UK trade minister Chris Bryant confirmed that the UK government suffered a cyberattack in October that affected systems linked to Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) data.
Bryant described the breach as a technical issue on one government site and said the vulnerability was closed quickly. He also said officials are “fairly confident” the risk to individuals is low at this stage, even as the investigation continues. A Foreign Office spokesperson said the department takes the security of systems and data seriously and is working to investigate the incident.
The incident comes as the United Kingdom’s government balances tougher security language with renewed diplomacy on China. Prime Minister Keir Starmer said earlier in December that China poses national security threats to Britain, while defending stronger engagement, and he is expected to visit Beijing in late January.
The disclosure lands amid a broader rise in disruption from cyberattacks across the United Kingdom’s private sector this year, including attacks that forced the country’s largest car maker, Jaguar Land Rover, to halt production and major British home goods retailer, Marks & Spencer, to suspend online orders for weeks, showing the severity of these attacks.
In the Gulf, where governments are scaling digital services and cloud adoption, the opportunity is to accelerate measurable cyber readiness by enforcing tighter identity controls, segmented networks, faster patch cycles, and repeatable incident-response drills backed by skilled teams.