A representative of Bacon said the FBI indicated that China stole information relating to Bacon’s “personal banking, political strategy and political fundraising,” according to Reuters. A Chinese Embassy representative called the claim a “smear” that was part of a “groundless narrative,” In a follow-up post on social media, Bacon said, “Plain and simple, the Chinese Communist Party is a bully. I will not back down. I will always stand up for freedom and human rights around the world.”Thus, there were other victims in this cyber operation. The Communist government in China are not our friends and are very active in conducting cyber espionage. I’ll work overtime to ensure Taiwan gets every $ of the $19B in weapons backlog they’ve ordered, and more. (2/2)
— Rep. Don Bacon 🇺🇸 (@RepDonBacon) August 14, 2023
The hack Bacon reported came at the same time as other cyber intrusions, according to The Hill. China-aligned hackers cracked the email of Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns last month. Republicans on the House Oversight and Accountability Committee are probing breaches of email systems in agencies such as the State Department and the Department of Commerce.Plain and simple, the Chinese Communist Party is a bully. I will not back down. I will always stand up for freedom and human rights around the world.
— Rep. Don Bacon 🇺🇸 (@RepDonBacon) August 15, 2023
According to The Washington Post, “the breach has alarmed experts for another reason: It was unclear how the government could have prevented it while relying exclusively on Microsoft for cloud, email and authentication services.”The China-linked hack of the Biden administration victimizing Microsoft customers has spread to Congress. https://t.co/DnP8ydah9V
— The Washington Times (@WashTimes) August 15, 2023
“Microsoft has said that the hackers obtained powerful signing keys they needed to create verified customer identities that could sidestep multifactor authentication. Combined with other Microsoft failings, millions of people could have been exposed to attack,” the Post reported.
According to an alert from Microsoft, it and federal agencies have found “stealthy and targeted malicious activity focused on post-compromise credential access and network system discovery aimed at critical infrastructure organizations in the United States.” The Microsoft advisory said, “Volt Typhoon, a state-sponsored actor based in China that typically focuses on espionage and information gathering” is behind the attacks. The alert said the hacker has a long-range, deadly purpose. “Microsoft assesses with moderate confidence that this Volt Typhoon campaign is pursuing development of capabilities that could disrupt critical communications infrastructure between the United States and Asia region during future crises,” Microsoft wrote. This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.