Russian APT28 Exploits Zimbra Vulnerability to Target Ukrainian Government
**APT28**, a threat group attributed to Russian military intelligence, is actively exploiting a critical **Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS)** vulnerability (**CVE-2025-66376**) in attacks aimed at Ukrainian government entities. The vulnerability allows for remote code execution and email account compromise.

Attackers part of **APT28**, a state-backed threat group linked to Russia's military intelligence service (GRU), are exploiting a **Zimbra Collaboration Suite (ZCS)** vulnerability in attacks targeting Ukrainian government entities.
### CVE-2025-66376: A High-Severity XSS Flaw
This high-severity security flaw (tracked as **CVE-2025-66376** and patched in early November) stems from a stored cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability. Unauthenticated attackers can exploit it to gain remote code execution (RCE) and compromise the Zimbra server and the target's email account.
### CISA Adds Vulnerability to Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog
On Wednesday, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (**CISA**) added the vulnerability to its catalog of vulnerabilities exploited in the wild. CISA also ordered Federal Civilian Executive Branch (FCEB) agencies to secure their servers within two weeks, as mandated by the Binding Operational Directive (BOD) 22-01 issued in November 2021.
### Operation GhostMail Targets Ukraine
While the U.S. cybersecurity agency didn't provide further details on the ongoing exploitation of **CVE-2025-66376**, security researchers at **Seqrite Labs** reported a day earlier that the Zimbra XSS vulnerability had been exploited by APT28 military hackers in attacks against Ukraine.
The Ukrainian State Hydrology Agency (a critical infrastructure entity under the Ministry of Infrastructure that provides navigational, maritime, and hydrographic support) was one of the targets of this phishing campaign (named Operation GhostMail).
"The phishing email has no malicious attachments, no suspicious links, no macros. The entire attack chain lives inside the HTML body of a single email, there are no malicious attachments," Seqrite Labs said.

### Attack Details
The **APT28** (aka Fancy Bear, Strontium) hackers' malicious messages delivered an obfuscated JavaScript payload that exploits the **CVE-2025-66376** vulnerability when the recipient opens the email in a vulnerable Zimbra webmail session.
"The script executes silently in the browser and begins harvesting credentials, session tokens, backup 2FA codes, browser-saved passwords, and the contents of the victim's mailbox going back 90 days with all the data exfiltrated over both DNS and HTTPS," the researchers added.
### Zimbra: A Frequent Target
Zimbra security flaws are frequently targeted in attacks, including by Russian state-sponsored threat groups, and have been used to breach thousands of vulnerable email servers in recent years.
For instance, starting in February 2023, the Russian Winter Vivern cyberespionage group used another reflected XSS exploit to breach Zimbra webmail portals and spy on the communications of NATO-aligned organizations and persons, including government officials, military personnel, and diplomats.
In October 2024, U.S. and U.K. cyber agencies also warned that **APT29** (aka Cozy Bear, Midnight Blizzard) hackers linked to Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) were attacking vulnerable Zimbra servers "at a mass scale," exploiting a vulnerability previously used to steal email account credentials.
Zimbra is a widely popular email and collaboration software suite used by hundreds of millions of people, including hundreds of government agencies and thousands of businesses worldwide.