Cyber operations are thought to be a cost-effective way for North Korea to maintain an asymmetric military option, as well as a means to gather intelligence; its primary intelligence targets are South Korea, Japan, and the United States.[10]
The activities of the agency came to public attention in December 2014 when Sony Pictures canceled the opening of its movie The Interview after its computers had been hacked.[12][13] Bureau 121 has been blamed for the cyber breach, but North Korea has rejected this accusation.[14]
Much of the agency's activity has been directed at South Korea.[7][10] Prior to the attack at Sony, North Korea was said to have attacked more than 30,000 PCs in South Korea affecting banks and broadcasting companies as well as the website of South Korean President Park Geun-hye.[7][10][15] North Korea has also been thought to have been responsible for infecting thousands of South Korean smartphones in 2013 with a malicious gaming application.[14] The attacks on South Korea were allegedly conducted by a group then called DarkSeoul Gang and estimated by the computer security company Symantec to have only 10 to 50 members with a "unique" ability to infiltrate websites.[7]
American authorities believe that North Korea has military offensive cyber operations capability and may have been responsible for malicious cyber activity since 2009.[10] As part of its sophisticated set-up, cells from Bureau 121 are believed to be operating around the world.[16][17][18] One of the suspected locations of a Bureau 121 cell is the Chilbosan Hotel in Shenyang, China.[11][19][5]
South Korea has also repeatedly blamed Bureau 121 for conducting GPS jamming aimed at South Korea. The most recent case of jamming occurred on 1 April 2016.
Structure
Bureau 121 consists of the following units as of 2019:[20]
Bureau 121 is the largest (more than 600 hackers) and most sophisticated unit in the RGB.[5][6][16] According to a report by Reuters, Bureau 121 is staffed by some of North Korea's most talented computer experts and is run by the Korean military.[7] A defector indicated that the agency has about 1,800 specialists. Many of the bureau's hackers are hand-picked graduates of the University of Automation, Pyongyang[7] and spend five years in training.[23] A 2021 estimate suggested that there may be over 6,000 members in Bureau 121, with many of them operating in other countries, such as Belarus, China, India, Malaysia, and Russia.[16]
While these specialists are scattered around the world, their families benefit from special privileges at home.[17]
^
Park, Donghui (2019). "3.5 North Korea's Cyber Proxy Warfare Strategy"(PDF). North Korea's Cyber Proxy Warfare: Origins, Strategy, and Regional Security Dynamics (PhD). University of Washington. pp. 137–150.
^ abcHealthcare Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center, (HC3) (2021). "North Korean Cyber Activity"(PDF). U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)