Lithuania army website hack hoax reveals 'NATO plans to annex Russia's Kaliningrad’

Lithuania army website hack hoax reveals 'NATO plans to annex Russia's Kaliningrad’
Fecha de publicación: 
11 June 2015
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The information on the army’s page alleges that ‘Sword-Stroke’ – the NATO military drills going on in Poland and the Baltic – are actually a preparation for the annexation of Kaliningrad, Russia’s westernmost city, sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania, which separates it from mainland Russia.

Lithuanian defense ministry spokesman, Victoria Cemenite, confirmed to the Delfi news agency that a hack has in fact occurred, and that the false information has since been removed from the website.

Screenshot from Ministry of National Defence website
Screenshot from Ministry of National Defence website

“Analysts with the National Center for Cybersecurity are investigating the hack,” she added.
Reporters also learned that the “servers of the Headquarters of the armed forces are being protected by a private company.”

READ MORE: NATO in E. Europe: 6,000 in Lithuania war games, Polish HQ doubles troops

The drills (June 1-19), organized by US military in Europe, are taking place in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland, and feature around 6,000 troops from 13 NATO member-states, as well as Finland. These are Lithuania’s biggest military exercises since joining the alliance in 2004.

Reuters / Kacper Pempel
Reuters / Kacper Pempel

NATO generals have told reporters the exercises are aimed at honing interoperability.

During the two-stage exercise, land and air forces have been carrying out joint operations in the field, followed by commanders conducting a separate computer simulation of a regional conflict.

The UK has announced that it has sent its biggest warship for the drills.

The exercises stem from concerns over neighboring Russia, intensified by the Baltic States and their allegations of Russian activities in Ukraine.

Moscow, for its part, has responded with promises to ramp up security in Crimea. “Naturally, we will increase our forces in Crimea because NATO countries have stepped up their activities in the immediate vicinity of our borders,” said Aleksandr Grushko, Russia’s envoy to NATO, in mid-May.

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