Chinese government-backed hackers may be systematically planting cyberbombs across U.S. computer networks according to Richard Clarke in this WSJ op-ed.   In support of this argument, that China has a hand in these attacks and not just run-of-the-mill hacker/swindlers, Mr. Clarke contends:

Cyber criminals don’t hack defense contractors—they go after banks and credit cards. Despite Beijing’s public denials, this attack and many others have all the hallmarks of Chinese government operations.

Mr. Clarke continues:

There is no money to steal on the electrical grid, nor is there any intelligence value that would justify cyber espionage: The only point to penetrating the grid’s controls is to counter American military superiority by threatening to damage the underpinning of the U.S. economy. Chinese military strategists have written about how in this way a nation like China could gain an equal footing with the militarily superior United States.

The op-ed is worth a read if you’re staying current on cyber threats and the larger geopolitical situation.

Mr. Clarke was a national security official in the White House for three presidents. He is chairman of Good Harbor Consulting, a security risk management consultancy for governments and corporations. He recently authored the book, The Next Threat to National Security and What to Do About It

A few cyber links…

Panetta Voices Concern About Cyber Warfare Threat (Washington Post, 10 June 2011)

The Fog of Cyberwar: What Are the Rules of Engagement? (Scientific American, 13 June 2011)

The Online Threat.  Should We Be Worried About a Cyberwar? (The New Yorker, 1 November 2010)

Secretary Gates explains how the Pentagon’s new cyber policy would be implemented with regard to the persistent threat of cyber attacks emanating from China…

Via Foreign Policy:

China points the finger back across the Pacific…

Via ABC News:

The Chinese military accused the U.S. on Friday of launching a global “Internet war” to bring down Arab and other governments, redirecting the spotlight away from allegations of major online attacks on Western targets originating in China.

The accusations Friday by Chinese military academy scholars, and their urging of tougher policing of the Internet, followed allegations this week that computer hackers in China had compromised the personal Gmail accounts of several hundred people, including government officials, military personnel and political activists.

Google traced the origin of the attacks to the city of Jinan that is home to a military vocational school whose computers were linked to a more sophisticated assault on Google’s systems 17 months ago. China has denied responsibility for the two attacks.

Writing in the Communist Party-controlled China Youth Daily newspaper, the scholars did not mention Google’s claims, but said recent computer attacks and incidents employing the Internet to promote regime change in Arab nations appeared to have originated with the U.S. government.

“Of late, an Internet tornado has swept across the world … massively impacting and shocking the globe. Behind all this lies the shadow of America,” said the article, signed by Ye Zheng and Zhao Baoxian, identified as scholars with the Academy of Military Sciences.

“Faced with this warmup for an Internet war, every nation and military can’t be passive but is making preparations to fight the Internet war,” it said.

While nuclear war was a strategy of the industrial era, Internet war is a product of the information age, the article said. Such conflicts stand to be hugely destructive, threatening national security and the very existence of the state, it said.

…the rest of the story…

That didn’t take long…

Via Reuters:

Suspected Chinese hackers tried to steal the passwords of hundreds of Google email account holders, including those of senior U.S. government officials, Chinese activists and journalists, the Internet company said.

…the rest of the story…