Workingman wrote:Anyone could have done it.
Wrong. These attacks happened simultaneously in at least 3 major cities with hundreds of miles of separation and were synchronised activities. Not just "anybody" could have carried them out. Not only that, but we'd need to understand just how they synchronised these attacks.
People don't just wake up in the middle of the night and say "hey I'm going to phone a bunch of like minded people and trash the fibre communications backbone for France". This took long and meticulous planning and flawless execution. Most people don't have a clue just how difficult that is over these distances. Especially as mobile phone and internet blackout was almost certainly required in order to ensure they got away without leaving obvious traces. They didn't just hit "any" fibre cables. They hit city to city backbone nexus points. That means a LOT of specific knowledge about how these networks were connected and where the crucial nexus points were. Everything about this shrieks "massive planning". They did not hit any fibre access points that were not critical nexus points.
As the investigation goes on I expect to hear that all the obvious quick investigative wins were not present.
No mobile phones or mobile internet active on the towers closest to the sites. No vehicles having passed any recording devices. No CCTV. France has very strict laws on CCTV which means that unless you have an overriding security issue, you can't put them up.
The next place they will look? Online for any traceable chatter about what was done and who did it. Like boasting. My guess? They won't find anything.
This was a professional hit on the fibre infrastructure of France. Traces will be all but invisible.
Then there have to be conclusions. I've already seen one security consultancy ruminating on just how impossible this was to happen. They didn't defend against it because it simply wasn't going to happen.
Whilst this will die a quiet death in the UK press, I'll be following up locally.