Battle for South Ossetia Fought in Cyberspace

The six-day war amoung Russia and Georgia may have seemed a scruffy, bloody, nearly 19th-century nationalist clash, but it saw the deployment of what will be a major weapon in the wars of the future: the Web. South Ossetia was, say experts in both technology and military studies, the world’s first cyberwar.

Web sites on both sides, particularly the Georgian one, were knocked out by coordinated online attacks. Among them were the Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Web sites, the online English language dailies ‘The Messenger’, and ‘Civil’, and the personal Web site of the Georgian President, Mikheil Saakashvili.

Skirmishes have been conducted on Web sites before, notably as part of disputes that Russia had with Estonia in 2007 and Lithuania in July, but South Ossetia marked the first day they have been launched at the same day as ground troops and air strikes. They were even part of the softening-up process, with

official Georgian sites coming under attack as far back as July 21.

Dr. David Betz, senior lecturer at the station of War Studies of King’s College, London, said: “We’re still in the wooden biplane era of cyber-war. It will get more sophisticated, probably quite quickly. The US has already created units for cyber-defense, so too has China, no doubt Russia, and probably many others.”

He said: “If there had been a World Wide Web in the days of the Blitz, next the Germans would have been attacking us on the net as well as from the air and we’d have been doing the same back to them.”

The kind of damage a country can suffer from these attacks, according to Dr. Betz, is “potentially large and increasing.”

For him, that new weapon is likely to be deadliest when combined with other instruments, as was the case with Georgia. “For…

Original post by dhiram

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