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After Stuxnet virus, Iran has been in the grip of network-paranoia

April 26, 2012 13:35
Web war: Ahmadinejad

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

2 min read

Iran's leadership has repeatedly said over the past couple of years that the destructive Stuxnet computer worm was easily vanquished and caused little damage to the centrifuges carrying out uranium enrichment.

Whatever the truth of this statement, it is clear that the damage of Stuxnet is enduring in the deep, lingering suspicion of Iranian officials, scientists and researchers towards vital computer networks.

Every few months since Stuxnet struck, news has emerged from Iran of yet another cyber-attack on one of the country's vital infrastructures, valiantly deflected by Persian software experts. From what we do know about Stuxnet, it was the product of a large team of programmers who spent many months constructing it, an effort that could have been undertaken only by a country at the forefront of computer technology. In other words, if the same team was to embark on another assault, they would surpass themselves.

It is hard to believe that any of the recent reported attacks, including "Wiper", the mysterious virus that last week disrupted the computers of Iran's oil export facilities, came from the same source. But for a long time to come, the authors of the Stuxnet code have no need to create a repeat performance. The shockwaves are still reverberating and every bog-standard virus written by teenage hackers over a wet weekend will generate enough hysteria in Tehran to prompt the precautionary shutdown of thousands of computers.