Foreign Policy Blogs

“Flame” and Smoke

flamecode

Flame receives its name from a module in its toolkit. Source: Wired/Kaspersky

Me culpa. Yesterday I speculated about the origins of Flame and noted at the outset that Stuxnet generally is attributed to Israel, perhaps with the United States as an accessory. In an exhaustive report published this morning, the New York Times reports that Stuxnet was in fact a U.S. product, part of a cyber-sabotage program initiated in George W. Bush’s administration and greatly accelerated under Obama, starting in the new president’s first weeks in office. Though the Times says Flame was not per se part of the overall program, dubbed Olympic Games, the kind of intelligence gathering Flame was designed to do would seem consistent with Stuxnet. The first step in Stuxnet, says the Times, was to write a “beacon” program that would map out the electronic workings of the Natanz enrichment plant in detail.

 

Author

William Sweet

Bill Sweet has been writing about nuclear arms control and peace politics since interning at the IAEA in Vienna during summer 1974, right after India's test of a "peaceful nuclear device." As an editor and writer for Congressional Quarterly, Physics Today and IEEE Spectrum magazine he wrote about the freeze and European peace movements, space weaponry and Star Wars, Iraq, North Korea and Iran. His work has appeared in magazines like the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists and The New Republic, as well as in The New York Times, the LA Times, Newsday and the Baltimore Sun. The author of two books--The Nuclear Age: Energy, Proliferation and the Arms Race, and Kicking the Carbon Habit: The Case for Renewable and Nuclear Energy--he recently published "Situating Putin," a group of essays about contemporary Russia, as an e-book. He teaches European history as an adjunct at CUNY's Borough of Manhattan Community College.