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Operational Technology Services
As tensions in the Middle East continue to shift among military escalation, ceasefire arrangements and diplomatic negotiations, Iranian-linked cyber actors remain a persistent source of risk for U.S. electric, water and municipal utilities. Iran’s interest in targeting operational technology (OT) as a mechanism of asymmetric warfare is not new. For more than a decade, the U.S. intelligence community has warned that Iran poses a cyberthreat to the critical infrastructure of the U.S. and its allies. What has changed is the maturity and operational relevance of those capabilities.
In 2024, Iran-affiliated actors demonstrated they could access and manipulate U.S. control systems across water, wastewater and energy environments. Those incidents were limited in scope, but they demonstrated that Iran is developing capabilities to affect visibility, control and operations at a time of its choosing. By 2026, government advisories and technical analyses now point to more dangerous and scalable demonstrations of those capabilities. Combined with persistent exposure of internet-facing OT assets, this progression raises the stakes for the safe and reliable delivery of essential services.