07/28/2025 / By Finn Heartley
In a stunning cyberattack with global repercussions, France’s Naval Group—the nation’s premier naval defense contractor—has suffered a catastrophic breach of classified nuclear submarine combat management systems. According to intelligence sources and hacking forums, the attackers exfiltrated 13GB of sensitive data, including missile launch protocols and guidance algorithms for France’s ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs).
The breach, first reported by cybersecurity watchdog CyberNews, reveals that hackers infiltrated the Combat Management Systems (CMS) used aboard France’s Triomphant-class nuclear submarines—vessels armed with M51 SLBMs (submarine-launched ballistic missiles) capable of striking targets up to 10,000 kilometers away. Authorities fear hostile actors could exploit the stolen data to remotely compromise command systems, manipulate missile trajectories, or even trigger unauthorized launches—an apocalyptic scenario NATO is scrambling to mitigate.
The stolen data reportedly includes:
Security analysts warn the breach could destabilize nuclear deterrence and embolden adversarial states—particularly amid escalating tensions between NATO, Russia, and China. “This isn’t just espionage; it’s a potential kill switch for France’s sea-based nuclear arsenal,” said a former French naval officer under condition of anonymity.
Unlike typical ransomware attacks, the hackers—identity still unknown—have not demanded monetary payment. Instead, they issued a chilling ultimatum to Naval Group: comply with unspecified conditions or face public leaks of the trove. The lack of a financial motive suggests state-backed sabotage, with analysts pointing to Russia, China, or even insider threats as potential culprits.
French defense officials have ordered an emergency review of submarine cybersecurity protocols, while NATO allies brace for fallout. “If hostile actors gain the ability to spoof missile commands, the entire Atlantic security framework collapses,” warned a NATO liaison in Brussels.
France has yet to confirm the attack’s full scope, but Defense Minister Sébastien Lecornu is expected to address Parliament this week. Meanwhile, U.S. Cyber Command has reportedly offered technical assistance, signaling transatlantic alarm.
Final Thought: As cyberwarfare eclipses traditional battlefields, the Naval Group breach may mark a turning point—where stolen code becomes as deadly as a stolen warhead.
Watch the July 28 episode of “Brighteon Broadcast News” as Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, talks about European nuclear missile submarine control system source code stolen by hackers; could strike the USA with 600+ thermonuclear warheads.
This video is from the Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.
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