Malware & Threats

Russia’s APT28 Rapidly Weaponizes Newly Patched Office Vulnerability 

The attacks targeting Europe were analyzed by Ukraine’s CERT-UA and the cybersecurity company Zscaler.

Russian hackers

The Russian cyberespionage group APT28 has rushed to add a recently patched Office vulnerability to its arsenal, with the first attacks observed just days after Microsoft announced fixes.

The flaw, tracked as CVE-2026-21509, was addressed by Microsoft on January 26. The tech giant warned at the time that the vulnerability had been exploited as a zero-day and urged customers to apply the patches immediately. 

Microsoft initially credited its own security researchers for finding the vulnerability, but later updated its advisory to also credit Google Threat Intelligence Group (GTIG). However, neither Microsoft nor GTIG has released any information on the attacks exploiting CVE-2026-21509. 

While it remains unclear who exploited the Office vulnerability as a zero-day, Ukraine’s computer emergency response team (CERT-UA) and cybersecurity firm Zscaler revealed this week that the flaw was quickly weaponized by Russia’s APT28 after its disclosure.

APT28 is a well-known, highly sophisticated group that is also tracked by the cybersecurity industry as Forest Blizzard, Sofacy, Fancy Bear, and GruesomeLarch. 

CVE-2026-21509 can be exploited by tricking the targeted user into opening a specially crafted Office file. 

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

While both Zscaler and CERT-UA spotted the first malicious file exploiting the vulnerability on January 29, the Ukrainian agency found evidence that the weaponized document had been created on January 27, the day after Microsoft announced patches for CVE-2026-21509.

Since there appears to be no publicly available technical information on the vulnerability, the threat actor likely reverse-engineered Microsoft’s patches to develop its exploit. 

Zscaler, which linked the campaign to APT28 with high confidence based on victimology and TTPs, has observed exploitation of CVE-2026-21509 to deliver a dropper that in turn delivered other malware.

One of the pieces of malware deployed by the dropper is MiniDoor, described by the security firm as an Outlook macro-based email stealer. The other malware observed in the attacks has been named PixyNetLoader, which the attackers use to deploy a Covenant Grunt implant that provides them with full remote access and various post-exploitation capabilities.

Zscaler has seen attacks targeting users in Central and Eastern Europe, including Slovakia, Romania, and Ukraine.

“Social engineering lures were crafted in both English and localized languages, (Romanian, Slovak and Ukrainian) to target the users in the respective countries,” Zscaler explained.

Indicators of compromise (IoCs) have been made available by both Zscaler and CERT-UA

Related: Russia’s APT28 Targeting Energy Research, Defense Collaboration Entities

Related: Russian APT Hits Ukrainian Government With New Malware via Signal

Related: CISA Says Russian Hackers Targeting Western Supply-Lines to Ukraine

Related Content

Vulnerabilities

The flaws allow attackers to execute arbitrary PHP code and gain root privileges on shared hosting servers.

Vulnerabilities

SOCRadar has detected 30,000 compromised Fortinet firewalls that expose networks to hacking. 

Network Security

Cisco recently became aware of the exploitation of CVE-2026-20262, a Catalyst SD-WAN Manager zero-day that allows arbitrary file write.

Vulnerabilities

The critical-severity OS command injection vulnerability allows attackers to execute arbitrary code with root privileges.

Cybercrime

Oracle has mitigated CVE-2026-35273, but it has not publicly confirmed the vulnerability’s in-the-wild exploitation.

Vulnerabilities

Oracle has released mitigations for CVE-2026-35273, but it has not said whether it’s a zero-day exploited in ShinyHunters attacks.

Vulnerabilities

Disclosed in March, the security defect enables unauthenticated attackers to write files to arbitrary locations on the system.

Vulnerabilities

The company warned about zero-day attacks exploiting the Exchange Server vulnerability CVE-2026-42897 on May 14. 

Copyright © 2026 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version