Iran accelerates online activities that appear to be aimed at US electionIn one case, an email phishing attack targeted a presidential campaign, Microsoft said Friday.
Iranian actors have also created fake news sites and posed as activists in recent months, laying the foundation for the split and potentially influence American voters This fall, the swing states are particularly important, the technology giant noted.
The results of Microsoft’s latest threat intelligence report show how Iran, the actively participated in the recent US elections, is developing its tactics for another election that will likely have global implications. The report goes a step beyond anything US intelligence officials have disclosed to date, giving specific examples of Iranian groups and their actions to date. Iran’s UN mission denied that it had any plans to interfere in the US presidential election or to launch cyberattacks.
The report does not provide any details about Iran’s intentions beyond seeking to create chaos in the United States, although US officials have previously indicated that Iran is opposed to former President Donald Trump in particular. US officials have also expressed concern about Tehran’s efforts to retaliate for an attack on an Iranian general in 2020 ordered by Trump. This week, the Justice Department filed charges against a Pakistani man with ties to Iran who allegedly Murder plans hatched against several officerspossibly including Trump.
The report also reveals how Russia and China are exploiting political polarization in the United States to spread their own divisive messages in a key election year.
Microsoft’s report identified four examples of recent Iranian activity that the company expects to increase as the November elections approach.
First, a group with ties to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard targeted a senior U.S. presidential campaign official with a phishing email in June, a form of cyberattack commonly used to obtain sensitive information, said the report, which did not specify which campaign was targeted. The group disguised the email’s origin by sending it from the hacked email account of a former senior adviser, Microsoft said.
A few days later, the Iranian group tried to log into the account of a former presidential candidate, but the attempt was unsuccessful, Microsoft’s report said. The company notified the victims.
In another example, an Iranian group created websites posing as U.S. news sites and targeting voters from opposite camps on the political spectrum, the report said.
One fake news site aimed at a left-leaning audience insults Trump by calling him “completely insane” and suggesting he takes drugs, the report said. Another site aimed at Republican readers focuses on LGBTQ issues and gender reassignment surgery.
A third example cited by Microsoft shows Iranian groups posing as US operatives, potentially laying the groundwork for influence operations just before the elections.
Finally, another Iranian group compromised the account of a government employee in a swing state in May, the report said. It was unclear whether this cyberattack was related to attempts to manipulate the election.
Iran’s UN mission emailed a statement to the Associated Press: “Iran has been the victim of numerous offensive cyber operations targeting its infrastructure, public service centers and industry. Iran’s cyber capabilities are defensive and appropriate to the threats it faces. Iran has no intention or plans to launch cyber attacks. The US presidential election is an internal matter in which Iran does not interfere.”
The Microsoft report said that, given Iran’s increasing cyber influence, actors linked to Russia have targeted their influence campaigns on the US election, while actors with ties to the Chinese Communist Party have exploited pro-Palestinian university protests and other current events in the US to increase political tensions in the US.
Microsoft said it continues to monitor foreign enemies using generative AI technologyThe increasingly cheap and easily accessible tools can produce lifelike fake images, photos and videos in seconds, causing some experts to fear that they could be used as a weapon to Misleading voters this election cycle.
Although many countries have experimented with AI in their influence operations, the company said, these efforts have not had much impact so far. The report says that as a result, some actors have “resorted to techniques that have proven effective in the past – simple digital manipulation, misrepresentation of content, and the use of trusted labels or logos over false information.”
Microsoft’s report is consistent with recent warnings from American intelligence agencies that America’s adversaries appear determined to seed the Internet with false and inflammatory claims ahead of the November vote.
Senior intelligence officials said last month that Russia remained the biggest threat when it came to election disinformation, while there were signs that Iran was expanding its efforts and China was treading cautiously as it looked toward 2024.
Iran’s efforts appear to be aimed at undermining candidates who are believed to be more likely to increase tensions with Tehran. Officials said. This is a description that fits Trump, whose administration ended the nuclear agreement with Iranre-imposed sanctions and ordered Killing of Iran’s highest-ranking general.
The influence efforts also come at a time of high tensions between Iran and Israel, whose military the United States strongly supports.
Avril Haines, the director of national intelligence, said last month that the Iranian government had secretly supported American protests about Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. Iran-linked groups have posed as online activists and encouraged Protests and financially supported some protest groups, Haines said.
America’s enemies, including Iran, have long sought to influence U.S. elections. In 2020 Groups with links to Iran Intelligence officials said they sent emails to Democratic voters, apparently in an attempt to influence their voting decisions.
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Associated Press writers David Klepper and Eric Tucker in Washington contributed to this report.
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