Hackers imitate Putin to say that Ukraine has invaded Russia

An emergency television and radio broadcast apparently from President Vladimir Putin announcing that Ukraine had invaded Russia was the result of a hacker attack, the Kremlin has acknowledged.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
04 June 2023 Sunday 22:21
6 Reads
Hackers imitate Putin to say that Ukraine has invaded Russia

An emergency television and radio broadcast apparently from President Vladimir Putin announcing that Ukraine had invaded Russia was the result of a hacker attack, the Kremlin has acknowledged. The fake ad claimed that "Ukrainian troops armed to the teeth by NATO and with the consent and support of Washington have invaded the Kursk, Belgorod and Bryansk regions." He also falsely announced that martial law had been declared and that a general evacuation of citizens was underway in the three border regions.

Putin "definitely" did not make any appeals to the nation and the pirated broadcast shown on various networks has been removed, Kremlin spokesman Dmitri Peskov said, according to the state news service Tass. There was no indication as to who may have been involved and how the broadcast appeared to include the president's voice and likeness.

The video and radio message apparently showed Putin addressing the Russians as "brothers and sisters" and declaring martial law in the Belgorod, Briansk and Kursk regions after he said it was a Ukrainian invasion backed by weapons of NATO and that it had started at 4 in the morning.

The president's resembling voice urged residents to evacuate “the depths of Russian territory” and said he would shortly declare a full-scale mobilization to defend against the attack, before ending with: “The enemy will be defeated, victory will be ours."

The broadcast came after fighting recently broke out in the Belgorod region with cross-border raids from Ukraine by a Russian volunteer militia committed to ousting Putin. The Russian Defense Ministry has sent troops backed by artillery and air support to repel the interventions.

Officials in the Belgorod region said the broadcast was an alleged forgery intended to "sow panic among peaceful residents".

Meanwhile, in the neighboring Voronezh region, officials also warned residents about "hacking of radio transmission frequencies." Officials added that "there is no cause for concern."

One of the stations that was hacked, Radio Mir, said the incident lasted around 40 minutes.

The broadcast seemed to have echoes of the responses of the leaders of the Soviet Union at the beginning of the Nazi German invasion on June 22, 1941. The Soviet Foreign Minister at the time, Vyacheslav Molotov, said that the invasion had begun at 4 a.m. in a radio address that day that ended with the words “the enemy will be defeated. Victory will be ours." Stalin, for his part, addressed the population as “brothers and sisters” in a July 3 speech calling for resistance to the invaders.