According
to Donald Trump’s campaign, Iranian operatives were the intended targets of a
breach that compromised some internal communications.
On
Saturday, the US news website Politico said that it had received campaign
information, including reports on Ohio Senator JD Vance—Trump’s running
mate—through email.
A campaign spokeswoman informed the BBC that the papers were sought out from
hostile foreign sources with the intention of interfering with the 2024
election.
Politico
announced that it has verified the papers’ legitimacy. Neither the BBC nor any
third party has checked the claims.
There
was a lack of specificity and proof that the Iranian government or Iranian
hackers were involved in the document release, according to the campaign.
An
unidentified US presidential candidate’s campaign was hacked in June, according
to a report issued by Microsoft the day before.
A
spear phishing email, which attempts to appear legitimate in order to trick the
recipient into clicking on a malicious link, was sent to the campaign,
according to Microsoft’s Threat Analysis Center (MTAC).
“In
recent months, there has been a noticeable increase in influence operations
carried out by Iranian entities,” stated the MTAC study.
“Coincides
with the close timing of President Trump’s selection of a vice presidential
nominee” was the statement made by Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung on
the June hacking effort, as cited in the MTAC findings.
He
said, “The Iranians know that President Trump will stop their reign of terror
just like he did in his first four years in the White House,” Mr. Cheung told
the press.
An
AOL email account belonging to an individual named “Robert” started sending
emails to Politico in late July, according to the publication.
Based
on publicly accessible evidence about Vance’s past record and utterances, the
news source stated that the Vance file was 271 pages lengthy. Marco Rubio, a
senator from Florida and a potential vice presidential candidate, was also
mentioned in the email as having given portions of a study document.
In
order to avoid any embarrassing surprises, presidential campaigns often
investigate possible vice presidential nominees. Mr. Vance’s well-known past
criticisms of Trump were reportedly marked as “potential vulnerabilities” in
the dossier, according to Politico.
The
research from Microsoft said: “Iranian cyber-enabled influence operations have
been a consistent feature of at least the last three US election cycles.”
During
the 2020 presidential race, Microsoft published a comparable dossier claiming
that Iranian hackers had compromised presidential campaigns.
In
a development unrelated to the attempted shooting in Pennsylvania last month,
US security sources have reportedly warned of an Iranian conspiracy to
eliminate Trump. On Tuesday, the US justice department announced the charges
against a Pakistani national who is believed to have links to Iran. He is being
held on suspicion of plotting the assassination of US officials, possibly
including the former president.
Iranian officials have been approached by the BBC for comment.
Post a Comment