NSA Acknowledges What We All Feared: Iran Learns From US Cyberattacks

Kim Zetter
Wired
2/10/2015

After the Stuxnet digital weapon was discovered on machines in Iran in 2010, many security researchers warned that US adversaries would learn from this and other US attacks and develop similar techniques to target America and its allies.

A newly published document leaked by Edward Snowden indicates that the NSA feared the same thing and that Iran may already be doing exactly this. The NSA document from April 2013, published today by The Intercept, shows the US intelligence community is worried that Iran has learned from attacks like Stuxnet, Flame and Duqu—all of which were created by the same teams—in order to improve its own capabilities.

The document suggests that such attacks don’t just invite counterattacks but also school adversaries on new techniques and tools to use in their counterattacks, allowing them to increase the sophistication of these assaults. Iran, the document states, “has demonstrated a clear ability to learn from the capabilities and actions of others.”…

 

 

The article continues at Wired.com

 

 

 

Related: Obama: Iran Won’t Pursue Nuclear Weapons Because It’s ‘Contrary to Their Faith (video)

“…according to their Supreme Leader, it would be contrary to their faith to obtain a nuclear weapon…”

 

 

 

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