International | Ghosts in the machines

The new front in China’s cyber campaign against America

Big powers are preparing for wartime sabotage

An illustration of a sinister figure crouching between two screens.
Illustration: Mark Pernice

THE ISLAND of Guam, a tiny American territory that lies more than 6,000km west of Hawaii, has long known that it would take a battering in any Sino-American war. The island’s expanding airfields and ports serve as springboards for American ships, subs and bombers. In the opening hours of a conflict, these would be subject to wave after wave of Chinese missiles. But an advance party of attackers seems to have lurked quietly within Guam’s infrastructure for years. In mid-2021 a Chinese hacking group—later dubbed Volt Typhoon—burrowed deep inside the island’s communication systems. The intrusions had no obvious utility for espionage. They were intended, as America’s government would later conclude, for “disruptive or destructive cyber-attacks against…critical infrastructure in the event of a major crisis or conflict”. Sabotage, in short.

Explore more

This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline “Ghosts in the machines”

The rise of Chinese science: Welcome or worrying?

From the June 15th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from International

Can Donald Trump’s Iron Dome plan keep America safe?

In a dangerous world, cutting-edge missile defence is all the rage

Why the war on childhood obesity is failing

Sugar taxes and obesity drugs will not be enough


Paris could change how cities host the Olympics for good

The games will test the success of new solutions to old bugbears


Could America fight its enemies without breaking the law?

The speed and intensity of prospective conflicts could test the laws of war

How China and Russia could hobble the internet

The undersea cables that connect the world are becoming military targets

Trump and other populists will haunt NATO’s 75th birthday party

Threats to Western alliances lie both within and without the club