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Threats / Actors / Leviathan
G0065 Nation-stateour call,
not MITRE’s
ATT&CK Group

Leviathan

How MITRE ATT&CK characterizes this group1: Leviathan is a Chinese state-sponsored cyber espionage group that has been attributed to the Ministry of State Security's (MSS) Hainan State Security Department and an affiliated front company. Active since at least 2009, Leviathan has targeted the following sectors: academia, aerospace/aviation, biomedical, defense industrial base, government, healthcare, manufacturing, maritime, and transportation across the US, Canada, Australia, Europe, the Middle…

Origin / sponsor: not established from a curated public advisory — see Coverage & confidence. Not asserted here.

Also tracked as: MUDCARP Kryptonite Panda Gadolinium BRONZE MOHAWK TEMP.Jumper APT40 TEMP.Periscope Gingham Typhoon — ATT&CK group page1
Read this as · tier is our editorial call, not MITRE’s

Read as a state-directed operator, not a smash-and-grab.

A nation-state classification means patience, tradecraft, and an intelligence objective. When this name attaches to a vulnerability, the question shifts from “will someone exploit it” to “has a well-resourced service already built it into an operation.” All tradecraft below is sourced to MITRE ATT&CK.

50
Techniques
ATT&CK count1
17
Named tools / malware
ATT&CK count2
1
Attributed campaigns
ATT&CK count1
12
Tactics spanned
ATT&CK count1
~2022–2022approx.
Activity bounds (campaign floor)
approximate1
01

Known for

— signature moves, each sourced to ATT&CK
CampaignLeviathan Australian Intrusions. ATT&CK tracks this attributed operation as C0049.70
ArsenalNamed tooling. ATT&CK attributes 17 tools/malware to this group, including Windows Credential Editor, China Chopper, Derusbi, gh0st RAT.53
ReachFurthest outcome. This actor's cited tradecraft reaches as far as outcome 4 — Data at risk — exfiltration. (editorial mapping over ATT&CK tactics).
02

Tradecraft heatmap

— ATT&CK techniques mapped onto the five attacker-outcome narratives

Each row is a documented technique (MITRE ATT&CK). Each column is one of the five attacker-outcome narratives a defender funds against. A filled cell means this technique’s own ATT&CK tactic defensibly advances that outcome. The mapping of technique→outcome is our editorial alignment over ATT&CK's tactic data, not a separately-sourced MITRE edge. A filled cell means one of the technique's own ATT&CK tactics defensibly advances that outcome; enabler tactics (C2, Defense Evasion, Discovery) heat no column.

1Front door
2Keys to the kingdom
3Lateral reach
4Data at risk
5Lights out

Reach: this actor’s cited techniques light columns 1·2·3·4 — furthest is 4 · Data at risk. (furthest-position idiom, reused from the landing map).

A dot = this technique advances that outcomeColumn 5 (Lights out) is empty — Compare: a ransomware or wiper actor lights column 5.
Editorial: the technique→outcome alignment is our call over ATT&CK’s tactic data, not a separately-sourced MITRE edge — same basis the landing page declares. Enabler tactics (C2, defense evasion, discovery) heat no column.1
03

Arsenal

— named tools & malware ATT&CK attributes to this group
Windows Credential EditorS0005 · Tool
China ChopperS0020 · Malware
DerusbiS0021 · Malware
gh0st RATS0032 · Malware
NetS0039 · Tool
BLACKCOFFEES0069 · Malware
atS0110 · Tool
Cobalt StrikeS0154 · Malware
+9 moreCoverage

ATT&CK attributes 17 tools/malware to G0065 in total; the full list is on the group page.

04

Campaign highlights

— attributed operations in the ATT&CK record
A

Leviathan Australian Intrusions — ATT&CK Campaign C0049

Attributed operation
ATT&CK records Leviathan Australian Intrusions (C0049) — roughly 2022–2022 as an operation attributed to this group.70
Open ATT&CK C0049 ↗
05

Latest activity

— with explicit confidence, and what we cannot yet claim
ATT&CK
snapshot

The most recent cited activity in this card is the ATT&CK record itself. We do not paste a “last seen this week” line we cannot source. Recency from secondary reporting appears here only when attached to a named advisory.

ATT&CK snapshot, compiled 2026-06-22Coverage gap — live “currently active” status not asserted
CVE ↔ actor bridge — Known exploits / Linked CVEs every link below traces to a named source; tier is explicit
Known exploits — confirmed by named advisory 5 CVE(s)
CVE-2021-31207 →

The CISA-led joint advisory AA24-190A names APT40 (tracked in ATT&CK as Leviathan) as a PRC Ministry of State Security group that rapidly weaponizes newly public vulnerabilities, naming the ProxyShell Exchange chain, Log4Shell, and Atlassian Confluence CVEs alongside the group.

CISA AA24-190A — names this group + CVE ↗
CVE-2021-34523 →

The CISA-led joint advisory AA24-190A names APT40 (tracked in ATT&CK as Leviathan) as a PRC Ministry of State Security group that rapidly weaponizes newly public vulnerabilities, naming the ProxyShell Exchange chain, Log4Shell, and Atlassian Confluence CVEs alongside the group.

CISA AA24-190A — names this group + CVE ↗
CVE-2021-34473 →

The CISA-led joint advisory AA24-190A names APT40 (tracked in ATT&CK as Leviathan) as a PRC Ministry of State Security group that rapidly weaponizes newly public vulnerabilities, naming the ProxyShell Exchange chain, Log4Shell, and Atlassian Confluence CVEs alongside the group.

CISA AA24-190A — names this group + CVE ↗
CVE-2021-44228 →

The CISA-led joint advisory AA24-190A names APT40 (tracked in ATT&CK as Leviathan) as a PRC Ministry of State Security group that rapidly weaponizes newly public vulnerabilities, naming the ProxyShell Exchange chain, Log4Shell, and Atlassian Confluence CVEs alongside the group.

CISA AA24-190A — names this group + CVE ↗
CVE-2021-26084 →

The CISA-led joint advisory AA24-190A names APT40 (tracked in ATT&CK as Leviathan) as a PRC Ministry of State Security group that rapidly weaponizes newly public vulnerabilities, naming the ProxyShell Exchange chain, Log4Shell, and Atlassian Confluence CVEs alongside the group.

CISA AA24-190A — names this group + CVE ↗
Inferred / reported — lower confidence, never headline attribution 1 link(s)

These are not confirmed attribution. An inferred link is a structural ATT&CK chain (this group uses a tool whose reference cites the CVE); it is back-cited to the original report and never claims the source names the group.

CVE-2015-5119 →

ATT&CK attributes gh0st RAT (S0032) to this group, and that software’s ATT&CK reference cites CVE-2015-5119. Structural chain — not a statement that the report names the group.

original report (cited on the ATT&CK software page) ↗
06

Coverage & confidence

— what we know, and what we don’t

Established (cited)

  • Group identity, aliases, description — MITRE ATT&CK group page
  • 50 techniques — ATT&CK technique pages (linked per row)
  • 17 software (arsenal) — ATT&CK software pages
  • 1 attributed campaign(s) — ATT&CK campaign pages
  • 10 third-party research citations — ATT&CK external references
  • Coverage gaps — stated, not hidden

  • Origin/sponsor not established from a curated public advisory. ATT&CK prose may imply attribution but is not asserted here — absence of a curated source is a coverage finding, not a clean bill of attribution.
  • Threat tier is OUR editorial classification (rule-based), not a MITRE field — labeled as such.
  • Technique → outcome heatmap is editorial alignment over ATT&CK tactic data, not a separately-sourced MITRE edge.
  • Activity bounds are a floor from attributed-campaign dates only — flagged approx., not a true active-since range.
  • ATT&CK has no first-class group→CVE relationship; this card asserts no specific CVE without a named advisory.
  • Empty heatmap column(s): Lights out — consistent with this actor's nature, stated as a finding.