Israel's National Security Council 'looking into' NSO spyware
allegations
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[July 21, 2021] By
Dan Williams
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel has set up a
senior inter-ministerial team to "look into" proliferating allegations
that spyware sold by a Israeli cyber firm has been abused on a global
scale, an Israeli source said on Wednesday, while adding that an export
review was unlikely.
The team is headed by Israel's National Security Council, which answers
to Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and has broader areas of expertise
than the Defence Ministry, which oversees exports of NSO Group's Pegasus
software, the source said.
"This event is beyond the Defence Ministry purview," the source said,
referring to potential diplomatic blowback after prominent media reports
this week of suspected abuses of Pegasus in France, Mexico, India,
Morocco and Iraq.
The source, who has first-hand knowledge of the team and requested
anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue, deemed it "doubtful" that
new curbs would be placed on Pegasus exports.
Stopping short of describing the team's task as a formal investigation,
the source said: "The objective is to find out what happened, to look
into this issue and learn lessons."
NSO did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Neither did
Bennett's office. Addressing a cyber conference on Wednesday, the prime
minister did not comment on the NSO affair.
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A man reads at a stand of the NSO Group Technologies, an Israeli
technology firm known for its Pegasus spyware enabling the remote
surveillance of smartphones, at the annual European Police Congress
in Berlin, Germany, February 4, 2020. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke/File
Photo
A global investigation published on Sunday by 17 media organisations, led by the
Paris-based non-profit journalism group Forbidden Stories, said Pegasus had been
used in attempted and successful hacks of smartphones belonging to journalists,
government officials and human rights activists.
NSO has rejected the reporting by the media partners, saying it was "full of
wrong assumptions and uncorroborated theories". Pegasus is intended for use only
by government intelligence and law enforcement agencies to fight terrorism and
crime, NSO said.
Such purposes are also what guide Israel's export policy, Defence Minister Benny
Gantz said in a speech on Tuesday. But, in a reference to the allegations around
Pegasus, he added: "We are currently studying the information published on the
matter."
At the conference, Bennett said Israel has memorandums of understanding with
dozens of countries about cyber security, which he wants to upgrade into a
"global cyber defence shield".
(Writing by Dan Williams, Editing by William Maclean)
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