Russische hack van DNC en Podesta’s e-mail: ‘het bewijs’ daarvoor zakt als een soufflé in elkaar

Het was al lang duidelijk dat de bewering voor het Russische hacken van het DNC (Democratic National Committee) en het e-mail account van Podesta was gefundeerd op los zand en vooral was gebaseerd op de wil Rusland aan te wijzen als de grote boosdoener voor het verlies van de Democratische Partij in de VS presidentsverkiezingen, november vorig jaar.

Zeer tegen de zin van de VS, heeft Rusland zich internationaal (‘uiteraard’ niet in het westen) een positie verworven, die als betrouwbaar wordt gezien, dit i.t.t. de VS, als gevolg van VS inmenging in diverse buitenlanden en de grootscheepse terreur o.a. middels illegale oorlogen, die dit ‘land’ o.a. in het Midden-Oosten en Afrika begon.

Anti-Media bracht afgelopen zaterdag een artikel, waaruit duidelijk is op te maken, hoe de vork echt in de steel steekt, en dat (nogmaals: zoals bekend), Rusland niets met hacken of andere manipulaties van de verkiezingen te maken had!!

Het cyberbeveiligingsbedrijf dat de gegevens gaf voor de bewering dat het DNC en de mail van Podesta door de Russen zijn gehackt, Crowdstrike, heeft prutswerk geleverd en dat in één dag tijd..!!! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

Crowdstrike heeft de zaak uitgelegd in de context van ‘de Russen hebben ‘t gedaan…..’ Lullig genoeg was juist de democratische presidentskandidaat Sanders, het slachtoffer van smerige manipulaties binnen de Democratische Partij, door de top van die partij!!

ESET, een ander cyberbeveiligingsbedrijf legt in het artikel uit wat Crowdstrike (expres) fout heeft gedaan. Het malware ‘programma’ X-Agent, dat volgens Crowdstrike werd gebruikt, is NB in handen gekomen van ESET, na onderzoek van TV5 Monde, de Bundestag en het DNC…….

Nogmaals, de conclusie van het volgende artikel is geen verrassing, de inhoud is dat echter wel degelijk!!

Oordeel zelf:

The
Evidence That Russia Hacked the DNC Is Collapsing

The Evidence That Russia Hacked the DNC Is Collapsing

(ANTIWAR Op-Ed) The
allegation – now accepted as incontrovertible fact by the
“mainstream” media – that the Russian intelligence services
hacked the Democratic National Committee (and John Podesta’s
emails) in an effort to help Donald Trump get elected recently
suffered a blow from which it may not recover.

Crowdstrike
is the cybersecurity company hired by the DNC to determine who hacked
their accounts: it took them a single day to determine the identity
of the culprits – it was, 
they
said
,
two groups of hackers which they named “Fancy Bear” and “Cozy
Bear,” affiliated 
respectively with
the GRU, which is Russian military intelligence, and the FSB, the
Russian security service.

How
did they know this?

These
alleged “hacker groups” are not associated with any known
individuals in any way connected to Russian intelligence: instead,
they are identified by the tools they use, the times they do their
dirty work, the nature of the targets, and other characteristics
based on the history of past intrusions.

Yet
as Jeffrey Carr and 
other
cyberwarfare experts
 have
pointed out, this methodology is fatally flawed. “It’s important
to know that the process of attributing an attack by a cybersecurity
company has nothing to do with the scientific method,” 
writes
Carr
:

Claims
of attribution aren’t testable or repeatable because the hypothesis
is never proven right or wrong. Neither are claims of attribution
admissible in any criminal case, so those who make the claim don’t
have to abide by any rules of evidence (i.e., hearsay, relevance,
admissibility).”

Likening
attribution claims of hacking incidents by cybersecurity companies to
intelligence assessments, Carr notes that, unlike government agencies
such the CIA, these companies are never held to account for their
misses:

When
it comes to cybersecurity estimates of attribution, no one holds the
company that makes the claim accountable because there’s no way to
prove whether the assignment of attribution is true or false unless
(1) there is a criminal conviction, (2) the hacker is 
caught in
the act, or (3) a government employee 
leaked the
evidence.”

This
lack of accountability may be changing, however, because
Crowdstrike’s case for attributing the hacking of the DNC to the
Russians is falling apart at the seams like a cheap sweater.

To
begin with, Crowdstrike initially gauged its certainty as to the
identity of the hackers with “
medium
confidence
.”
However, a later development, announced in late December and touted
by the 
Washington
Post
,
boosted this to “high confidence.” The reason for this newfound
near-certainty was their discovery that “Fancy Bear” had also
infected an application used by the Ukrainian military to target
separatist artillery in the Ukrainian civil war. As
the 
Post reported:

While
CrowdStrike, which was hired by the DNC to investigate the intrusions
and whose findings are described in a new report, had always
suspected that one of the two hacker groups that struck the DNC was
the GRU*, Russia’s military intelligence agency, it had only medium
confidence.

Now,
said CrowdStrike co-founder Dmitri Alperovitch, ‘we have high
confidence’ it was a unit of the GRU. CrowdStrike had dubbed that
unit ‘Fancy Bear.’”

Crowdstrike published an
analysis that claimed a malware program supposedly unique to Fancy
Bear, X-Agent, had infected a Ukrainian targeting application and,
using GPS to geo-locate Ukrainian positions, had turned the
application against the Ukrainians, resulting in huge losses:

Between
July and August 2014, Russian-backed forces launched some of the
most-decisive attacks against Ukrainian forces, resulting in
significant loss of life, weaponry and territory.

Ukrainian
artillery forces have lost over 50% of their weapons in the two years
of conflict and over 80% of D-30 howitzers, the highest percentage of
loss of any other artillery pieces in Ukraine’s arsenal.”

Alperovitch told the
PBS News Hour that “Ukraine’s artillery men were targeted by the
same hackers, that we call Fancy Bear, that targeted DNC, but this
time they were targeting cell phones to try to understand their
location so that the Russian artillery forces can actually target
them in the open battle. It was the same variant of the same
malicious code that we had seen at the DNC.”

He told NBC
News that this proved the DNC hacker “wasn’t a 400-pound guy in
his bed,” 
as
Trump had opined
 during
the first presidential debate – it was the Russians.

The
only problem with this analysis is that is isn’t true. It turns out
that Crowdstrike’s estimate of Ukrainian losses was based on a 
blog
post
 by
a pro-Russian blogger eager to tout Ukrainian losses: the
Ukrainians 
denied it.
Furthermore, the hacking attribution was based on the hackers’ use
of a malware program called X-Agent, supposedly unique to Fancy Bear.
Since the target was the Ukrainian military, Crowdstrike extrapolated
from this that the hackers were working for the Russians.

All
somewhat plausible, except for two things: To begin with, as Jeffrey
Carr 
pointed
out
 in
December, and now others are beginning to realize, X-Agent isn’t
unique to Fancy Bear.

Citing
the findings of ESET, another cybersecurity company, he wrote:

Unlike
Crowdstrike, ESET doesn’t assign APT28/Fancy Bear/Sednit to a
Russian Intelligence Service or anyone else for a very simple reason.
Once malware is deployed, it is no longer under the control of the
hacker who deployed it or the developer who created it. It can be
reverse-engineered, copied, modified, shared and redeployed again and
again by anyone. In other words  –  malware deployed is malware
enjoyed!

In
fact, the source code for X-Agent, which was used in the DNC,
Bundestag, and TV5Monde attacks, was obtained by 
ESET as
part of their investigation!

During
our investigations, we were able to retrieve the complete Xagent
source code for the Linux operating system….”

If
ESET could do it, so can others. It is both foolish and baseless to
claim, as Crowdstrike does, that X-Agent is used solely by the
Russian government when the source code is there for anyone to find
and use at will.”

Secondly,
the estimate Crowdstrike used to verify the Ukrainian losses was
supposedly based on data from the respected International Institute
for Strategic Studies (IISS). But now IISS is disavowing
and 
debunking
their claims
:

[T]he International
Institute for Strategic Studies
 (IISS)
told [Voice of America] that CrowdStrike erroneously used IISS data
as proof of the intrusion. IISS disavowed any connection to the
CrowdStrike report. Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense also has claimed
combat losses and hacking never happened….

“’The
CrowdStrike report uses our data, but the inferences and analysis
drawn from that data belong solely to the report’s authors,” the
IISS said. “The inference they make that reductions in Ukrainian
D-30 artillery holdings between 2013 and 2016 were primarily the
result of combat losses is not a conclusion that we have ever
suggested ourselves, nor one we believe to be accurate.’

One
of the IISS researchers who produced the data said that while the
think tank had dramatically lowered its estimates of Ukrainian
artillery assets and howitzers in 2013, it did so as part of a
‘reassessment” and reallocation of units to airborne forces.’

No,
we have never attributed this reduction to combat losses,” the IISS
researcher said, explaining that most of the reallocation occurred
prior to the two-year period that CrowdStrike cites in its report.

The
vast majority of the reduction actually occurs … before
Crimea/Donbass,’ he added, referring to the 2014 Russian invasion
of Ukraine.”

The
definitive “evidence” cited by Alperovitch is now effectively
debunked: indeed, it was debunked by Carr late last year, but that
was ignored in the media’s rush to “prove” the Russians hacked
the DNC in order to further Trump’s presidential ambitions. The
exposure by the Voice of America of Crowdstrike’s falsification of
Ukrainian battlefield losses – the supposedly solid “proof” of
attributing the hack to the GRU – is the final nail in
Crowdstrike’s coffin. They didn’t bother to verify their analysis
of IISS’s data with IISS – they simply took as gospel the
allegations of a pro-Russian blogger. They didn’t contact the
Ukrainian military, either: instead, their confirmation bias dictated
that they shaped the “facts” to fit their predetermined
conclusion.

Now
why do you suppose that is? Why were they married so early – after
a single day – to the conclusion that it was the Russians who were
behind the hacking of the DNC?

Crowdstrike
founder Alperovitch is a 
Nonresident
Senior Fellow
 of
the Atlantic Council, and head honcho of its “Cyber Statecraft
Initiative” – of which his role in promoting the “Putin did it”
scenario is a Exhibit A. James Carden, 
writing in The
Nation
,
makes the trenchant point that “The connection between Alperovitch
and the Atlantic Council has gone largely unremarked upon, but it is
relevant given that the Atlantic Council – which 
is
funded in part
 by
the US State Department, NATO, the governments of Latvia and
Lithuania, the Ukrainian World Congress, and the Ukrainian oligarch
Victor Pinchuk – has been among the loudest voices calling for a
new Cold War with Russia.” Adam Johnson, 
writing on
the FAIR blog, adds to our knowledge by noting that the Council’s
budget is also supplemented by “a consortium of Western
corporations (Qualcomm, Coca-Cola, The Blackstone Group), including
weapons manufacturers (Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman)
and oil companies (ExxonMobil, Shell, Chevron, BP).”

Johnson
also notes that CrowdStrike currently has a 
$150,000
/ year, no-bid contract
 with
the FBI for “systems analysis.”

Nice
work if you can get it.

This
last little tidbit gives us some insight into what is perhaps the
most curious aspect of the Russian-hackers-campaign-for-Trump story:
the FBI’s complete dependence on

Crowdstrike’s
analysis. Amazingly, the FBI did no independent forensic work on the
DNC servers before Crowdstrike got its hot little hands on them:
indeed, 
the
DNC denied the FBI access to the servers
,
and, as far as anyone knows, the FBI 
never
examined them
.
BuzzFeed 
quotes an
anonymous “intelligence official” as saying “Crowdstrike is
pretty good. There’s no reason to believe that anything they have
concluded is not accurate.”

There
is now.

Alperovitch
is 
scheduled
to testify
 before
the House Intelligence Committee, and one wonders if our clueless –
and technically challenged – Republican members of Congress will
question him about the debunking of Crowdstrike’s rush to judgment.
I tend to doubt it, since the Russia-did-it meme is now the Accepted
Narrative and no dissent is permitted – to challenge it would make
them “Putin apologists”! (Although maybe Trey Gowdy, the only
GOPer on that panel who seems to have any brains, may surprise me.)

As I’ve been saying for months,
there is 
no
evidence
 that
the Russians hacked the DNC: 
nonezilchnada.
Yet this false narrative is the entire basis of a campaign launched
by the Democrats, hailed by the Trump-hating media, and fully
endorsed by the FBI and the CIA, the purpose of which is to “prove”
that Trump is “Putin’s puppet,” as Hillary Clinton 
put
it
.
Now the investigative powers of the federal government are being
deployed to confirm that the Trump campaign “colluded” with the
Kremlin in an act the evidence for which is collapsing.

This
whole affair is a vicious fraud. If there is any justice in this
world – and there may not be – the perpetrators should be
charged, tried, and jailed.

Opinion
by 
Justin
Raimondo
 /
Republished with permission / 
AntiWar.com / Report
a typo

=======================

* GRU in Nederland GROe (label veranderd op 5 oktober 2018)

Voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, klik op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terug kan vinden, dit geldt niet voor de labels: Alperovitch, Crowdstrike, Gowdy, GRU, IISS en Pinchuk.

Wie haalde het A321 toestel met vluchtnummer 9268 neer in de Sinaï woestijn?

Hier een scherpe analyse van Justin Raimondo, over vlucht 9268, die vorige week neerkwam in de Sinaï woestijn. De speculaties, de politieke bemoeienis, de gevolgen en een mogelijke ‘verantwoordelijke’ passeren de revue. Onder dit artikel kan u klikken voor een vertaling, al neemt het ‘downloaden’ wel wat tijd in beslag:

Who
Downed Metrojet Flight 9268?
Was
it ISIS – or somebody else?
By
Justin Raimondo

November 06, 2015
Information
Clearing House

– “
Antiwar
– First they said the downing of Russian Metrojet Flight 9268 was
most likely due to Russia’s “notorious
regional airlines, which supposedly are rickety and unreliable. The
Egyptian government denied that terrorism is even a possibility, with
Egyptian despot Abdel Fatah al-Sisi proclaiming:

When there is
propaganda that it crashed because of Isis, this is one way to damage
the stability and security of Egypt and the image of Egypt. Believe
me, the situation in Sinai – especially in this limited area – is
under our full control.”

However, it soon came
out that the person in charge of Sharm el-Sheikh airport, where the
Russia plane had landed before taking off again, had been “replaced”
– oh, but
not
because of anything to do with the downing of the Russian passenger
plane! As the Egyptian authorities put
it
:

Adel Mahgoub,
chairman of the state company that runs Egypt’s civilian airports,
says airport chief Abdel-Wahab Ali has been ‘promoted’ to become
his assistant. He said the move late Wednesday had nothing to do with
media skepticism surrounding the airport’s security. Mahgoub said
Ali is being replaced by Emad el-Balasi, a pilot.”

Laughable, albeit in a
sinister way, and yet more evidence that something wasn’t quite
right: after all, everyone knows the Egyptian government does
not
have the Sinai, over which the plane disintegrated in mid air, under
its “full control.” ISIS, which claimed
responsibility
for the crash hours after it occurred, is all
over
that peninsula.

Still, the denials
poured in, mostly from US government officials such
as
Director of National Intelligence James
Liar-liar-pants-on-fire
Clapper, who said ISIS involvement was “unlikely.” Then they told
us it couldn’t have been ISIS because they supposedly don’t have
surface-to-air missiles that can reach the height attained by the
downed plane. Yet that wasn’t very convincing either, because a)
How do they know what ISIS has in its arsenal?, and b) couldn’t
ISIS or some other group have smuggled
a bomb on board?

The better part of a
week after the crash, we
have this
:

Days
after authorities dismissed claims that ISIS brought down a Russian
passenger jet, a U.S. intelligence analysis now suggests that the
terror group or its affiliates
planted a bomb on the plane
.

British Foreign
Minister Philip Hammond said his government believes there is a
‘significant possibility’ that an explosive device caused the
crash. And a Middle East source briefed on intelligence matters also
said it appears likely someone placed a bomb aboard the aircraft.”

According to numerous
news
reports, intercepts of “internal communications” of the Islamic
State/ISIS group provided evidence that it wasn’t an accident but a
terrorist act. Those intercepts must have been available to US and UK
government sources early on, yet these same officials said they had
no “direct evidence,” as Clapper put it, of terrorist
involvement. Why is that? And furthermore: why the general
unwillingness of Western governments and media to jump to their usual
conclusion when any air disaster occurs,

and attribute it to
terrorism?

The answer is simple:
they didn’t want to arouse any sympathy for the Russians. Russia,
as we all know, is The Enemy – considered even worse, in some
circles, than the jihadists.  Indeed, there’s a whole section
of opinion-makers
devoted to the idea that  we must
help
Islamist crazies in Syria, including
al-Qaeda
’s affiliate, known as al-Nusra, precisely in order to
stop the Evil Putin from extending Russian influence into the region.

In a broader sense,
the reluctance to acknowledge that this was indeed a terrorist act is
rooted in a refusal to acknowledge the commonality of interests that
exists between Putin’s Russia and the West. The downing of the
Metrojet is just the latest atrocity carried out by the head-choppers
against the Russian people: this includes not only the Beslan
school massacre
, in which over 700 children were taken hostage by
Chechen Islamists, but also the five
apartment bombings
that took place in 1999. The real extent of
Western hostility to Russia, and the unwillingness to realize that
Russia has been a major terrorist target, is underscored by the
shameful
propaganda
pushed by the late Alexander Litvinenko, and endorsed
by Sen. John McCain
, which claims that the bombings were an
“inside job” carried out by the Russian FSB – a version of
“trutherism” that, if uttered in the US in relation to the 9/11
attacks, is routinely (and rightly) dismissed as sheer crankery. But
where the Russians are concerned it’s not only allowable, it’s
the default. A particularly egregious example is Russophobic hack
Michael D. Weiss, who, days before the downing of the Russian
passenger plane, solemnly informed us that Putin was “sending
jihadists to join ISIS
.” Boy oh boy, talk about ingratitude!

This downright creepy
unwillingness to express any sympathy or sense of solidarity with the
Russian people ought to clue us in to something we knew all along:
that the whole “war on terrorism” gambit is as phony as a
three-dollar bill. If US government officials were actually concerned
about the threat of terrorist violence directed at innocent
civilians, they would partner up with Russia in a joint effort to
eradicate the threat: that this isn’t happening in Syria, or
anywhere else, is all too evident. Not to mention our canoodling
with “moderate” Chechen terrorists, openly encouraging them to
carry on their war with Putin’s Russia. Our “war on terrorism”
is simply a pretext for spying on the American people, and most of
the rest of the world, and cementing the power of the State on the
home front, not to mention fattening up an already grotesquely obese
“defense” budget.

With the belated
admission that the downing of the Russian passenger jet was an act of
terrorism, we are beginning to hear that this a tremendous blow
to Putin’s prestige
at home – something no one would dare
utter about Obama’s or Cameron’s “prestige” if the Metrojet
had been an American or British passenger plane. They say it’s
“blowback” due to Russia’s actions in Syria, with the clear
implication that it’s deserved. And yet, according to US officials
and the usual suspects, the Russians
aren’t
hitting
ISIS so much as they’re smiting
the “moderate” Islamist head-choppers – the “Syrian rebels,”
as they’re known — who are being funded, armed, and encouraged by
the West.

If
that’s true, then what kind of blowback are we talking about –
and from which direction is it coming? Given this, isn’t it
entirely possible that Metrojet Flight 9268 was downed by US-aided
–and-supported “moderates,” who moderately decided to get back
at Putin?

Justin Raimondo is
the editorial director of Antiwar.com, and a senior fellow at the
Randolph Bourne Institute. He is a contributing editor at
The
American Conservative
,
and writes a monthly column for
Chronicles.
He is the author of
Reclaiming
the American Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement
[Center
for Libertarian Studies, 1993; Intercollegiate Studies Institute,
2000], and
An
Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N. Rothbard
[Prometheus
Books, 2000].

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Zie ook: ‘Koenders geeft alleen reisadvies voor vliegveld Sharm-el-Sheikh…..

       en: ‘Van Bommel vindt Egypte een fijn vakantieland……… AUW!!!

Voor meer berichten over/met vliegramp S, Sharm-el-Sheikh, Rusland, Putin, Tsjetsjenië, Cameron, Philip Hammond, ISIS en/of Abdul Fatah al-Sisi, klik op het desbetreffende label, onder dit bericht.

Excuus voor de layout, die ik niet juist kreeg.