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Nation-stateApr 9, 2026

Inside the FBI’s router takedown that cut off APT28’s ‘tremendous access’

FBI disrupts APT28 campaign that compromised 18,000+ TP-Link routers across 200+ organizations.

Summary

The FBI, in partnership with foreign governments and private sector, executed Operation Masquerade to disrupt a Russian GRU-attributed APT28 campaign that compromised over 18,000 TP-Link routers used in small offices and homes. The attackers propagated malicious DNS settings through the routers to intercept traffic from all connected devices, providing what FBI officials described as 'tremendous access' to sensitive information. The operation involved sending commands to reset DNS configurations on compromised routers to prevent further exploitation.

Full text

The recent FBI-led operation to knock Russian government hackers off routers sought to topple an especially insidious and threateningly contagious cyberespionage campaign, top bureau cyber official Brett Leatherman told CyberScoop. Researchers, along with U.S. and foreign government agencies, revealed details of the campaign this week by which APT28 — also known as Forest Blizzard or Fancy Bear, and attributed to Russia’s Main Intelligence Directorate of the General Staff (GRU) — compromised more 18,000 TP-Link routers and infiltrated more than 200 organizations worldwide. The compromise of routers used in small and home offices prompted the takedown operation, Operation Masquerade, which involved sending commands to the routers to reset Domain Name System (DNS) settings to prevent the hackers from exploiting that access. “What’s unique to me in this one is that when you change the internet settings in a router like they did, it propagates to all the devices in your house,” Leatherman, assistant director of the FBI’s cyber division, said. “All those devices now, once they’re connected to that Wi-Fi, are getting the malicious IP addresses that they are then routing their traffic through, and it gives the Russian GRU tremendous access to the content offered through a router itself.” “The difficulty in an attack like this is that it’s virtually invisible to the end users,” he said. “Actors were not deploying malware like we often see. And so when you think about endpoint detection on your computer or something like that, it’s not seeing that activity because they don’t have to. They’re using the tools on the router itself to capture your internet traffic and extend it throughout the house, and so traditional tools that detect that activity [are] just not there.” The disruption operation is in line with the cyber strategy the Trump administration published last month, with its emphasis on going on offense against malicious hackers and protecting critical infrastructure, Leatherman said. The FBI understands its role in implementing that strategy, he said, and worked with the Office of the National Cyber Director and other agencies in developing it. The White House has kept the public and Capitol Hill in the dark about strategy implementation, however. “We’ve got a long track record of leveraging unique authorities and capabilities to counter these actors, to impose costs, and through the 56 field offices to really defend critical infrastructure,” Leatherman said. “That’s part of our DNA, really. And so we want to make sure that we continue to align that in the most scalable and agile way we can, to align with the priorities of the strategy itself.” Leatherman traced how Operation Masquerade — the success of which he credited to the FBI’s Boston offices and partnerships with the private sector and foreign governments — fits into a series of disruptions aimed at Russian government hackers dating back to 2018. That’s when the bureau took on the VPNFilter botnet by seizing a domain used to communicate with infected routers. In 2022, the FBI took on the Cyclops Blink botnet, and in 2024, Operation Dying Ember went after another botnet. “”Over the course of those four operations, while the adversary continued to evolve in their tradecraft, so did we,” Leatherman said. “We moved from just sinkholing domains to actually taking steps that block them at the door of these routers, pulled any capability off of those routers so they were no longer able to collect the sensitive information, and then prohibited them from getting back in.” Share Facebook LinkedIn Twitter Copy Link

Indicators of Compromise

  • malware — VPNFilter
  • malware — Cyclops Blink

Entities

APT28 (Forest Blizzard, Fancy Bear) (threat_actor)Russian GRU (Main Intelligence Directorate of the General Staff) (threat_actor)Operation Masquerade (campaign)Operation Dying Ember (campaign)TP-Link routers (product)FBI Cyber Division (vendor)