] Working with experts at the Lawrence Livermore National ] Laboratory, the FBI traced trails of a broader ] reconnaissance. A forensic summary of the investigation, ] prepared in the Defense Department, said the bureau found ] "multiple casings of sites" nationwide. Routed through ] telecommunications switches in Saudi Arabia, Indonesia ] and Pakistan, the visitors studied emergency telephone ] systems, electrical generation and transmission, water ] storage and distribution, nuclear power plants and gas ] facilities. ] "We were underestimating the amount of attention [al ] Qaeda was] paying to the Internet," said Roger Cressey, ] a longtime counterterrorism official who became chief of ] staff of the President's Critical Infrastructure ] Protection Board in October. "Now we know they see it as ] a potential attack vehicle. Al Qaeda spent more time ] mapping our vulnerabilities in cyberspace than we ] previously thought. An attack is a question of when, ] not if." ] What they do know is that "Red Teams" of mock intruders ] from the Energy Department's four national laboratories ] have devised what one government document listed as ] "eight scenarios for SCADA attack on an electrical power ] grid" -- and all of them work. Eighteen such exercises ] have been conducted to date against large regional ] utilities, and Richard A. Clarke, Bush's cyber-security ] adviser, said the intruders "have always, always succeeded." Cyber-Attacks by Al Qaeda Feared (TechNews.com) |