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- Informational Materials
- The Stuxnet Worm
- 1St CYBER SECURITY WORKSHOP
- The History of Stuxnet: Key Takeaways for Cyber Decision Makers Military Category Cyber Conflict Studies Association
- Duqu: Analysis, Detection, and Lessons Learned
- Cyber Attack: a Dull Tool to Shape Foreign Policy
- The Middle East's Cyber Power: How Syria's Cyber War Asphyxiated Civil
- A War in the Shadows Spencer Stucky
- Hacking Nation-State Relationships: Exploiting the Vulnerability of the Liberal International Order
- The Changing Face of War: the Stuxnet Virus and the Need for International Regulation of Cyber Conflict by Landon J. Wedermyer
- Alyssa Rose COMP-116: Computer System Security 13-December
- Iran's Ministry of Intelligence and Security: a Profile
- Cyberwar Between Iran and Israel out in the Open
- Stuxnet and the Future of Cyber War James P
- U.S. - Iran Relations: a History of Covert Action and a Promising Future Cody Morgan University of Maine, [email protected]
- The Iranian Cyber Threat to the U.S. Homeland Statement Before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Homeland Security
- MILITARY LAW REVIEW VOLUME 219 • 2014 Volume 219 Spring 2014
- Falco2012 Stuxnetfactsreport.Pdf
- Operation “Olympic Games.” Cyber-Sabotage As a Tool of American Intelligence Aimed at Counteracting the Development of Iran’S Nuclear Programme
- The Iran Threat, in Brief by Adam Hlavek
- Cyberwarfare and Applied Just War Theory: Assessing the Stuxnet Worm Through Jus Ad Bellum and Jus in Bello
- Executive Warmaking Authority and Offensive Cyber Operations: Can Existing Legislation Successfully Constrain Presidential Power?
- The Mysterious Explosions at Iran's Nuclear Facilities
- W32.Duqu the Precursor to the Next Stuxnet Version 1.4 (November 23, 2011)
- Iran: COI Compilation July 2018
- Evolving Menace Iran's Use of Cyber-Enabled Economic Warfare
- W32.Duqu: the Precursor to the Next Stuxnet
- Iran After the Bomb: How Would a Nuclear-Armed Tehran Behave?
- Stuxnet Worm SEARCH Culturenot April 2011 a Declaration of Cyber-War
- Does Stuxnet Demonstrate a Need for Modifications to the Law of Armed Conflict?
- The Democratization of Nation-State Attacks
- Stuxnet Is a New Type of Weapon, a Digital Worm. and It Was Used in the First Cyberattack Known to Have Caused Physical Damage in the Real World
- Stuxnet Was an Attack
- The Cousins of Stuxnet: Duqu, Flame, and Gauss
- To Disclose Or Deceive? to Disclose Or Melinda Haas and Deceive? Keren Yarhi-Milo Sharing Secret Information Between Aligned States
- Iranian Nation-State Sponsored Threat Groups 6
- Threat Group Cards: a Threat Actor Encyclopedia
- Does Stuxnet Demonstrate a Need for Modifications to the Law of Armed Conflict?
- In Defense of Stuxnet
- Duqu, Flame, Gauss: Followers of Stuxnet
- Israel and Iran: a Dangerous Rivalry
- Stuxnet and the Limits of Cyber Warfare
- United States National Security Council
- Duqu– Threat Research and Analysis Mcafee Labs
- Iran's Nuclear Program: Status
- Stuxnet As Cyberwarfare: Applying the Law of War to the Virtual Battlefield, 29 J
- Stuxnet and Its Hidden Lessons on the Ethics of Cyberweapons P