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Hacker Decries U.S., Israel On Vietnam Memorial Site

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  • Hacker Decries U.S., Israel On Vietnam Memorial Site

    HACKER DECRIES U.S., ISRAEL ON VIETNAM MEMORIAL SITE
    By Josh White, Washington Post Staff Writer

    Washington Post
    Thursday, September 20, 2007; Page A03
    United States

    A computer hacker promoting Turkish nationalism posted a video and
    message on a U.S. Vietnam memorial Web site in recent days, blocking
    one of the site's search functions while defacing the site with a
    statement against the United States and Israel.

    Users of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial site -- at
    http://www.thewall-usa.com-- who searched for U.S. casualties by
    date were sent to an all-red Web page adorned with a symbol from the
    Turkish flag, a short video, and messages in Turkish and English. The
    English messages attacked Kurds, the United States, Israel and Armenia.

    According to translations, the Turkish message read: "Is there any
    equal or likeness to our martyrs at Gallipoli?" It is an apparent
    reference to the Battle of Gallipoli in 1915 during World War I,
    during which soldiers from the Ottoman Empire repelled an Allied
    operation to capture Istanbul, suffering heavy casualties of more
    than 250,000. The video called it a "story written in blood."

    A "Turk Defacer" took credit for the hack, which users reported
    yesterday to the FBI, the National Park Service and the 4/9 Infantry
    Manchu (Vietnam) Association, which maintains the site. The message
    was removed and the search function restored by last night.

    Jim Olberding of Ames, Iowa, said he found the message yesterday
    while researching Vietnam casualties.

    Olberding -- a Vietnam War veteran whose son is an Army captain
    with tours in Iraq and Afghanistan -- said the message offended
    him. "They're attacking American veterans," he said.

    The site -- a memorial to veterans and a historical repository
    that gets heavy traffic around Memorial Day and Veterans Day --
    was attacked days after the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington
    was defaced with an oily substance. Officials with the 4/9 Infantry
    Association said they received 200 e-mails from users alerting them
    to the hack. The group's leaders were in Memphis over the weekend to
    celebrate the association's 10th anniversary and did not know when
    the hack took place. The nonprofit bought the Web site about eight
    years ago to ensure that it would endure.

    "These kinds of groups are opportunistic and are going to do whatever
    they think they have to do to get their message out," said Cheryl
    Criteser, the association's secretary-treasurer. "I've gotten
    death threats, I've gotten all kinds of negative stuff from other
    countries. I just figure they're wackos."

    A spokesman for the Turkish Embassy in Washington said yesterday that
    the hack did not seem to be part of an organized group.

    Staff writer Jill F. Bartscht and staff researcher Julie Tate
    contributed to this report.
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