7 foreign ministers met, the U.K. pointed out the time was right to surrender to Ukraine whatever level of equipment it wishes to receive; the U.S. stating it was prepared to help with tanks and longer range anti-aircraft systems. The U.K.'s Starstreak anti-aircraft system is being prepared, along with 3,615 light anti-tank weapons (NLAWs) sent to Kyiv. Australia is prepared to deliver 30 of its Bushmaster armoured personnel carriers and the provision of anti-armour weapons and ammunition.

Such equipment as Switchblade armed drones, Javelin anti-tank missiles and ammunition is consumed quickly in high-intensity conflict. And some of the equipment requires months of training to operate. A matter of time that Ukraine hasn't the leisure to expend as a prelude to countering the Russian advance on the east. "Donbas will be a battle of attrition", remarked Mark Hertling, a former commander of the U.S. Army in Europe.

Members of the Ukrainian military advance near Nova Basan in the Chernihiv region earlier this month.

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Tuesday, July 20, 2021

China's Cyberwarfare Attacks

"APT 40 almost certainly consists of elements of the Hainan State Security Department's regional MSS office."
"This group's cyber activities targeted critical research in Canada's defence, ocean technologies and biopharmaceutical sectors in separate malicious cyber campaigns in 2017 and 2018."
Global Affairs Canada

"Responsible states do not indiscriminately compromise global network security nor knowingly harbour cyber criminals -- let alone sponsor or collaborate with them."
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken
marc garneau
Canadian Foreign Minister Marc Garneau, speaks during a meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, at the Harpa Concert Hall in Reykjavik, Iceland, Wednesday, May 19, 2021, on the sidelines of the Arctic Council Ministerial summit. (Saul Loeb/Pool Photo via AP)
 
Global Affairs Canada (Department of Foreign Affairs) has finally, publicly, named China's Ministry of State Security as the state actor responsible for organizing and orchestrating an extensive hack on Microsoft email software earlier in the year. Canada, its allies and their intelligence agencies have a high degree of confidence in charging the state intelligence agency of involvement in the attack. Canada also linked a regional office within the Ministry of State Security which had targeted Canada's defence, biopharmaceutical and oceanic technology sectors in a 2017 series of attacks extending into 2018.

Puzzlingly, with this knowledge and the ongoing warning by Canada's own intelligence agencies against China's cyber attacks, official Canada still made allowances for China and continued permitting Beijing to interfere with Canada's internal affairs, from harassing Chinese-Canadians to persuading Canadian universities to sign on to Chinese cultural programs financed by Beijing and buying out critical Canadian resource companies.. Leaving Canadian scientists working out of universities and official governmental scientific arms to sign contracts with and cooperate with Chinese research institutes and scientists.

Canada appears finally to have surrendered its fascination with China's vast outreach and the wealth that can be gained in free trade agreements with the trade behemoth and the urgency of Canadian corporations to invest in China including production and sharing of trade secrets for the promise of access to its vast market and the profit to be made therein. The massive hack of Microsoft email where over 400,000 servers were infiltrated, causing widespread shutdowns forced on government and corporate operations led to Canada and its allies casting aside kid gloves.

Microsoft referred to the company involved in the attack as a state-backed hacking group it referred to as Hafnium, involved in attempts to steal information from defence contractors, law firms and infectious disease experts. Canada, the U.K. European Union, Japan, Australia New Zealand and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, joined by the United States all contributed to statements blaming China's MSS agency for the worldwide-cyber attacks. 
 
The Canadian Centre for Cyber Security is urging organizations to protect businesses that use the Microsoft Exchange server because of a massive hack aimed at stealing data. CBC
 
Global Affairs Canada identified the Microsoft attack as having likely been the work of the Advanced Persistent Threat Group 40 (APT40), representing a group with direct ties to the People's Republic of China, described as a "highly sophisticated" network, able to achieve "sustained, covert access to Canadian and allied networks beyond the compromising of Microsoft exchange servers". A 2018 strategic cyber-attack by China attempted to secure data from myriads of foreign governments at which time a similar communication was aired.

The United States, in joining forces with the other nations impacted by China's hacking has committed to instituting remedial steps to counter the hostile cyber activities. Foreign Minister Dominic Raab of the United Kingdom spoke of "irresponsible cyber activity emanating from China", even as Australian Foreign Minister Marise Payne spoke of "serious concerns about malicious cyber activities by China's Ministry of State Security."

Four Chinese nationals with links to the Ministry of State Security's campaign to hack into computer systems of dozens of companies, universities and government entities in the U.S. and abroad between 2011 and 2018, were charged in the U.S. Monday, the indictment alleging the hackers targeted Ebola vaccine research among other areas. Competition with China, according to President Biden, appears one of the defining challenges of the century for the U.S.
 

Western governments said on Monday they are highly confident that hackers under the control of China’s Ministry of State Security breached the security of Microsoft Exchange, affecting 400,000 e-mail servers worldwide.   Steven Senne/The Associated Press

When the Biden administration decided to leave in place the former Trump administration's tariffs, the Chinese were taken by surprise, as well as being infuriated when the U.S. threw its support for an Australian demand on the world community through the United Nations, to have the World Health Organization conduct a deep review of how the COVID-19 pandemic began, and whether a leak from a laboratory in Wuhan might have been involved in the release of a deadly virus.

Canada's Communications Security Establishment issued over 2,500 foreign intelligence reports in 2020 to "alert and inform" officials from 28 departments and agencies of attempted cyber attacks. It was hard put to provide aid to the Government of Canada or its critical infrastructure partners no fewer than on 2,206 occasions, including 84 incidents "affecting Canada's health sector", last year. "Espionage and foreign interference activity at levels not seen since the Cold War", was identified in a separate study by CSIS, involving for the most part Chinese and Russian-backed actors.

Joe Biden and Chinese president Xi Jinping were all smiles in this file photo from when they met in 2013. President Biden now blames Chinese interests for a massive hack of the Microsoft Exchange server earlier this year. (Lintao Zhang/Reuters)

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