The Most Ruthless Cyber Decapitation in History! Israel Suspected of Using Keyboards to Destroy Iran's Military Finances
This is simply outrageous! Iranian cryptocurrency worth 650 million RMB has vanished without a trace. It wasn't stolen; it was directly thrown into a digital black hole, and even the hackers themselves can't retrieve it.
In simple terms: a hacker group called "Sparrow Hunters" breached Iran's largest cryptocurrency exchange, Nobitex, yesterday. But they didn't act according to the usual playbook; instead of transferring the money out, they deliberately sent it into digital safes that can never be opened. Professionals say that it would take billions of years to crack these safes, effectively erasing this money from the world.
Even more alarming is that the day before, this group hacked into the banking system of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, threatening to reveal internal secrets. This is clearly not the work of ordinary hackers; it is a precise strike aimed at the Iranian military's wallet.
It's important to note that cryptocurrency is particularly important to Iran as it serves as their "secret channel" to bypass U.S. sanctions. Now that this financial lifeline has been severed, the losses extend beyond just 650 million; the entire military profit system could be paralyzed.
Anyone with clear eyes can see that this level of cyber attack is beyond the capability of ordinary hackers. From target selection to technical means, it is entirely a matter of state-level cyber warfare. Although there is no direct evidence, in the Middle East, the only parties with this capability and a grudge against Iran would be Israel.
Experts from Israel are also hinting that this incident is likely related to their intelligence services. Just think about it: Iranian officials were recently assassinated, and now this happens; it’s like using keyboards instead of missiles for a "digital decapitation."
This incident reveals two terrifying facts: first, Iran's cybersecurity is as fragile as paper, and second, modern warfare has entered a new phase. Nowadays, you don't need to deploy planes or tanks to fight; sitting in front of a computer can collapse the opponent's economic system. This type of destructive "scorched earth cyber warfare" is more lethal than traditional weapons and is quietly changing the power dynamics in the Middle East.