- What: A new espionage campaign called SideWinder is expanding in Southeast Asia
- Impact: Targets include government and corporate entities in the region
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Robert Lemos , Contributing Writer March 18, 2026 4 Min Read Source: Chantelle Bosch via Shutterstock Recent cyber-espionage activity attributed to the SideWinder threat group suggests that the India-linked operation has expanded across Southeast Asia, including Indonesia and Thailand, while continuing to rely on phishing, credential theft, and infrastructure churn to avoid detection. The group often uses a government-audit themed phishing attack to convince employees to open a link, and has consistently reused certain techniques — such as staged execution and frequent domain changes — allowing SideWinder to shift geographic targets without altering its core malware toolkit, researchers with cybersecurity services firm ITSEC Group stated in a report released this week. The group, which the researchers also referred to as RagaSerpent, started targeting Thailand in late 2025 and Indonesia earlier this year, the report stated . That mix of simple intrusion methods and disciplined long-term access is typical of modern espionage campaigns, said Patrick Dannacher, president director of ITSEC Asia. Related: China-Nexus Hackers Skulk in Southeast Asian Military Orgs for Years "The espionage actors operating in this environment are not here for a quick payoff," he says. "They are here for sustained access to government institutions, telecommunications networks, and strategic economic sectors." Active since 2012, the SideWinder APT group has typically focused on South Asian governments , such as those of Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka, as well as military organizations and diplomatic entities across South and Southeast Asia, the group has more recently broadened its focus to include maritime infrastructure , logistics companies, and a nuclear sector, says Vasily Berdnikov, lead security researcher at Kaspersky's Global Research and Analysis Team (GReAT). While Kaspersky's policy is not to attribute any threat group to a particular nation-state, SideWinder has moved beyond South Asia to compromise targets in other regions, he says. "They have expanded operations into Africa, Europe, and the Middle East, demonstrating the ambition to go beyond one region," Berdnikov says. Easy Entry Points, Post-Compromise Persistence Despite its decade-plus experience as an espionage actor, the SideWinder group's initial intrusion techniques are not especially complex, say researchers. The group continues to rely heavily on spear-phishing, stolen credentials, and exploitation of long-patched vulnerabilities to gain access to targeted networks. The group frequently uses known Microsoft Office flaws and DLL hijacking to establish a foothold, says Berdnikov. "SideWinder has been using the same tactics and techniques for years," he says. "These primarily involve spear-phishing and exploiting long-patched MS Office vulnerabilities. ... The group's primary method for establishing and launching malware is through DLL hijacking." Related: INC Ransomware Group Holds Healthcare Hostage in Oceania What makes the threat actor more difficult to contain, however, is not how it gains access, but its post-exploitation activities. SideWinder has built a repeatable workflow around a staged payload delivery, persistence built on top of Windows services, and rapid changes to command-and-control (C2) infrastructure. The result is that attackers maintain access even after many responders believe they have remediated an attack. One of the more unusual behaviors observed in recent campaigns involves the malware deriving configuration data — primarily, the C2 server address — dynamically at runtime rather than embedding it directly in the binary, making it easier for the group's operators to rotate infrastructure without rebuilding the payload, says Dannacher. "The implication of that design choice is significant," he says. "It means the attacker can rotate their entire communications infrastructure simply by renaming a file. No recompilation, no new malware build, no lengthy development cycle." Related: Chinese Cyber Threat Lurks In Critical Asian Sectors for Years The design makes incident response challenging, because remediation may look complete, but in reality, the attacker can redeploy in a matter of hours, Dannacher says. It also reduces the effectiveness of signature-based detection and allows the same malware to be reused across multiple campaigns, he adds. Long-Term Intelligence Goals The SideWinder threat group's targeting pattern is consistent with an espionage-driven mission rather than financially motivated attacks, researchers say. Recent campaigns show signs of careful operational scoping, including malware configurations that avoid interacting with certain networks, the ITSEC researchers stated. Their conclusion is that the operators are trying to limit collateral impact, while gaining access to specific high-value environments. For defenders, the broader targeting means organizations outside government may still be at risk if they sit inside the same supply chain or within the same communications networks. In addition, pre-positioned threats may not appear for many years, but pose a threat over "a five- or 10-year strategic horizon," says Dannacher. "The realistic picture for a large institution is that it is simultaneously of interest to multiple state-aligned actors with different objectives," he says. "Designing your security posture to account for that complexity is not paranoia. It is accuracy." Companies need to expand beyond indicators of compromise-focused defenses and look for ways of repeatedly blocking the group's tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs), ITSEC Asia stated in the report. While financially motivated attackers are the most common in the region, the same techniques are being reused across different threat groups and that convergence increases risk, Dannacher says. "What we are seeing in Indonesia right now is not a landscape with a single dominant threat category — it is a convergence, and that convergence is what makes it genuinely difficult to defend against," he says. "The boundaries that used to separate cybercrime from hacktivism from state-sponsored intrusion have largely dissolved at the operational level." Read more about: DR Global Asia Pacific About the Author Robert Lemos Contributing Writer Veteran technology journalist of more than 20 years. Former research engineer. Written for more than two dozen publications, including CNET News.com, Dark Reading, MIT's Technology Review, Popular Science, and Wired News. Five awards for journalism, including Best Deadline Journalism (Online) in 2003 for coverage of the Blaster worm. Crunches numbers on various trends using Python and R. Recent reports include analyses of the shortage in cybersecurity workers and annual vulnerability trends. See more from Robert Lemos More Insights Industry Reports Frost Radar™: Non-human Identity Solutions 2026 CISO AI Risk Report Cybersecurity Forecast 2026 The ROI of AI in Security ThreatLabz 2025 Ransomware Report Access More Research Webinars Building a Robust SOC in a Post-AI World Retail Security: Protecting Customer Data and Payment Systems Rethinking SSE: When Unified SASE Delivers the Flexibility Enterprises Need Securing Remote and Hybrid Work Forecast: Beyond the VPN AI-Powered Threat Detection: Beyond Traditional Security Models More Webinars Editor's Choice Cybersecurity Operations Why Stryker's Outage Is a Disaster Recovery Wake-Up Call Why Stryker's O