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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Guardian staff and agencies

Chinese government hackers targeted US Treasury office that administers sanctions – report

A general view of the US Department of the Treasury, in Washington, DC. Chinese government hackers reportedly targeted the US Treasury Office that administers economic sanctions.
A general view of the US Department of the Treasury, in Washington, DC. Chinese government hackers reportedly targeted the US Treasury Office that administers economic sanctions. Photograph: Sipa US/Alamy

Chinese government hackers breached the US Treasury office that administers economic sanctions, the Washington Post reported on Wednesday, identifying targets of a cyber-attack Treasury disclosed earlier this week.

The Treasury letter earlier this week said hackers compromised third-party cybersecurity service provider BeyondTrust and accessed several employee workstations and unclassified documents.

Citing unnamed US officials, the Washington Post said hackers compromised the Office of Foreign Assets Control and the Office of Financial Research and also targeted the office of US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen.

The department earlier this week disclosed in a letter to lawmakers that hackers stole unclassified documents in a “major incident.” It did not specify which users or departments were affected.

The Washington Post quoted its sources as saying that a top area of interest for the Chinese government would be Chinese entities that the US government may be considering designating for financial sanctions.

Asked about the paper’s report, Liu Pengyu, spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said the “irrational” US claim was “without any factual basis” and represented “smear attacks” against Beijing.

The statement said China “combats all forms of cyber-attacks” and did not directly address the Washington Post’s reporting on specific targets. The Treasury Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the newspaper report.

Chinese firms, individuals and entities have been a frequent target for US sanctions, which Washington has used as a key tool in its foreign policy towards Beijing.

The hack comes amid reports that Chinese state-sponsored actors also breached three of the largest US telecommunications companies earlier this month. During that breach, called Salt Typhoon, cybercriminals were able to gain access to lawmakers’ phone calls and text messages. Lawmakers across the political spectrum condemned the hack.

The United States considers China’s its biggest foreign policy challenge, and last month Yellen told Reuters that Washington would not rule out sanctions on Chinese banks as it seeks to reduce Russia’s oil revenue and access to foreign supplies to fuel its war in Ukraine.

With Reuters

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