"It is widely regarded as the world’s
most potent spyware, capable of reliably cracking the encrypted communications
of iPhone and Android smartphones.
The software, Pegasus, made by an
Israeli company, NSO Group, has been able to track terrorists and drug cartels.
It has also been used against human rights activists, journalists and
dissidents.
Now, an investigation published Friday by The New
York Times Magazine has found that Israel, which controls the export
of the spyware, just as it does the export of conventional weapons, has made
Pegasus a key component of its national security strategy, using it to advance
its interests around the world.
The yearlong investigation, by Ronen
Bergman and Mark Mazzetti, also reports that the F.B.I. bought and tested NSO
software for years with plans to use it for domestic surveillance until the
agency finally decided last year not to deploy the tools.
The Times found that sales of
Pegasus played a critical role in securing the support of Arab nations in
Israel’s campaign against Iran and negotiating the Abraham Accords, the 2020
diplomatic agreements, signed at a Trump White House ceremony, that
normalized relations between Israel and some of its longtime Arab adversaries.
The
U.S. sought the cyberweapon for domestic use.
The U.S. had also moved to acquire
Pegasus, The Times found. The F.B.I., in a deal never previously reported,
bought the spyware in 2019, despite multiple reports that it had been used
against activists and political opponents in other countries. It also spent two
years discussing whether to deploy a newer product, called Phantom, inside the
United States.
The discussions at the Justice
Department and the F.B.I. continued until last summer, when the F.B.I.
ultimately decided not to use NSO weapons.
But Pegasus equipment is still in a
New Jersey building used by the F.B.I. And the company also gave the agency a
demonstration of Phantom, which could hack American phone numbers.
A brochure for potential customers,
obtained by The Times, says that Phantom allows American law enforcement and
spy agencies to “turn your target’s smartphone into an intelligence gold mine.”
The yearlong Times investigation was
based on interviews with government officials, leaders of intelligence and law
enforcement agencies, cyber experts, business executives and privacy activists
in a dozen countries.
It tells the story of NSO’s rise
from a start-up operating out of a converted chicken coop on an agricultural
cooperative to its blacklisting by the Biden administration
in November because of its use by foreign governments to “maliciously target”
dissidents, journalists and others.
NSO began with two school friends,
Shalev Hulio and Omri Lavie, hatching start-ups in Bnai Zion, an agricultural
cooperative outside of Tel Aviv, in the mid-2000s.
One of their start-ups, CommuniTake,
which offered cellphone tech-support workers the ability to take control of
their customers’ devices — with permission — caught the attention of a European
intelligence agency, Mr. Hulio said.
NSO was born, and the company
eventually developed a way to gain access to phones without the user’s
permission — no need to click on a malicious attachment or link. (That the
company’s name sounded like the N.S.A. was a mere coincidence).
‘You
start to believe your every move is watched.’
After NSO began selling Pegasus
globally in 2011, Mexican authorities used it to capture Joaquín Guzmán Loera,
the drug lord known as El Chapo. And European investigators used it to smash a
child-abuse ring with dozens of suspects in more than 40 countries.
But abuses have also been revealed in reports by researchers and news organizations, including The Times.
Mexico used the spyware to target
journalists and dissidents. Saudi Arabia used it against women’s rights
activists and associates of Jamal Khashoggi, the Washington
Post columnist who was killed and dismembered by Saudi operatives in 2018.
That year, the C.I.A. bought Pegasus
to help Djibouti, an American ally, fight terrorism, despite longstanding
concerns about human rights abuses there, including the persecution of
journalists and the torture of dissidents.
In the U.A.E., Pegasus was used to
hack the phone of an outspoken critic of the government, Ahmed Mansoor.
Mr. Mansoor’s email account was
breached, his geolocation was monitored, $140,000 was stolen from his bank
account, he was fired from his job and strangers beat him on the street.
“You start to believe your every
move is watched,” he said. In 2018, he was sentenced to 10 years in prison for
posts he made on Facebook and Twitter.
Through a series of new deals
licensed by the Israeli Ministry of Defense, Pegasus has been provided to the
far-right leaders of Poland, Hungary, India and other countries.
Mr. Netanyahu did not order the
Pegasus system to be cut off, even when the Polish government enacted laws that
many Jews inside and outside of Israel saw as Holocaust denial, or when Prime
Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, at a conference attended by Mr. Netanyahu himself,
falsely listed “Jewish perpetrators” among those responsible for the Holocaust.
The
blacklisting of NSO infuriated Israeli officials.
American companies have been trying
to build their own tools that could hack phones with the ease of NSO’s “zero
click” technology.
One of those companies, Boldend,
told Raytheon, the defense-industry giant, in January 2021, that it could hack
WhatsApp, the popular messaging service owned by Facebook, but then lost the
capability after a WhatsApp update, according to a presentation obtained by The
Times.
The claim was especially notable
because, according to one of the slides, a major Boldend investor is Founders
Fund — a company run by Peter Thiel, the billionaire who was one of Facebook’s
first investors and remains on its board.
The recent American blacklisting of
NSO could suffocate the company by denying it access to the American technology
it needs to run its operations, including Dell computers and Amazon cloud
servers.
The rebuke has infuriated Israeli
officials who have denounced the move as an attack not only on a crown jewel of
the country’s defense industry but on the country itself.
“The people aiming their arrows
against NSO,” said Yigal Unna, director general of the Israel National Cyber
Directorate until Jan. 5, “are actually aiming at the blue and white flag
hanging behind it.”"
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