Military submarine maker springs leak after “hack”—India, Oz hit dive alarm


August 24, 2016

A massive leak of documents on India’s new military submarines from French shipbuilder DCNS is the result of a hack, the country’s defence minister said on Wednesday.

Manohar Parrikar claimed, according to local reports, that the entire designs of its Scorpene submarines hadn’t been disclosed. “First step is to identify if its related to us, and anyway its not all 100 percent leak,” he was quoted as saying.

The documents were made public by The Australian on Tuesday, which described the breach as an “Edward Snowden-sized leak.”

A DCNS spokesperson told Ars: “DCNS has been made aware of articles published in the Australian press related to the leakage of sensitive data about Indian Scorpene. This serious matter is thoroughly investigated by the proper French national authorities for defence security. This investigation will determine the exact nature of the leaked documents, the potential damages to DCNS customers as well as the responsibilities for this leakage.”

Although the 22,000-page cache of documents date from 2011, they give very detailed technical information about the combat capability of the Scorpene vessels, which are currently in use in Malaysia and Chile. India signed the £2.6 billion deal for six of the boats in 2005—they are to be built in conjunction with an Indian government-owned Mumbai shipbuilder—and Brazil is due to deploy the vessels in 2018.

Such sensitive information in the wrong hands would have huge ramifications for national security in all four countries. “It appears that the source of leak is from overseas and not in India,” Parrikar said, vowing to investigate further

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