Monday, 11 March 2024

The hunger killing Gaza’s children has a clear cause that few are willing to name out loud

The hunger killing Gaza’s children has a clear cause that few are willing to name out loud

The hunger killing Gaza’s children has a clear cause that few are willing to name out loud





Recent massacre of civilians lined up for food aid highlights deliberate nature of humanitarian catastrophe inflicted on Palestine



Eva Bartlett is a Canadian independent journalist. She has spent years on the ground covering conflict zones in the Middle East, especially in Syria and Palestine (where she lived for nearly four years).



Palestinian children collect food at a donation point provided by a charity group in the southern Gaza Strip city of Rafah, on November 30, 2023
©MOHAMMED ABED/AFP






Following the February 29 Israeli slaughter of at least 115 starving Palestinians lined up for food aid, there was little or no outrage by the same Western media which would have howled if the perpetrator were Russia or Syria.







According to the Gaza Health Ministry, early morning on Thursday, February 29, Israeli forces opened fire on unarmed Palestinians waiting just southwest of Gaza City for desperately needed food aid. As a result, 115 civilians were killed and over 750 wounded.


Popular US commenter Judge Andrew Napolitano said in a recent interview with award-winning analyst Professor Jeffery Sachs, “Innocent Gaza civilians were lined up to receive flour and water from an aid truck, and more than 100 were slaughtered, mowed down, by Israeli troops. This has got to be one of the most reprehensible and public slaughterings that they’ve engaged in.”


The official Israeli version of events, unsurprisingly, puts the blame on the Palestinians themselves. The deaths and injuries were supposedly caused by a stampede, and the Israeli soldiers only fired when they felt they were endangered by the crowd. The BBC even cited one army lieutenant as saying that troops had “cautiously [tried] to disperse the mob with a few warning shots.” Mark Regev, a special adviser to the Israeli prime minister, went as far as to tell CNN that Israeli troops had not been involved directly in any way and that the gunfire had come from “Palestinian armed groups.”


Testimonies from survivors and doctors tell a different story, though, saying the majority of those treated after the incident had been shot by Israeli forces. Legacy media reports, however, use characteristically neutral wording when evidence starts to stack up against Israel. “112 dead in chaotic scenes as Israeli troops open fire near aid trucks, say Gaza officials,” a Guardian headline reads. Palestinians always seem to just “die,” not get killed, and Israeli troops seem to have just “opened fire” nearby. The skewed wording conventions persist even despite the attribution to Palestinian officials present in that same headline – officials like the Palestinian Foreign Ministry, which was quite clear in accusing Israel of perpetrating a ”massacre” as part of a “genocidal war.”


The article does eventually cite the acting Director of al-Awda hospital as saying most of the 161 casualties treated appeared to have been shot. The confusing headline was likely intentional, counting on most people not bothering to read the article in full.


In a report published on March 3, Euro-Med stated members of its field team were present at the time of the incident and “documented Israeli tanks firing heavily towards Palestinian civilians while trying to receive humanitarian aid.” The report goes on to cite Dr Jadallah Al-Shafi’i, head of nursing at Shifa, Gaza’s main hospital, saying, “paramedics and rescue workers were among the victims,” and that at Shifa “they observed dozens of dead and injured, hit by Israeli gunfire.”


The report also cites Dr Amjad Aliwa, an emergency specialist at Shifa who was also on site when Israel opened fire. According to Aliwa, the Israeli fire began, “as soon as the trucks arrived on Thursday at 4 am”


But the February 29 massacre, tragic as it is, is only a part of the current stage of Israel’s war on Gaza: the deliberate starvation of Palestinians. And like the massacre itself, the whole issue is being subjected to the hands-off wording treatment by establishment media.


On February 29, the New York Times published an article whose headline, “Starvation Is Stalking Gaza’s Children,” suggests starvation is a mysterious malicious force with a will of its own, skirting the mention of the Israeli siege as its obvious cause.


Again, as with the Guardian article, a few paragraphs in, the NYT piece does state that the “hunger is a man-made catastrophe,” describing how Israeli forces prevent food delivery and how Israeli bombardments make aid distribution dangerous.


As Professor Sachs stated, ”...Israel has deliberately starved the people of Gaza. Starved! I’m not using an exaggeration, I’m talking literally starving a population. Israel is a criminal, is in non-stop, war crime, status now. I believe in genocidal status.”


Anyone who’s been paying attention knows that the February 29 massacre was not the first such incident, and likely not the last. A thread on Twitter/X outlines this, noting, ”Before yesterday’s “Flour Massacre”, the IDF has been shooting indiscriminately for WEEKS at starved Gazans awaiting aid trucks at the exact same spot, virtually every single day!”


The thread (warning: graphic images!), compiled by Gazan analyst and Euro-Med chief of communications Muhammad Shehada, gives examples of Israeli soldiers firing on Palestinians every single day in the week prior to February 29.


You can bet that, were these Syrian or Russian soldiers firing on starving civilians, the outrage would be front page, 24/7, for weeks. Scratch that, they wouldn’t even have to do it – just a hint of an accusation would have been enough to get the presses going.




Starvation in Syria was another matter



The NYT article mentioned above notes that “Reports of death by starvation are difficult to verify from a distance.” But ‘verifying from a distance’ is precisely what the NYT and other Western media did repeatedly in Syria over the years.


In areas occupied by (then) al-Nusra, Jaysh al-Islam, and the other extremist terrorist gangs which the West and corporate media dubbed “rebels,” food aid was always taken by the respective terrorists and withheld from the civilian population, causing starvation in some districts. Madaya, to the west of Damascus, eastern Aleppo, and later eastern Ghouta were districts most loudly campaigned over in legacy media, providing covering fire for the broader US-led campaign to overthrow the Syrian government.


Backing the claims that the government was starving civilians were mostly “unnamed activists” or activists whose allegiance to Nusra, or even ISIS, was very overt.


As I would see and hear whenever one of these regions was liberated, ample food and medicine had been sent in, but civilians never saw it. Time and again, in eastern Aleppo, Madaya, al-Waer, eastern Ghouta, to name key areas, civilians complained that terrorist factions hoarded food and medicine, and if they sold it to the population, it was at extortionist prices people couldn’t afford.


In the old city of Homs in 2014, back then dubbed by legacy media as the “capital of the revolution,” starved residents I met told me the West’s precious “rebels” had stolen every morsel of food from them, stealing anything of value as well.


Yet, media headlines about these regions screamed about starvation, outright blaming the Syrian government, and were accompanied by disturbing images of emaciated civilians (some of which were not even from Syria) meant to evoke strong emotions among readers and viewers. The same media largely opts not to show you gaunt, starving,


Tellingly, Syrian towns surrounded by terrorist forces, besieged, bombed, sniped and starved, got virtually no media coverage. It didn’t fit NATO’s narrative of “rebels”=good, Assad=bad.


But in Gaza the world watches in real time as Palestinians die from the ongoing, preventable, starvation.



Open the borders



Some days ago, the CEO of Medical aid for Palestinians, Melanie Ward, in an interview with CNN, named Israel as the cause of starvation in Gaza.


“It’s very simple: it’s because the Israeli military won’t let it in. We could end this starvation tomorrow very simply if they would just let us have access to people there. But it’s not being allowed. This is what they said [on October 9], ‘Nothing will go in’,” Ward said.


She described the starvation as “the fastest decline in a population’s nutrition status ever recorded. What that means is that children are being starved at the fastest rate the world has ever seen. And we could finish it tomorrow, we could save them all. But we’re not being able to.”


This is echoed by UNICEF. The press-release for its February 2024 report notes that 15.6 % (one in six children) under two years of age are “acutely malnourished” in Gaza’s north. “Of these, almost 3% suffer from severe wasting, the most life-threatening form of malnutrition, which puts young children at highest risk of medical complications and death unless they receive urgent treatment,” UNICEF notes.


Even worse, “since the data were collected in January, the situation is likely to be even graver today,” UNICEF warns, likewise noting the rapid increase of malnutrition is “dangerous and entirely preventable.”


Professor Sachs made an important point: “This will stop when the United States stops providing the munitions to Israel. It will not stop by any self control in Israel, there is none...They believe in ethnic cleansing or worse. And it is the United States which is the sole support...that is not stopping this slaughter.”


Air-dropping paltry amounts of food aid into Gaza is not the answer. It both legitimizes Israel’s deliberate starvation of Gaza and also makes those Palestinians who run toward the aid sitting ducks for the Israeli army to maim or kill. The only solution is to immediately open the borders and allow in the hundreds of aid trucks parked in Egypt. And end the Israeli bombardment of Gaza.


An unprecedented phenomenon when one group of civil society is seen as a prisoner to be exterminated. Israel's vile attitude must lead to a unanimous conclusion, that the state of Israel must be wiped out from the face of this earth












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Sunday, 10 March 2024

West is conducting all-out militarization in attempts to defeat Putin — Vucic

West is conducting all-out militarization in attempts to defeat Putin — Vucic

West is conducting all-out militarization in attempts to defeat Putin — Vucic





Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic
©Aleksey Druzhinin/TASS






The Western countries are building up their military potential and pursuing a policy of total militarization in an attempt to defeat Russia, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic has said.







"What is happening now is madness. They all thought that [Russian President Vladimir] Putin would be easily defeated. Now they see that this is not so," Vucic said. "The current trend is toward total militarization and a five-fold build-up in all respects," he told the media while visiting the Belgrade Military Technical Institute and inspecting armaments on display.


The Serbian leader together with Defense Minister Milos Vucevic inspected new weapons of the Serbian Armed Forces. He noted the importance of increasing the production of UAVs and other weapons.


Earlier, Vucic stressed that under the current circumstances it should not be ruled out the West might send its soldiers to Ukraine and there was a risk of the conflict’s escalation.



France gathering alliance of countries capable to send troops to Ukraine — Politico



France is gathering an alliance of countries that may send troops to Ukraine in theory, the Politico newspaper reported, commenting on a visit of French Foreign Minister Stephane Sejourne to Lithuania.


"France is building an alliance of countries open to potentially sending Western troops to Ukraine — and in the process deepening its clash with a more cautious Berlin," the newspaper said.


The French foreign minister highlighted an opportunity at a press conference with his Lithuanian and Ukrainian counterparts on March 8 to send NATO troops to Ukraine that will deal with demining and will not participate in hostilities, the Politico noted.


French President Emmanuel Macon raised the possibility earlier that the NATO military may be sent to Ukraine, the newspaper reminded. The majority of European countries, including Germany, Poland and the Czech Republic, rejected the idea but the Baltic countries "are much more open to the idea," the Politico added.



France Just Can't Calm Down, Itching to Start World War III, Report Shows



France is forming a coalition of nations that are willing to consider the possibility of deploying Western forces to Ukraine, Politico reports.


On Friday, French Foreign Minister Stéphane Séjourné travelled to Lithuania to hold a meeting with his Baltic and Ukrainian counterparts to promote the idea that foreign forces might assist Ukraine in tasks such as de-mining.


Séjourné repeatedly mentioned mine clearance operations as a potential area of assistance, stating it "might mean having some personnel, [but] not to fight."


"It is not for Russia to tell us how we should help Ukraine in the coming months or years," Séjourné said at a meeting chaired by Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis and attended by his Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba.


The newspaper recalled French President Emmanuel Macron's remarks about the possibility of sending servicemen from Western countries to Ukraine. Subsequently most EU members, including Germany, the Czech Republic, and Poland, clarified they had no such plans. However, as Politico writes, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania appeared "much more open to the idea."


Commenting on Macron’s statements, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov stressed that NATO troops’ potential boots on the ground in Ukraine will lead to an inevitable conflict between Russia and the alliance.


Russia has repeatedly warned NATO countries that arms supplies to Ukraine would be considered legitimate targets. Moscow has accused NATO countries of "playing with fire" by arming Ukraine, emphasizing that such actions hinder the possibility of Russia-Ukraine negotiations.



France, Poland Cannot Speak for NATO - Italian Defense Minister



France and Poland have no right to speak on behalf of NATO, and the alliance's intervention in the conflict would "erase the path to diplomacy," Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto said in an interview with Italian newspaper La Stampa, published on Sunday.


Following a Paris-hosted conference on Ukraine on February 26, Macron said Western leaders had discussed the possibility of sending troops to Ukraine and, although no consensus had been reached in this regard, nothing could be ruled out. On Friday, Polish Defense Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said that the presence of NATO forces in Ukraine "was not unthinkable," adding that he appreciated Macron's initiative on the possibility of sending Western troops to Ukraine. Meanwhile, Polish President Andrzej Duda said that Poland needed to build a large airport for the transfer of NATO troops.


"France and Poland cannot speak on behalf of NATO, which formally and voluntarily did not intervene in the conflict from the very beginning. Sending troops to Kiev is a step toward unilateral escalation that will erase the path to diplomacy," the Italian minister said.


European countries continue to support Kiev, but it is important to intensify diplomatic efforts to help Ukraine regain its freedom, territory and security, the minister added.


Western countries have been providing military and financial aid to Kiev since the start of Russia's military operation in Ukraine in February 2022. The Kremlin has consistently warned against continued arms deliveries to Kiev, saying it would lead to further escalation of the conflict. In April 2022, Russia sent a diplomatic note to all NATO countries on the issue of arms supplies to Ukraine. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has warned that any cargo containing weapons for Ukraine will become a legitimate target for Russian strikes.





















In a Rafah school called ‘Hope’, Gaza IDPs seek shelter from Israel’s bombs

In a Rafah school called ‘Hope’, Gaza IDPs seek shelter from Israel’s bombs

In a Rafah school called ‘Hope’, Gaza IDPs seek shelter from Israel’s bombs





A group of El-Amal Society students pose for a selfie [Courtesy of El-Amal Society]






The rooms and corridors of Rafah’s El-Amal Rehabilitation Society, a two-storey building in a sunny yard filled with trees, and a children’s play area off to the side, are as lively as they have ever been.







But instead of it being just the deaf students who are usually bustling around, the classrooms are occupied by families fleeing Israel’s relentless assault on the people of Gaza.


Rafah, at the southernmost tip of the Gaza Strip on the border with Egypt, now hosts some 1.5 million people displaced by the endless, indiscriminate Israeli bombing from other parts of the Gaza Strip into an area of about 63sq km (24sq miles).


The first arrivals poured into the fixed structures: homes of friends or family, abandoned buildings, and schools that were not in use because Israel’s war on Gaza had paralysed life.


Some of the schools were run by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) but the agency is no longer able to fully operate them as shelters as it did several times before during previous Israeli assaults on Gaza.


Rafah is estimated to have about 15 buildings that can be used as shelters, each of which can house about 3,000 people. This makes for a total of 45,000 displaced people that the city can cope with. Today, each school building is home to up to 25,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs).


The Society’s building and grounds are straining to accommodate displaced people[Courtesy El-Amal Society]


The unprecedented influx of people prompted the independent El-Amal Society management to open its doors to IDPs, seeing the dire need as families came to Rafah on foot, carrying, pushing, or pulling those who could not walk, holding on to whatever meagre possessions they could save.


Families like that of journalist Abdul Rahman Mahani, 24, who all live in a single room. He was displaced along with his parents, brother and two sisters, but this was not their first displacement.


They had fled the vicious bombing on their neighbourhood of Remal in the west of Gaza City to the doomed al-Shifa Hospital and finally down to Rafah.


“In the dark of night, we heard the frantic voices of neighbours yelling: ‘Evacuate! Evacuate!’” Mahani told Al Jazeera of a night when he and his family fled. “Amid the Israeli raids, we all rushed to seek refuge at al-Shifa Hospital.”


From al-Shifa they soon had to relocate, to the Nassr neighbourhood this time, and Mahani remembers making the trek with a 25kg (about 50 pounds) bag of flour on his back, a most precious commodity in Gaza.


There was no safety to be found anywhere, and after several days of moving back and forth between Nassr, al-Shifa and the area around it, the family made its way south to Khan Younis.


Abdul Rahman Mahani came to El-Amal after several displacements [Courtesy Abdulrahman Mehanne]


“That was the first time I saw Israeli occupation tanks, from a distance. We were walking in lines … young Palestinians were being arrested right before our eyes … it was terrifying.”


A month later, another move, then another which finally brought them to El-Amal Society, although there is no guarantee that this would be the last time they have to pick up their lives and go.



El-Amal, ‘hope’



The deaf children and youth who attend El-Amal Society’s school are all from Rafah, so some were able to stay in their homes, if the homes were in one piece.


Some children had to move into the building with their families after their home was destroyed by Israeli attacks. They have hit the ground running though, acting as guides for incoming families, showing them where markets, shops, pharmacies and healthcare facilities are.


The team at El-Amal, comprising five people including project manager Bahaa Abu Batnin, are happy to have this extra help. “The deaf students are so cheerful and they love to give


“They found ways to communicate with the displaced, making the displaced feel like they’re at home despite the Israeli bombing and the difficulties and hardships,” Abu Batnin said.


Palestinian children wait to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen amid shortages of food supplies, in Rafah on March 5, 2024 [Mohammed Salem/Reuters]


They have also drafted some displaced people to volunteer to clean or cook for the others and run recreational activities for the children.


There are now more than 600 people living at El-Amal, some rooms crammed with more than 20 people, and the team works hard every day to try to help as many of them as possible.


Funding is an issue as they have to rely on financial or in-kind donations to support everybody, but they have resorted to solutions like bringing items in from their own homes, especially when they were scrambling for enough mattresses and blankets for all the IDPs in Gaza’s cold winter weather.



Struggling for the basics



Once those had been secured, they had to turn to other priorities, with which they also struggled.


With regards to food, the team is only able to provide enough to give each displaced person just one small meal a day.


In addition to that, the Gaza-wide potable water crisis means they can only secure the equivalent of five cups of water a week per person.


Another priority the team works hard to provide is the “dignity bags” of sanitary pads, painkillers and other supplies that they offer to all the displaced women and girls.


Baha al-Batnin [Courtesy of Baha al-Batnin]


To a certain extent, helping displaced people has become a personal mission for Abu Batnin and the team, and they do not want to give up on any aspect.


“We primarily care for displaced children and women, so our priorities were decided accordingly,” Abu Batnin said.


Hala, a mother of three, is grateful that the dignity bags made it onto the priority list.


“They’re so necessary, we can’t find these things in the markets at all right now,” she told Al Jazeera.


Hala, her husband and their two sons and daughter were displaced from Tal al-Hawa, west of Gaza City, on October 13. Initially, they sought refuge in their second home in az-Zahra for about five days but the Israeli bombs got there too.


They managed to get one room in El-Amal, which is better than nothing, despite the discomfort of being crammed in a tiny room and having to share one bathroom with five other families.


But, she says: “I don’t feel safe. The constant sounds of Israeli bombings just increase the sense of danger.”














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Pilot Smart Air ditemukan selamat

Pilot Smart Air ditemukan selamat

Pilot Smart Air ditemukan selamat











Pencarian pesawat Smart Air yang hilang kontak membuahkan hasil. Puing-puing pesawat Smart Air berhasil ditemukan dan pilot dikabarkan selamat.







Kabid Humas Polda Kaltara, Kombes Pol Budi Rachmat, menyebut saat ini proses evakuasi pesawat Smart Air yang jatuh di Tarakan masih berlangsung. Ia menyebut, berdasarkan informasi saat ini, pilot Capt. M Yusuf (29), salah satu korban pesawat Pilatus PC-6 Porter PK-SNE ditemukan selamat.


"Sudah ditemukan, infonya pilot selamat. Tim SAR dari Satbrimob Polda Kaltara saat ini tengah mengevakuasi korban," kata Budi kepada wartawan.


Saat ini, kata Budi, tim SAR dari Satbrimob Polda Kaltara sudah diterjunkan dan sedang mengevakuasi para korban. Dalam video yang diberikan oleh Budi, terlihat tim SAR turun dari helikopter dan mencoba meraih area pesawat jatuh yang ada di tengah hutan.


Berdasarkan informasi yang dihimpun, pesawat ini diawaki oleh Pilot Capt M Yusuf dan satu orang Engineer on Board (EOB), Deni S. Belum diketahui bagaimana kondisi Deni S.


Berdasar video penyelamatan yang diterima Kantor Berita Politik RMOL, tampak tim SAR turun dari helikopter dan mencoba meraih area pesawat jatuh yang ada di tengah hutan.


Pesawat itu mengangkut Sembako, lepas landas dari Bandara Internasional Juwata Tarakan, pukul 08.25 Wita, dan seharusnya tiba di Binuang, Krayan, Nunukan, pukul 09.25 Wita.


Pesawat diawaki Pilot Capt M Yusuf dan satu orang Engineer on Board (EOB), Deni S.


Sejauh ini belum diketahui pasti kondisi Deni S.


"Baru ini yang kami terima, detail menyusul ya," pungkasnya



Kronologis ditemukan pesawat



Tim Pencari pesawat Pilatus Smart Air PK-SNE sempat melihat ada tiga orang melambaikan tangan ke helikopter pada salah satu titik koordinat yang menjadi fokus pencarian, pada, pada hari Sabtu sore, 09/03/2024.


Humas SAR Tarakan, Burhadi, menyebut puing pesawat ditemukan daerah Binuang, Kalimantan Utara. Kondisi pesawat belum diketahui pasti.


"(Lokasi ditemukan) 03.43'.27.60" 115. 56'. 32.40". Daerah Binuang," katanya.


Dia menambahkan dari pantauan udara terlihat puing-puing pesawat. "Sementara yang terpantau puing-puing," katanya.


Ternyata lokasi penemuan puing Pesawat Smart Air di tengah hutan. Dalam video pantauan udara, Sabtu, 09/03/2024, terlihat ada asap yang membumbung.


Di foto lainnya juga memperlihatkan adanya benda berwarna putih yang terdapat di tengah hutan. Benda itu diduga puing-puing dari pesawat kargo Smart Air.


Petugas menemukan adanya api unggun di dekat lokasi puing pesawat. Api unggun itu diduga dibuat korban.


"Ditemukan pada koordinat 3°43'45.80"N115°56'54.45"E. Diduga api tersebut dibuat oleh korban yang masih hidup untuk memberikan tanda," kata Komandan Lanud Anang Busra Kota Tarakan, Kolonel Pnb Bambang Sudewo dalam keterangannya seperti dilansir dari Antara, hari Sabtu, 09/03/2024.


Posko Gabungan Tarakan dan Posko Gabungan Malinau terus melakukan koordinasi terkait temuan puing pesawat. Petugas juga mengirimkan perbekalan dan makanan untuk korban dengan menggunakan helikopter BELL 412 EPI REG HA 5224.


Namun, helikopter tak dapat melaksanakan penerjunan bantuan perbekalan karena kabut dan hujan. Diketahui, dua korban pesawat Smart Air yakni Capt M Yusuf dan Deni S (35).





















Microsoft says it hasn’t been able to shake Russian state hackers

Microsoft says it hasn’t been able to shake Russian state hackers

Microsoft says it hasn’t been able to shake Russian state hackers











Microsoft said Friday it’s still trying to evict the elite Russian government hackers who broke into the email accounts of senior company executives in November and who it said have been trying to breach customer networks with stolen access data.







The hackers from Russia’s SVR foreign intelligence service used data obtained in the intrusion, which it disclosed in mid-January, to compromise some source-code repositories and internal systems, the software giant said in a blog and a regulatory filing.


A company spokesman would not characterize what source code was accessed and what capability the hackers gained to further compromise customer and Microsoft systems.


Microsoft said Friday that the hackers stole “secrets” from email communications between the company and unspecified customers — cryptographic secrets such as passwords, certificates and authentication keys — and that it was reaching out to them “to assist in taking mitigating measures.”


Cloud-computing company Hewlett Packard Enterprise disclosed on Jan. 24 that it, too, was an SVR hacking victim and that it had been informed of the breach — by whom it would not say — two weeks earlier, coinciding with Microsoft’s discovery it had been hacked.


“The threat actor’s ongoing attack is characterized by a sustained, significant commitment of the threat actor’s resources, coordination, and focus,” Microsoft said Friday, adding that it could be using obtained data “to accumulate a picture of areas to attack and enhance its ability to do so.” Cybersecurity experts said Microsoft’s admission that the SVR hack had not been contained exposes the perils of the heavy reliance by government and business on the Redmond, Washington, company’s software monoculture — and the fact that so many of its customers are linked through its global cloud network.


“This has tremendous national security implications,” said Tom Kellermann of the cybersecurity firm Contrast Security. “The Russians can now leverage supply chain attacks against Microsoft’s customers.”


Amit Yoran, the CEO of Tenable, also issued a statement, expressing both alarm and dismay. He is among security professionals who find Microsoft overly secretive about its vulnerabilities and how it handles hacks.


“We should all be furious that this keeps happening,” Yoran said. “These breaches aren’t isolated from each other and Microsoft’s shady security practices and misleading statements purposely obfuscate the whole truth.”


Microsoft said it had not yet determined whether the incident is likely to materially impact its finances. It also said the intrusion’s stubbornness “reflects what has become more broadly an unprecedented global threat landscape, especially in terms of sophisticated nation-state attacks.”


The hackers, known as Cozy Bear, are the same hacking team behind the SolarWinds breach.


When it initially announced the hack, Microsoft said the SVR unit broke into its corporate email system and accessed the accounts of some senior executives as well as employees on its cybersecurity and legal teams. It would not say how many accounts were compromised.


At the time, Microsoft said it was able to remove the hackers’ access from the compromised accounts on or about Jan. 13. But by then, they clearly had a foothold. It said they got in by compromising credentials on a “legacy” test account but never elaborated.


Microsoft’s latest disclosure comes three months after a new US Securities and Exchange Commission rule took effect that compels publicly traded companies to disclose breaches that could negatively impact their business.