Washington Warns of Iranian Piracy Targeting World Sectors

An FBI special agent investigates a scene in Queens, New York March 25, 2010. (Reuters)
An FBI special agent investigates a scene in Queens, New York March 25, 2010. (Reuters)
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Washington Warns of Iranian Piracy Targeting World Sectors

An FBI special agent investigates a scene in Queens, New York March 25, 2010. (Reuters)
An FBI special agent investigates a scene in Queens, New York March 25, 2010. (Reuters)

In a joint US-UK operation, US security and law enforcement agencies issued a warning of Iranian-affiliated hacking operations targeting a range of government and private organizations in multiple sectors around the world.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), and other British and US agencies were quoted by Reuters as saying that they had observed Iranian entities, known as MuddyWater, carrying out cyber-espionage targeting the defense, local government, oil and natural gas and telecommunications sectors across the globe.

An alert issued by the US Cyber Security Agency stated that it had revealed, in cooperation with the FBI, the US National Cyber Command Force, and the National Cyber Security Center in the United Kingdom, the presence of “a group of Iranian government-sponsored advanced persistent threat (APT) actors, known as MuddyWater, conducting cyber espionage and other malicious cyber operations targeting a range of government and private-sector organizations across sectors…”

The US Cyber Security Agency said that MuddyWater was a “subordinate element within the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security” and had “conducted broad cyber campaigns in support of MOIS objectives since approximately 2018.”

“MuddyWater actors are positioned both to provide stolen data and accesses to the Iranian government and to share these with other malicious cyber actors,” according to the agency.

The alert read: “MuddyWater actors are known to exploit publicly reported vulnerabilities and use open-source tools and strategies to gain access to sensitive data on victims’ systems and deploy ransomware. These actors also maintain persistence on victim networks via tactics such as side-loading dynamic link libraries (DLLs)—to trick legitimate programs into running malware…”

The US warning comes less than two weeks after the Cyber Security Agency had cautioned against a “new storm” of cyber-attacks targeting individuals and facilities.

A report by the FBI and the Cyber Security Agency of the Department of Homeland Security on Feb. 10 disclosed major plans that some hackers might carry out to target civilian facilities and individuals with the aim to cause wider damage.

However, the latest warning pointed specifically to Iran’s MuddyWater which mainly targeted Middle Eastern, European and North American countries. The group’s victims are mainly in the telecommunications and government sectors, as well as oil.

The group was previously associated with the FIN7, but MuddyWater may have been motivated by espionage.

FIN7 has been working on active financially motivated threats since 2013 and primarily targeting the retail, restaurant and hospitality sectors in the United States, often using point-of-sale malware.



India: Efforts Are on to Reconstruct Events that Caused Air India Crash

FILE PHOTO: A tail of an Air India Boeing 787 Dreamliner plane that crashed is seen stuck on a building after the incident in Ahmedabad, India, June 12, 2025. REUTERS/Amit Dave/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A tail of an Air India Boeing 787 Dreamliner plane that crashed is seen stuck on a building after the incident in Ahmedabad, India, June 12, 2025. REUTERS/Amit Dave/File Photo
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India: Efforts Are on to Reconstruct Events that Caused Air India Crash

FILE PHOTO: A tail of an Air India Boeing 787 Dreamliner plane that crashed is seen stuck on a building after the incident in Ahmedabad, India, June 12, 2025. REUTERS/Amit Dave/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A tail of an Air India Boeing 787 Dreamliner plane that crashed is seen stuck on a building after the incident in Ahmedabad, India, June 12, 2025. REUTERS/Amit Dave/File Photo

Efforts are underway to reconstruct the sequence of events leading to the Air India plane crash this month that killed 260 people, and identify contributing factors, India's civil aviation ministry said on Thursday.

The London-bound Boeing 787 Dreamliner crashed moments after takeoff from India's Ahmedabad city on June 12, killing 241 of the 242 people on board and the rest on ground in the world's worst aviation disaster in a decade.

The black boxes of the plane - the cockpit voice recorder (CVR) and flight data recorder (FDR) - were recovered in the days that followed, one from the rooftop of a building at the crash site on June 13, and the other from the debris on June 16.

They were transported to national capital Delhi on Tuesday, where a team led by India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau began extracting their data, Reuters quoted the ministry as saying in a statement.

"The Crash Protection Module (CPM) from the front black box was safely retrieved, and...the memory module was successfully accessed and its data downloaded...the analysis of CVR and FDR data is underway," it said.

The CPM is the core part of a black box that houses and protects data recorded during a crash.

India said last week that it was yet to decide where the black boxes would be analyzed. The data retrieved from them could provide critical clues into the aircraft's performance and any conversations between the pilots preceding the crash.

The air disaster has also brought renewed attention to violations of norms by airlines in the country.

India's aviation regulator said on Tuesday that multiple instances of
aircraft defects reappearing were found at the Mumbai and Delhi airports - two of India's busiest.

Reuters has reported that warnings were given by India's aviation regulator to Air India, which has come under increased scrutiny since the crash, including for permitting some aircraft to fly despite emergency equipment checks being overdue.

The airline has also been warned for violations related to pilot duty scheduling and oversight.

Air India has said it had implemented the authority's directions and was committed to ensuring adherence to safety protocols.

It also said it was accelerating verification of maintenance records and would complete the process in the coming days.