[Infowarrior] - MoD security manual leaked on web

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Tue Oct 6 17:31:31 UTC 2009


MoD's security manual leaked on web
MoD excels itself
By Nick Farrell
Tuesday, 6 October 2009, 17:03
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1557599/mod-security-manual-leaked-web


THE UK MINISTRY OF LEAKS, er, Defence (MoD), has seen its manual of  
how to avoid leaks, leaked onto the world wide web.

The MoD, which has a habit of leaving all kinds of classified  
documents laying about where they can be nicked, apparently wrote a  
560,000-word Defence Manual of Security in 2001 that told its would-be  
James and Jamie Bonds how to avoid leakage of secret or possibly  
embarrassing data.

Somehow the document ended up on Wikileaks and it makes for rather  
amusing reading, actually.

It seems that the MoD is particularly concerned about information  
getting into the hands of investigative journalists as much as the  
ever feared "subversive or terrorist organisations".

Chinese agents are "expert flatterers and are well aware of the  
softening effect of food and alcohol", according to the document.

Chinese spies are very different from the portrayal of 'Moscow Rules'  
in the novels of John Le Carre, the manual reads.

"The Chinese make no distinction between information and intelligence.  
Their appetite for information, particularly in the scientific and  
technical field, is vast and indiscriminate.

"They do not run agents, they make friends. Although there are Chinese  
intelligence officers, both civilian and military, these fade into  
insignificance behind the mass of ordinary students, businessmen and  
locally employed staff who are working (at least part-time) on the  
orders of various parts of the State intelligence-gathering  
apparatus," the manual further warns.

Chinese spooks employ telephone and electronic bugs in hotels and  
restaurants. They have also been known to search hotel rooms and to  
use surveillance techniques against visitors of particular interest.

You should never shag anyone, deal in black-market currency or Chinese  
antiques and artifacts, stray into 'forbidden' areas or make  
injudicious use of a camera or video recorder.

The same advice applies to going to Russia. Apparently the FSB [the  
Russian security service and successor to the legendary KGB] makes  
extensive use of sophisticated technical devices.

"In the main hotels, all telephones can be tapped and in some rooms  
visual or photographic surveillance can be carried out, if necessary  
using infra-red cameras to take photographs in the dark."

The MoD is fairly laid back about its documents ending up on the net,  
apparently. It was only marked 'restricted'. MoD policy is to keep  
security policies and procedures private, as an MoD spokesman has been  
quoted as having said. Policy it might be, but obviously it hasn't  
worked.

The MoD manual dates from 2001 and apparently it's out of date and  
things are so different now that it's no loss that the UK's useless  
Government's security guidance is plastered up on the web for all to  
see. µ


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