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'Israel tested Stuxnet virus on Dimona plant'

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'Israel tested Stuxnet virus on Dimona plant'
By JPOST.COM STAFF


01/16/2011 07:24

'Israel tested Stuxnet virus on Dimona plant'

Report: J'lem used centrifuges identical to Iran's to test computer worm; virus was authorized by Bush, Obama administrations to "put time on the clock."


Israel tested the Stuxnet virus in Dimona, according to a Sunday report by The New York Times.

Israel reportedly has centrifuges that are identical to those at the Iranian nuclear site in Natanz, which were used to test the Stuxnet computer worm.

In 2008, the Times reported, German company Siemens cooperated with the Idaho National Laboratory, allowing it to identify problems in the comany's computer controllers, which are used in Iranian nuclear plants. The laboratory is part of the American Energy Department, which is responsible for nuclear weapons in the US.

The vulnerabilities identified in 2008 were used the following year by Stuxnet.

The Times' report explained how Stuxnet operates. First, it spun Iranian nuclear centrifuges out of control. It would also secretly record the daily routine at the nuclear plant and play back the recording of a regular day to operators at the plant. This way, it would seem that the facility was operating correctly, while the centrifuges were being destroyed.


The Stuxnet virus enters computers through removable drives or through the internet. It then spreads to other computers and any drives that may be plugged into them. The virus searches for computers with Step 7, software that programs Siemens controllers. After a controller is infected, Stuxnet hides itself. After a few days, the virus speeds and slows motors in such a way that could damage them. At the same time, it sends out the false signals described above.

The worm was reportedly only partially successful, delaying Iran's progress but not destroying the nuclear sites.

According to the Times, Stuxnet was developed by the US and Israel, with help from the Germans and the British, who may not have known the part they played. Former president George W. Bush reportedly authorized the program in January 2009, and President Barack Obama, with Israel's encouragement, ordered that it be accelerated.

A Washington official told the Times that rather than allow Israel to attack Iran, the US wanted "to put time on the clock...and now, we have a bit more."
 
How exactly they know? from another "Vaanunu"?

Its not stated as out and out fact in the NYT, but this is likely the truth considering the targeted nature of the worm.

Disrupted their adversary's plans without a messy war, collateral damage, and economic jitters (well no more than was already there), well played.:coffee:
 
isn't the pakistani centrifuges also identical to Iran's ..... iran get this through A.Q. Khan network only...

what's the probability of Stuxnet virus on pakistani nuclear computer ....??
 
isn't the pakistani centrifuges also identical to Iran's ..... iran get this through A.Q. Khan network only...

what's the probability of Stuxnet virus on pakistani nuclear computer ....??

a. It's not happening as long as Pakistan is a declared US ally.

b. It's not happening if the Pakistani computers are not connected to the internet/USB device or something that can be used to infect them.
 
Affected countries:

A study of the spread of Stuxnet by Symantec showed that the main affected countries as of August 6, 2010 were:

Country Infected computers

Iran 62,867
Indonesia 13,336
India 6,552
United States 2,913
Australia 2,436
United Kingdom 1,038
Malaysia 1,013
Pakistan 993
Finland 7
Germany 5

Use your imagination :D
 
Why would they need to test it on dimona plant?? Israel being high tech can use simulation. Stuxnet purpose was to attack PLC's not centrifuges and that can be done without risking a live nuke plant..this article is rubbish!
 
Why would they need to test it on dimona plant?? Israel being high tech can use simulation. Stuxnet purpose was to attack PLC's not centrifuges and that can be done without risking a live nuke plant..this article is rubbish!
Of course you need to test it with 'live' machines and centrifuges are machines. Stuxnet does not 'attack' machines but their controllers, much like this...

Preparing for cyber war:Bernd Debusmann | Reuters
At the height of the Cold War, a Soviet oil pipeline blew up in an explosion so huge that the American military suspected a nuclear blast. A quarter of a century later, the incident serves as an object lesson in successful cyber warfare.

The pipeline blew up, with disastrous consequences for the Soviet economy, because its pumps, valves and turbines were run by software deliberately designed to malfunction. Made in the U.S. and doctored by the CIA, it passed into Soviet hands in an elaborate game of deception that left them unaware they had acquired "bugged" software.

"The pipeline software...was programmed to go haywire, after a decent interval, to reset pump speeds and valve settings to produce pressures far beyond those acceptable to pipeline joints and welts. The result was the most monumental non-nuclear explosion ever seen from space," Thomas C. Reed, a former air force secretary, wrote in his 2004 memoir.

The pipeline explosion was probably the first major salvo in what has since become known as cyber warfare. The incident has been cropping up in increasingly urgent discussions in the U.S. on how to cope with attacks on military and civilian computer networks and control systems - and how and when to strike back.
You cannot believe that the Israelis tested Stuxnet against working Dimona facilities. More likely it was tested against a group of centrifuges running inert gas in an isolated area of Dimona.
 
a. It's not happening as long as Pakistan is a declared US ally.

b. It's not happening if the Pakistani computers are not connected to the internet/USB device or something that can be used to infect them.

You are right but there is a big difference between declaration and consideration:D
and you are right our military and nuclear computers have been totally isolated and removable storage hardware was never allowed!
 
You are right but there is a big difference between declaration and consideration:D
and you are right our military and nuclear computers have been totally isolated and removable storage hardware was never allowed!

Love your Signature dude. You give me hope.:smitten:
 
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