September25, 2008:
In Myanmar (Burma), the
military dictatorship has used Cyber War techniques to shut down the three opposition
web sites that provide the most information on what is going on inside the
country. The generals apparently hired several botnets (networks of illegally
controlled PCs, yours might be one of them and you wouldn't know it) to smother
the anti-dictatorship websites with phony visitors (a "DDOS attack").
The botnets (tens, or hundreds of thousands of hijacked PCs) are run by
criminals who rent them out for sending spam, DDOS attacks or several other
types of Internet based scams. The Myanmar government launched these DDOS
attacks now because of major demonstrations that occurred in Myanmar this time
last hear.
The generals
shut down those demonstrations, which were led by Buddhist monks mobilizing popular unrest over
an increase in the price of fuel. The unrest was suppressed with arrests, raids
on monasteries and shutting down cell phone and Internet service. Several
hundred demonstrators have been killed. Similar disturbances in 1998 resulted
in violence that left over 3,000 dead (mostly demonstrators). The military are
not just killing people, but very effectively shutting down any organization
the demonstrators have. The army and police have planned for this sort of thing
better than the demonstrators.
Myanmar has
been ruled by a military dictatorship for the last 45 years. The generals have
run the economy into the ground, and succeeded in suppressing all attempts at
establishing a representative government. They have also managed to maintain
the support of a fairly large army. How have they managed to pull this off for
so long? Simple, the generals have concentrated on maintaining the loyalty of
the officers and senior NCOs in the armed forces. This is done by making the military
a well paid, by Burmese standards, profession, and select carefully from among
those who apply to be career soldiers.
About one percent of Burma's 50 million
people are in the armed forces (including paramilitary intelligence and
security secret police type organizations.) The secret police keep an eye on
the troops, and the troops keep an eye (and often gun pointed at) the people.
Myanmar only spends about a billion dollars a year on the armed forces, most of
that going to pay and living expenses of infantry troops. But there's enough
left over to hire Cyber War mercenaries.