Security researchers at Cisco Talos have uncovered a sophisticated cyber espionage campaign dubbed “ArcaneDoor” conducted by a state-sponsored threat actor tracked as UAT4356 (STORM-1849).
This campaign targeted government networks globally by exploiting multiple zero-day vulnerabilities in Cisco’s Adaptive Security Appliance (ASA) firewalls.
The attack chain leveraged two custom malware implants – “Line Dancer” and “Line Runner” – to gain persistent access and remote control over compromised ASA devices.
Line Dancer was an in-memory shellcode interpreter that enabled executing arbitrary payloads, while Line Runner provided a persistent backdoor by abusing a legacy VPN client pre-loading functionality.
“Cisco uncovered a sophisticated attack chain that was used to implant custom malware and execute commands across a small set of customers. While Cisco researchers have been unable to identify the initial attack vector, we have identified two vulnerabilities (CVE-2024-20353 and CVE-2024-20359) that were abused in this campaign.”
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Initial Compromise and Line Dancer Implant
The initial attack vector used to compromise ASA firewalls remains unknown. However, once access was obtained, the hackers deployed the Line Dancer implant – a memory-resident shellcode interpreter.
This allowed them to upload and execute malicious payloads via the host-scan-reply field of the SSL VPN session establishment process.
Line Dancer provided the capability to disable logging, capture device configurations, sniff network traffic, execute CLI commands, and even bypass authentication mechanisms.
It hooked critical functions like crash dumps to hinder forensic analysis and rebooted devices to remove itself from memory.
Persistent Line Runner Backdoor
To maintain access, the hackers exploited two zero-day vulnerabilities (CVE-2024-20353 and CVE-2024-20359) to install the Line Runner persistent backdoor.
This leveraged a legacy feature that allowed pre-loading VPN client bundles on ASAs.
Line Runner consisted of Lua scripts that created a hidden directory, planted a web content file acting as a backdoor, and modified system scripts to copy a malicious ZIP file for execution on every boot.
This gave the attackers a persistent HTTP-based backdoor that survived software upgrades and reboots.
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Anti-Forensics and Attribution
The ArcaneDoor campaign demonstrated advanced anti-forensics capabilities, modifying core dump functions, disabling logging, and hooking authentication processes to hide their activities.
These operational security measures, combined with developing bespoke malware implants and chaining of zero-days, strongly suggest a state-sponsored threat actor.
While Cisco has released patches for the exploited vulnerabilities, organizations should urgently update their ASA firewalls and follow the recommended incident response procedures to detect and remediate potential compromises from this campaign.
Perimeter network devices like firewalls are lucrative targets for espionage actors because they provide a direct intrusion point into sensitive networks.
The ArcaneDoor campaign underscores the importance of prompt patching, secure configurations, and proactive monitoring of such critical infrastructure components.
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Indicators of Compromise
Likely Actor-Controlled Infrastructure:
192.36.57[.]181
185.167.60[.]85
185.227.111[.]17
176.31.18[.]153
172.105.90[.]154
185.244.210[.]120
45.86.163[.]224
172.105.94[.]93
213.156.138[.]77
89.44.198[.]189
45.77.52[.]253
103.114.200[.]230
212.193.2[.]48
51.15.145[.]37
89.44.198[.]196
131.196.252[.]148
213.156.138[.]78
121.227.168[.]69
213.156.138[.]68
194.4.49[.]6
185.244.210[.]65
216.238.75[.]155
Multi-Tenant Infrastructure:
5.183.95[.]95Â
45.63.119[.]131Â
45.76.118[.]87Â
45.77.54[.]14Â
45.86.163[.]244Â
45.128.134[.]189Â Â Â Â
89.44.198[.]16Â
96.44.159[.]46Â
103.20.222[.]218Â
103.27.132[.]69Â
103.51.140[.]101Â
103.119.3[.]230Â
103.125.218[.]198Â
104.156.232[.]22Â
107.148.19[.]88Â
107.172.16[.]208Â
107.173.140[.]111Â
121.37.174[.]139Â
139.162.135[.]12Â
149.28.166[.]244Â
152.70.83[.]47Â
154.22.235[.]13Â
154.22.235[.]17Â
154.39.142[.]47Â Â
172.233.245[.]241Â
185.123.101[.]250Â
192.210.137[.]35Â Â
194.32.78[.]183Â
205.234.232[.]196Â Â
207.148.74[.]250Â
216.155.157[.]136Â
216.238.66[.]251Â
216.238.71[.]49Â
216.238.72[.]201Â
216.238.74[.]95Â
216.238.81[.]149Â
216.238.85[.]220Â
216.238.86[.]24Â Â
Update: Cisco has released updates for Zero Day vulnerabilities; more details can be found here.