Image source: CBS News via YouTube
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You May Be Surprised by Who Likens Chinese Hackers — Who Cost the U.S. Economy Billions Each Year — to a 'Drunk Burglar\
October 05, 2014
"They're kickin' in the front door, knocking over the vase, while they're walking out with your television set."
WASHINGTON (TheBlaze/AP) — FBI Director James Comey compared Chinese hackers — who cost the U.S. economy billions of dollars every year — to a "drunk burglar" who steals with reckless abandon.
In an interview broadcast Sunday on CBS' "60 Minutes," Comey said Chinese hackers target the intellectual property of U.S. companies in China every day.
Image source: CBS News via YouTube
"I liken them a bit to a drunk burglar," Comey said. "They're kickin' in the front door, knocking over the vase, while they're walking out with your television set. They're just prolific. Their strategy seems to be: 'We'll just be everywhere all the time. And there's no way they can stop us.'"
The Justice Department earlier this year announced a 31-count indictment against Chinese hackers accused of breaking into computer networks at steel companies and the manufacturers of solar and nuclear technology, with the goal of gaining a competitive advantage. China has denied the allegations.
In the CBS interview, Comey also discussed the U.S. fight against terrorism, describing the terrorist networks within Syria as a sophisticated "metastasis" of Al Qaeda.
He said the Khorasan Group, an Al Qaeda cell in Syria targeted in military strikes last month, was "working and, you know, may still be working on an effort to attack the United States or our allies, and looking to do it very, very soon."
"Given our visibility we know they're serious people, bent on destruction," Comey said.
The small group of Al Qaeda veterans from Afghanistan and Pakistan was targeted in strikes near Aleppo, Syria, last month. Senior U.S. officials have not said whether the group's plots have been disrupted.
Comey said the U.S. believes there are about a dozen Americans fighting alongside extremist groups in Syria. He said if someone has fought alongside the Islamic State militant group and tries to come back to the U.S., "we will track them very carefully."
He said Americans should have confidence in changes made since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, pointing to a government "better organized, better systems, better equipment, smarter deployment. We're better in every way that you'd want us to be since 9/11."
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Sr. Editor, News
Dave Urbanski is a senior editor for Blaze News.
DaveVUrbanski
Dave Urbanski
Sr. Editor, News
Dave Urbanski is a senior editor for Blaze News and has been writing for Blaze News since 2013. He has also been a newspaper reporter, a magazine editor, and a book editor. He resides in New Jersey. You can reach him at durbanski@blazemedia.com.
@DaveVUrbanski →more stories
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