Lockheed says F-35 classified data not breached

Tue Apr 21, 2009 10:54pm BST
 
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By Jim Wolf

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon and Lockheed Martin Corp, its top supplier, discounted a published report that cyber spies had stolen secrets of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter being built for the United States and nearly a dozen allies.

"I'm not aware of any specific concerns," Bryan Whitman, a Defense Department spokesman, told reporters of the reported compromise of the Pentagon's costliest arms acquisition plan.

He spoke after the Wall Street Journal said on Tuesday that "terabytes" of the $300 billion program's design and electronic systems data had been grabbed in raids identified by the paper as appearing to have started in China.

The Journal cited current and former officials said to be familiar with the purported computer intrusions, which if confirmed could make it easier to defend against the F-35. It noted it is tough to know the origin of cyberspying for sure because it is relatively easy for experts to mask tracks online.

The radar-evading F-35 is being developed with financing from the United States, Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Turkey, Canada, Australia, Denmark and Norway. Other projected early buyers include Israel and Singapore.

Lockheed Martin's chief financial officer, Bruce Tanner, said: "We actually believe the Wall Street Journal was incorrect in its representation of successful cyber attacks on the F-35 program."

"I've not heard of that, and to our knowledge there's never been any classified information breach," he said during a teleconference on the company's latest earnings.

Tanner acknowledged attacks on Lockheed Martin's systems "are continuous and we do have stringent measures in place to both detect and stop these attacks."  Continued...

 

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