U.S. and China trade cyberattack allegations as tensions escalate

  • China has been named as the culprit behind a significant cyber-attack on U.S. national security networks, with the potential to disrupt critical infrastructure such as power grids, water supplies and fuel refineries. The attack is part of a broader strategy to exploit internal chaos and unrest in the United States and there are even rumors of a potential military invasion by Chinese troops.
  • China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS) has accused the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) of orchestrating a years-long cyberattack against China’s National Time Service Center. The MSS claims the NSA infiltrated the center’s systems, stole sensitive data and attempted cyber sabotage, raising concerns about potential disruptions to financial markets, transportation and power grids.
  • The MSS alleges that the NSA’s operation began in March 2022, exploiting vulnerabilities in foreign-made smartphones used by staff at the National Time Service Center. By April 2023, hackers allegedly escalated their efforts, breaching internal networks using stolen credentials and deploying 42 distinct cyber tools to mask their origins through servers in the U.S., Europe and Asia.
  • The MSS warned that such intrusions could have destabilized China’s critical infrastructure, given the center’s role in synchronizing time for financial transactions, telecommunications and defense systems. The targeting of timekeeping infrastructure is particularly concerning due to its foundational role in modern society, with any disruption potentially having cascading effects.
  • The latest accusations fit a long-standing pattern of mutual cyber hostilities between Washington and Beijing. Both nations engage in digital espionage as part of broader geopolitical competition and the timing of China’s allegations coincides with renewed trade tensions and U.S. threats to impose additional tariffs on Chinese goods. The cycle of cyber recriminations shows no sign of slowing, with both nations continuing to accuse each other of cyber malfeasance.

China has accused the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) of orchestrating a years-long cyberattack against its National Time Service Center—a critical infrastructure hub responsible for maintaining China’s official timekeeping.

The Ministry of State Security (MSS) claims the NSA infiltrated the center’s systems, stole sensitive data and attempted cyber sabotage, raising alarms over potential disruptions to financial markets, transportation and power grids. The allegations, published Sunday, Oct.19, on China’s WeChat platform, come amid escalating cyber tensions between the two superpowers, with both nations routinely accusing each other of digital espionage.

According to the MSS, the NSA’s operation began in March 2022, exploiting vulnerabilities in foreign-made smartphones used by staff at the National Time Service Center. By April 2023, hackers allegedly escalated their efforts, breaching internal networks using stolen credentials and deploying 42 distinct cyber tools to mask their origins through servers in the U.S., Europe and Asia.

The MSS warned that such intrusions could have destabilized China’s critical infrastructure, given the center’s role in synchronizing time for financial transactions, telecommunications and defense systems.

“The U.S. is aggressively pursuing cyber-hegemony and repeatedly trampling on international norms,” the ministry stated.

The U.S. Embassy in Beijing did not directly address the claims but reiterated its stance that China remains “the most active and persistent cyber threat” to American government and private-sector networks.

A cycle of cyber recriminations

“The latest accusations fit a long-standing pattern of mutual cyber hostilities between Washington and Beijing. In January, U.S. officials alleged that Chinese hackers targeted the Treasury Department‘s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), prompting Beijing to dismiss the claims as ‘unfounded,'” BrightU.AI‘s Enoch said.

Cybersecurity experts note that both nations engage in digital espionage as part of broader geopolitical competition.

“Neither side is innocent,” said John Hultquist, chief analyst at Mandiant Intelligence. “Cyber operations are now a standard tool of statecraft, used for intelligence gathering, coercion and strategic advantage.”

The timing of China’s allegations is notable, coinciding with renewed trade tensions over rare earth metals and U.S. threats to impose additional tariffs on Chinese goods. Some analysts suggest the cyber accusations may serve as leverage in ongoing economic negotiations.

The targeting of timekeeping infrastructure is particularly concerning due to its foundational role in modern society. Precision timing underpins GPS navigation, stock market transactions and power grid synchronization—meaning any disruption could have cascading effects.

China’s accusations also raise questions about the vulnerability of global digital infrastructure. If state-sponsored hackers can infiltrate such high-security systems, the risks extend beyond bilateral disputes to broader threats against financial stability and public safety.

As U.S.-China relations grow increasingly adversarial, cyber warfare has become a central battleground. While Beijing’s latest allegations remain unverified, they underscore the fragility of digital trust between the world’s two largest economies. With both nations continuing to accuse each other of cyber malfeasance, the risk of escalation—whether through retaliatory hacks, economic sanctions, or diplomatic fallout—remains ever-present. Until transparency and accountability improve, the cycle of cyber recriminations shows no sign of slowing.

Watch the video below that talks about the escalating trade tensions between China and the United States.

This video is from the TrendingNews channel on Brighteon.com.

Sources include:

RT.com

Reuters.com

ABCNews.Go.com

BrightU.ai

Brighteon.com

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