http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/21/world/asia/hacking-us-secrets-china-pushes-for-drones.html?ref=asia&_r=0


Hacking U.S. Secrets, China Pushes for Drones
By EDWARD WONG
Published: September 20, 2013 

BEIJING — For almost two years, hackers based in Shanghai went after one 
foreign defense contractor after another, at least 20 in all. Their target, 
according to an American cybersecurity company that monitored the attacks, was 
the technology behind the United States’ clear lead in military drones. 

Enlarge This Image
 
Associated Press
A hacking operation run by a unit of the People’s Liberation Army was tracked 
to this building outside of Shanghai. 


“I believe this is the largest campaign we’ve seen that has been focused on 
drone technology,” said Darien Kindlund, manager of threat intelligence at the 
company, FireEye, based in California. “It seems to align pretty well with the 
focus of the Chinese government to build up their own drone technology 
capabilities.” 
The hacking operation, conducted by a group called “Comment Crew,” was one of 
the most recent signs of the ambitions of China’s drone development program. 
The government and military are striving to put China at the forefront of drone 
manufacturing, for their own use and for export, and have made an all-out push 
to gather domestic and international technology to support the program. 

Foreign Ministry officials have said China does not sanction hacking, and is 
itself a victim, but another American cybersecurity company has tracked members 
of Comment Crew to a building of the People’s Liberation Army outside Shanghai. 

China is now dispatching its own drones into potential combat arenas. Every 
major arms manufacturer in China has a research center devoted to drones, 
according to Chinese and foreign military analysts. Those companies have shown 
off dozens of models to potential foreign buyers at international air shows. 

Chinese officials this month sent a drone near disputed islands administered by 
Japan; debated using a weaponized drone last year to kill a criminal suspect in 
Myanmar; and sold homemade drones resembling the Predator, an American model, 
to other countries for less than a million dollars each. Meanwhile, online 
photographs reveal a stealth combat drone, the Lijian, or Stealth Sword, in a 
runway test in May. 

Military analysts say China has long tried to replicate foreign drone designs. 
Some Chinese drones appearing at recent air shows have closely resembled 
foreign ones. Ian M. Easton, a military analyst at the Project 2049 Institute 
in Virginia, said cyberespionage was one tool in an extensive effort over years 
to purchase or develop drones domestically using all available technology, 
foreign and domestic. 

Chinese engineers and officials have done reverse engineering, studied open 
source material and debriefed American drone experts who attend conferences and 
other meetings in China. “This can save them years of design work and 
mistakes,” Mr. Easton said. 

The Chinese military has not released statistics on the size of its drone 
fleet, but a Taiwan Defense Ministry report said that as of mid-2011, the 
Chinese Air Force alone had more than 280 drone units, and analysts say the 
other branches have thousands, which means China’s fleet count is second only 
to the 7,000 or so of the United States. “The military significance of China’s 
move into unmanned systems is alarming,” said a 2012 report by the Defense 
Science Board, a Pentagon advisory committee. 

China’s domestic security apparatus, whose $124 billion official budget this 
year is larger than that of the military, is also keenly interested in drones, 
which raises questions about the potential use of drones for surveillance and 
possibly even attacks inside China, including in restive areas of Xinjiang and 
Tibet. Drone technology conferences here are attended by both military and 
domestic security officials. An international conference on nonmilitary drones 
is scheduled to take place in Beijing from Sept. 25 to 28. 

A signal moment in China’s drone use came on Sept. 9, when the navy sent a 
surveillance drone near the disputed Diaoyu Islands, which Japan administers 
and calls the Senkakus. Japanese interceptor jets scrambled to confront it. 
This was the first time China had ever deployed a drone over the East China 
Sea. The Chinese Defense Ministry said “regular drills” had taken place “at 
relevant areas in the East China Sea, which conform to relevant international 
laws and practices.” 

The drone appeared to be a BZK-005, a long-range aircraft used by the Chinese 
Navy that made its public debut in 2006 at China’s air show in Zhuhai, said an 
American official. 

Mr. Easton said deploying the drone near disputed waters and islands “was very 
much a first” for China and had caught Japanese officials off guard. 

“I think this is really just the beginning of a much broader trend we’re going 
to see — for China to increase its ability to monitor the East China Sea and 
the Western Pacific, beyond the Philippines, and to increase the operational 
envelope of their strike capabilities,” he said. 

The Chinese military, with its constant focus on potential war over Taiwan and 
an eye on China’s growing territorial disputes, is at the vanguard of preparing 
drones for use in maritime situations. That is unlike the United States, which 
has used drones to hunt and kill suspected terrorists and guerrilla fighters, 
mostly in Pakistan and Afghanistan. 

American drones “are not designed to enter into contested or denied air space,” 
Mr. Easton said. “So they would be unable to fight in any conflict with China.” 

China, on the other hand, is building drones, also called unmanned aerial 
vehicles, precisely to operate in contested spaces. “It’s a very useful 
instrument for safeguarding maritime sovereignty,” said Xu Guangyu, a retired 
major general and director of the China Arms Control and Disarmament 
Association. “China will gradually step up its use of U.A.V.’s in this area.” 

Chinese strategists have discussed using drones in attack situations if war 
with the United States were to break out in the Pacific, according to the 
Project 2049 report. Citing Chinese military technical material, the report 
said the People’s Liberation Army’s “operational thinkers and scientists 
envision attacking U.S. aircraft-carrier battle groups with swarms of 
multimission U.A.V.’s in the event of conflict.” 

University research centers are at the core of China’s drone program. The 
oldest research and production center for drones is the Northwestern 
Polytechnical University in Xi’an, where design work began in 1958. The ASN 
Technology Group, linked to the school, said on its Web site that it produces 
90 percent of Chinese drones. 

At the program’s start, China reverse-engineered drones it had acquired from 
the Soviet Union in the 1950s. It also got its hands on American drones that 
crashed in Vietnam in the 1960s and in China while monitoring China’s nuclear 
weapons program. China bought 100 Harpy armed drones from Israel in the 1990s — 
its only significant purchase of foreign-made drones — and the Pentagon later 
pressured Israel not to upgrade those drones for China. 

In recent years, China has continued to acquire foreign drone technology and is 
especially focused on studying American models. “American U.A.V. technology is 
very sophisticated,” Mr. Xu said. “We can only envy their technology. Right 
now, we’re learning from them.” 

For the Obama administration and American business executives, no method of 
Chinese technology acquisition is more worrisome than cyberespionage. An 
American official confirmed that drone technology had been stolen by hackers. 

FireEye, the cybersecurity company in California, called the drone theft 
campaign Operation Beebus, traced back to a command-and-control node at 
bee.businessconsults.net. Cybersecurity experts say that general address and 
tools linked to it are associated with the Comment Crew, the Chinese hacker 
unit that Mandiant, another cybersecurity company, discussed in a report in 
February. Mandiant said the group was part of Unit 61398 of the People’s 
Liberation Army, based in Shanghai. 

Though the initial victims in Operation Beebus were large defense contractors, 
the hackers began to pick out companies that specialized in drone technology, 
said Mr. Kindlund, FireEye’s threat intelligence manager. They then alternated 
between large companies that made a wide range of military technology and 
boutique firms that focused on drones. 

In China, it is not just the military that is looking at uses for drones. In 
February, Liu Yuejin, the director of the antidrugs bureau in the Ministry of 
Public Security, which is responsible for domestic security, told Global Times, 
a state-run newspaper, that the ministry had considered using a drone armed 
with 44 pounds of explosives to kill a Burmese man in northern Myanmar 
suspected of ordering the murders of 13 Chinese sailors on the Mekong River. In 
the end, the idea was shelved because senior Chinese officials wanted the 
suspect, Naw Kham, captured alive. 

Chinese drones are increasingly appearing in the arsenals of other nations. The 
Chinese version of the Predator, the Wing Loong, or Pterodactyl, was first 
exported in 2011, according to People’s Daily. At the Paris Air Show in June, 
the president of a Chinese aeronautics company told Global Times that the drone 
could carry two laser-guided missiles and was the equal of the Predator in 
endurance and flight range, but was much cheaper. 


Patrick Zuo and Bree Feng contributed research. 

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