Three threat activity clusters aligned with China have targeted a government organization in Southeast Asia as part of what has been described as a “complex and well-resourced operation.”
The campaigns have led to the deployment of various malware families, including HIUPAN (aka USBFect, MISTCLOAK, or U2DiskWatch), PUBLOAD, EggStremeFuel (aka RawCookie), EggStremeLoader (aka Gorem RAT), MASOL RAT, PoshRAT, TrackBak Stealer, RawCookie, Hypnosis Loader, and FluffyGh0st.
“These activity clusters overlap with publicly reported campaigns aimed at establishing persistent access,” Palo Alto Networks Unit 42 researchers Doel Santos and Hiroaki Hara said. “Significant overlap in tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) with known China-aligned campaigns suggests the clusters and threat group have a common target of interest, potentially coordinating their effort.”
The Mustang Panda activity, recorded between June 1 and August 15, 2025, entailed the use of a USB-based malware known as HIUPAN to deliver the PUBLOAD backdoor by means of a rogue DLL codenamed Claimloader. The threat actor’s first recorded use of Claimloader dates back to late 2022 in attacks targeting government organizations in the Philippines.
Additional analysis of the victim network has uncovered the deployment of COOLCLIENT, another known backdoor attributed to Mustang Panda for more than three years. It supports file download/upload, keystroke recording, packet tunneling, and port map information capture.
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