Audio By Carbonatix
The US launched a cyber-attack on Iranian weapons systems on Thursday as President Trump pulled out of air strikes on the country, US reports say.
The cyber-attack disabled computer systems controlling rocket and missile launchers, the Washington Post said.
It was in retaliation for the shooting down of a US drone as well as attacks on oil tankers that the US has blamed Iran for, the New York Times said.
There is no independent confirmation of damage to Iranian systems.
The US has also imposed sanctions President Trump described as "major".
He said the sanctions were needed to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, and economic pressure would be maintained unless Tehran changed course.
Speaking in Jerusalem, US National Security Adviser John Bolton said the details of the new sanctions were likely to be announced on Monday.
Nobody had granted Iran "a hunting licence in the Middle East," he added.
Tensions between the US and Iran have risen since the US last year pulled out of a 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers and reinstated sanctions, triggering economic meltdown in Iran.
Last week Iran said it would exceed internationally agreed limits on its nuclear programme.
Mr Trump has said he does not want war with Iran, but warned the country would face "obliteration" if conflict broke out.
What did the US cyber-attack do?
The attack had been planned for several weeks, the sources told US media outlets, and was suggested as a way of responding to the mine attacks on tankers in the Gulf of Oman. It was aimed at weapons systems used by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which shot down the US drone last Thursday and which the US says also attacked the tankers. Both the Washington Post and AP news agency said the cyber-attack had disabled the systems. The New York Times said it was intended to take the systems offline for a period of time. On Saturday the US Department for Homeland Security warned that Iran was stepping up its own cyber-attacks on the US. Christopher Krebs, the director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, said "malicious cyberactivity" was being directed at US industries and government agencies by "Iranian regime actors and their proxies". They were using "destructive 'wiper' attacks", he said, using tactics such as "spear phishing, password spraying and credential stuffing" in a bid to take control of entire networks. Iran has also been trying to hack US naval ship systems, the Washington Post reported.DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Interior Minister shows compassion to two foster homes in Kumasi
6 minutes -
Keta NADMO empowers women on disaster preparedness
10 minutes -
South Africa’s Xenophobia is a gun pointed inward
13 minutes -
TWMA disburses GH¢ 91k to persons with disabilities
14 minutes -
Rapist who infected men and boys with HIV in UK jailed
46 minutes -
More than 500 people killed in Tanzania election violence, inquiry finds
56 minutes -
South African police chief suspended over $20m health contract
1 hour -
One person killed and 5 hurt in Louisiana shopping centre shooting
1 hour -
Warner Bros shareholders approve Paramount’s $111bn takeover
1 hour -
You can’t stay, work and still claim stipends – High Commissioner Benson fires at Ghanaian Scholars in UK
2 hours -
Ghana owes £5m in unpaid stipends to PhD students in UK – High Commissioner reveals
2 hours -
Economic diplomacy is my top KPI – Zita Benson defends aggressive push to attract UK capital
2 hours -
Meta says it will cut 8,000 jobs as AI spending soars
3 hours -
US soldier charged after winning $400,000 betting on removal of Maduro
3 hours -
Two trains collide head-on in Denmark, leaving five critically hurt
5 hours