not MITRE’s ATT&CK Group
Aoqin Dragon
How MITRE ATT&CK characterizes this group1: Aoqin Dragon is a suspected Chinese cyber espionage threat group that has been active since at least 2013. Aoqin Dragon has primarily targeted government, education, and telecommunication organizations in Australia, Cambodia, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Vietnam. Security researchers noted a potential association between Aoqin Dragon and UNC94, based on malware, infrastructure, and targets.
Origin / sponsor: not established from a curated public advisory — see Coverage & confidence. Not asserted here.
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.
Known for
— signature moves, each sourced to ATT&CKTradecraft heatmap
— ATT&CK techniques mapped onto the five attacker-outcome narrativesEach 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.
Reach: this actor’s cited techniques light columns 1·3 — furthest is 3 · Lateral reach. (furthest-position idiom, reused from the landing map).
Arsenal
— named tools & malware ATT&CK attributes to this groupCampaign highlights
— attributed operations in the ATT&CK recordNo attributed campaigns — coverage gap
Latest activity
— with explicit confidence, and what we cannot yet claimsnapshot
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.