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China cybervictim claims a red herring, analysts say

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China’s full-throated denials of hacking and counter-accusations of its own do nothing to allay growing concern over large-scale cyberspying alleged in a bombshell report this week, Western analysts said.

Chinese officials and state-run media have lashed out after a report by a US firm laid out in unprecedented detail what Western officials and experts have long claimed: that China’s army runs an aggressive hacking operation targeting US firms.

But James Lewis, a senior fellow based in Washington with the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), said: “No country breaks into tears and confesses when accused of espionage, so the denials can be dismissed.

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“Many countries besides the US have concluded that China is the leading bad actor in cyberspace and China’s espionage is on track to become a major international problem,” he added.

“Saying ‘we’re victims, too’ won’t deflect this.”

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The report from consultancy Mandiant alleged that hacking group “APT1” had stolen data from at least 141 organisations across 20 industries and was part of a Chinese military unit which investigators traced to an office block in Shanghai.

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