Tech Talk
By

Elinor Mills /

CNET/ June 13, 2010, 12:51 AM

Soldier Leaked Google Attack Investigation Details, Hacker says

An Army analyst jailed for allegedly leaking a video of a controversial Iraq air strike also allegedly leaked classified information about a U.S. investigation into cyberattacks on Google that originated in China, the hacker who turned in the analyst told CNET on Saturday.

CNET

U.S. Army intelligence analyst Bradley Manning had confided to well-known hacker Adrian Lamo in e-mails and instant messages that he was the one who provided the 2007 video of a military helicopter gunning down journalists and civilians in Iraq, as well as other information, to whistleblower Web site Wikileaks, Lamo has said.

Along with leaking another video of an attack in which nearly 200 civilians were killed in Afghanistan in 2009 and leaking 260,000 classified U.S. diplomatic cables, Manning told Lamo that he leaked the code name and details of a government investigation being conducted regarding the attacks on Google, Lamo said.

Lamo said he could not say anything more or risk arrest for disclosing classified information.

The U.S. State Department complained to China about the cyberattacks, which Google announced in January and which helped push Google to withdraw its search engine from the Chinese market. More than 30 other companies were targeted in the cybertattacks, which appeared to target source code and, in Google's case, also Gmail accounts of human rights activists. The Chinese government has denied any involvement in the cyberattacks.

Agents from the Army's criminal and counter-intelligence units and the Diplomatic Security Service met with Lamo on Friday night, Lamo said. The agents asked for files related to the communications between him and Manning, Lamo said, and he gave them a laptop and the hard drive from another laptop, as well as encrypted e-mails that had been stored on a remote server. Lamo said he is scheduled to give a sworn statement to authorities on Sunday.

Manning was arrested a few weeks ago, after Lamo went to authorities and told them about the soldier confiding in him. While he praised the leaks of the air-strike video, Lamo said he feared that U.S. foreign policy could be compromised and lives put at risk by the other leaks.

Read the full article at CNET News.com.

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  • Elinor Mills On Twitter » On Google+ »

    Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service, and the Associated Press.

5 Comments Add a Comment
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RoboBlogger says:
I'm surprised this "Lame O" wasn't advised by the DSS to stop bumping his gums to the media. That would be his best bet.
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rwsmith29456 says:
Traitor, pure and simple.
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babooph says:
Not as bad as outing a CIA agent,& better news than the" in bed with "journalism...
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rocketjl says:
It goes without saying that this Manning character has committed an act of espionage and should suffer the maximum penalty since it was committed during war. I have lots of things that I think this guy has earned, but the death penalty would let him off easy.
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lilbear925 says:
This ex-intelligence analyst can count on seeing the inside of a military prison for a very long time. Leaking sensitive information in the military is sometimes considered espionage -- or even treason -- and the military laws that govern the punisment for same can be very strict.
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