Full-Spectrum Penetration
Israeli
Spying in the United States
By CHRISTOPHER
KETCHAM
March 12 , 2009
From:
http://www.counterpunch.org/
Scratch a
counterintelligence officer in the U.S. government and they'll tell
you that Israel is not a friend to the United States.
This is because Israel runs one of the most aggressive and damaging
espionage networks targeting the U.S..
The fact of Israeli
penetration into the country is not a subject oft-discussed in the
media or in the circles of governance, due to the extreme
sensitivity of the U.S.-Israel relationship coupled with the burden
of the Israel lobby, which punishes legislators who dare to
criticize the Jewish state. The void where the facts should sit is
filled instead with the hallucinations of conspiracy theory -- the
kind in which, for example, agents of the Mossad, Israel’s top
intelligence agency, engineer the 9/11 attacks, while 4,000 Israelis
in the Twin Towers somehow all get word to escape before the planes
hit. The effect, as disturbing as it is ironic, is that the less
the truth is addressed, the more noxious the falsity that spreads.
Israel's spying on the U.S.,
however, is a matter of public record, and neither conspiracy nor
theory is needed to present the evidence. When the FBI produces
its annual report to Congress concerning "Foreign Economic
Collection and Industrial Espionage," Israel and its intelligence
services often feature prominently as a threat second only to China.
In 2005 the FBI noted, for example, that Israel maintains "an active
program to gather proprietary information within the United
States." A key Israeli method, said the FBI report, is computer
intrusion. In 1996, the Defense Intelligence Service, a branch of
the Pentagon, issued a warning that "the collection of scientific
intelligence in the United States [is] the third highest priority of
Israeli Intelligence after information on its Arab neighbors and
information on secret U.S. policies or decisions relating to
Israel."
In 1979, the Central
Intelligence Agency produced a scathing survey of Israeli
intelligence activities that targeted the U.S. government. Like any
worthy spy service, Israeli intelligence early on employed wiretaps
as an effective tool, according to the CIA report. In 1954, the
U.S. Ambassador in Tel Aviv discovered in his office a hidden
microphone "planted by the Israelis," and two years later telephone
taps were found in the residence of the U.S. military attaché. In a
telegram to Washington, the ambassador at the time cabled a warning:
"Department must assume that all conversations [in] my office are
known to the Israelis." The former ambassador to Qatar, Andrew
Killgore, who also served as a foreign officer in Jerusalem and
Beirut, told me Israeli taps of U.S. missions and embassies in the
Middle East were part of a "standard operating procedure."
According to the 1979 CIA
report, the Israelis, while targeting political secrets, also devote
"a considerable portion of their covert operations to obtaining
scientific and technical intelligence." These operations involved,
among other machinations, "attempts to penetrate certain classified
defense projects in the United States." The penetrations,
according to the CIA report, were effected using "deep cover
enterprises," which the report described as "firms and
organizations, some specifically created for, or adaptable to, a
specific objective." At the time, the CIA singled out
government-subsidized companies such as El Al airlines and Zim, the
Israeli shipping firm, as deep cover enterprises.
Other deep cover operations
included the penetration of a U.S. company that provided
weapons-grade uranium to the Department of Defense during the 1960s;
Israeli agents eventually spirited home an estimated 200 pounds of
uranium as the bulwark in Israel’s secret nuclear weapons program.
Moles have burrowed on Israel’s behalf throughout the U.S.
intelligence services. Perhaps most infamous was the case of
Jonathan Pollard, a Jewish-American employed as a civilian analyst
with the U.S. Navy who purloined an estimated 800,000 code-word
protected documents from inside the CIA, the Defense Intelligence
Agency, and numerous other U.S. agencies.
While Pollard was sentenced
to life in prison, counterintelligence investigators at the FBI
suspected he was linked to a mole far higher in the food chain,
ensconced somewhere in the DIA, but this suspected Israeli
operative, nicknamed "Mr. X," was never found. Following the
embarrassment of the Pollard affair -- and its devastating effects
on U.S. national security, as testified by then Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger (who allegedly stated that Pollard "should have
been shot") -- the Israeli government vowed never again to pursue
espionage against its ally and chief benefactor.
Fast-forward a quarter
century, and the vow has proven empty. In 2004, the authoritative
Jane's Intelligence Group noted that Israel's intelligence
organizations "have been spying on the U.S. and running clandestine
operations since Israel was established." The former deputy
director of counterintelligence at FBI, Harry B. Brandon, last year
told Congressional Quarterly magazine that "the Israelis are
interested in commercial as much as military secrets. They have a
muscular technology sector themselves." According to CQ, "One
effective espionage tool is forming joint partnerships with U.S.
companies to supply software and other technology products to U.S.
government agencies."
Best-selling author
James Bamford now adds another twist in this history of infiltration
in a book published last October, "The
Shadow Factory," which forms the
latest installment in his trilogy of investigations into the
super-secret National Security Agency. Bamford is regarded among
journalists and intelligence officers as the nation’s expert on the
workings of the NSA, whose inner sanctums he first exposed to the
public in 1982. (So precise is his reporting that NSA officers once
threw him a book party, despite the fact that he continually reveals
their secrets.)
The agency has come a
long way in the half-century since its founding in 1952. Armed with
digital technology and handed vast new funding and an almost
limitless mandate in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, Bamford writes,
the NSA has today "become the largest, most costly, and most
technologically sophisticated spy organization the world has ever
known." The NSA touches on every facet of U.S. communications, its
mega-computers secretly filtering "millions of phone calls and
e-mails" every hour of operation. For those who have followed the
revelations of the NSA’s "warrantless wiretapping" program in the
New York Times
in 2005 and the
Wall Street Journal
last year, what Bamford unveils in
"The Shadow Factory" is only confirmation of the worst fears: "There
is now the capacity," he writes of the NSA’s tentacular reach into
the private lives of Americans, "to make tyranny total."
Much less has been reported
about the high-tech Israeli wiretapping firms that service U.S.
telecommunications companies, primarily AT&T and Verizon, whose
networks serve as the chief conduits for NSA surveillance. Even
less is known about the links between those Israeli companies and
the Israeli intelligence services. But what Bamford suggests in his
book accords with the history of Israeli spying in the U.S.: Through
joint partnerships with U.S. telecoms, Israel may be a shadow arm of
surveillance among the tentacles of the NSA. In other words, when
the NSA violates constitutional protections against unlawful search
and seizure to vacuum up the contents of your telephone
conversations and e-mail traffic, the Israeli intelligence services
may be gathering it up too -- a kind of mirror tap that is
effectively a two-government-in-one violation.
***
On its face, the overseas
outsourcing of high-tech services would seem de rigueur in a
competitive globalized marketplace. Equipment and services from
Israel’s telecom sector are among the country’s prime exports,
courtesy of Israeli entrepreneurs who have helped pioneer wireless
telephony, voicemail and voice recognition software, instant
messaging, phone billing software, and, not least, "communications
interception solutions." Israeli telecom interception hardware and
software is appraised as some of the best in the world.
By the mid-1990s, Israeli
wiretap firms would arrive in the U.S. in a big way. The key to the
kingdom was the 1994 Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement
Act (CALEA), which was Congress’ solution for wiretapping in the
digital age. Gone are the days when wiretaps were conducted
through on-site tinkering with copper switches. CALEA mandated that
telephonic surveillance operate through computers linked directly
into the routers and hubs of telecom companies -- a spyware
apparatus matched in real-time, all the time, to American telephones
and modems. CALEA effectively made spy equipment an inextricable
ligature in telephonic life. Without CALEA, the NSA in its
spectacular surveillance exploits could not have succeeded.
AT&T and Verizon, which
together manage as much as 90 percent of the nation’s communications
traffic, contracted with Israeli firms in order to comply with
CALEA. AT&T employed the services of Narus Inc., which was founded
in Israel in 1997. It was Narus technology that AT&T whistleblower
Mark Klein, a 22-year technician with the company, famously unveiled
in a 2006 affidavit that described the operations in AT&T’s secret
tapping room at its San Francisco facilities. (Klein’s affidavit
formed the gravamen of a lawsuit against AT&T mounted by the
Electronic Freedom Foundation, but the lawsuit died when Congress
passed the telecom immunity bill last year.) According to Klein,
the Narus supercomputer, the STA 6400, was "known to be used
particularly by government intelligence agencies because of its
ability to sift through large amounts of data looking for
preprogrammed targets." The Narus system, which was maintained by
Narus technicans, also provided a real-time mirror image of all data
streaming through AT&T routers, an image to be rerouted into the
computers of the NSA.
According to Jim Bamford,
who cites knowledgeable sources, Verizon’s eavesdropping program is
run by a competing Israeli firm called Verint, a subsidiary of
Comverse Technology, which was founded by a former Israeli
intelligence officer in 1984. Incorporated in New York and Tel
Aviv, Comverse is effectively an arm of the Israeli government: 50
percent of its R&D costs are reimbursed by the Israeli Ministry of
Industry and Trade. The Verint technology deployed throughout
Verizon’s network, known as STAR-GATE, boasts an array of Orwellian
capabilities. "With STAR-GATE, service providers can access
communications on virtually any type of network," according to the
company’s literature. "Designed to manage vast numbers of targets,
concurrent sessions, call data records, and communications,
STAR-GATE transparently accesses targeted communications without
alerting subscribers or disrupting service."
As with the Narus system,
the point is to be able to tap into communications unobtrusively, in
real time, all the time. A Verint spinoff firm, PerSay, takes the
tap to the next stage, deploying "advanced voice mining," which
singles out "a target’s voice within a large volume of intercepted
calls, regardless of the conversation content or method of
communication." Verint’s interception systems have gone global
since the late 1990s, and sales in 2006 reached $374 million (a
doubling of its revenues over 2003). More than 5,000 organizations
-- mostly intelligence services and police units -- in at least 100
countries today use Verint technology.
What troubles Bamford is
that executives and directors at companies like Narus and Verint
formerly worked at or maintain close connections with the Israeli
intelligence services, including Mossad; the internal security
agency Shin Bet; and the Israeli version of the NSA, Unit 8200, an
arm of the Israeli Defense Forces Intelligence Corps. Unit 8200,
which Bamford describes as "hypersecret," is a key player in the
eavesdropping industrial complex in Israel, its retired personnel
dispersed throughout dozens of companies. According to Ha’aretz,
the Israeli daily, "Many of the [eavesdropping] technologies in use
around the world and developed in Israel were originally military
technologies and were developed and improved by [Unit 8200]
veterans." A former commander of Unit 8200, cited by Bamford,
states that Verint technology was "directly influenced by 8200
technology….[Verint parent company] Comverse’s main product, the
Logger, is based on the Unit’s technology."
The implications for U.S.
national security, writes Bamford, are "unnerving." "Virtually the
entire American telecommunications system," he avers, "is bugged by
[Israeli-formed] companies with possible ties to Israel’s
eavesdropping agency." Congress, he says, maintains no oversight of
these companies’ operations, and even their contracts with U.S.
telecoms -- contracts pivotal to NSA surveillance -- are considered
trade secrets and go undisclosed in company statements.
U.S. intelligence
officers have not been quiet in their concerns about Verint (I
reported on this matter in
CounterPunch.org last September).
"Phone calls are intercepted, recorded, and transmitted to U.S.
investigators by Verint, which claims that it has to be ‘hands on’
with its equipment to maintain the system," says former CIA
counterterrorism officer Philip Giraldi. The "hands on" factor is
what bothers Giraldi, specifically because of the possibility of a
"trojan" embedded in Verint wiretap software. A trojan in
information security hardware/software is a backdoor that can be
accessed remotely by parties who normally would not have access to
the secure system.
Allegations of widespread
trojan spying have rocked the Israeli business community in recent
years. "Top Israeli blue chip companies," reported the AP in 2005,
"are suspected of using illicit surveillance software to steal
information from their rivals and enemies." Over 40 companies have
come under scrutiny. "It is the largest cybercrime case in Israeli
history," Boaz Guttmann, a veteran cybercrimes investigator with the
Israeli national police, told me. "Trojan horse espionage is part
of the way of life of companies in Israel. It’s a culture of
spying."
In a wide-ranging four-part
investigation into Israel-linked espionage that aired in December
2001, Carl Cameron, a correspondent at Fox News Channel, reported
the distress among U.S. intelligence officials warning about
possible trojans cached in Verint technology. Sources told Cameron
that "while various FBI inquiries into [Verint] have been conducted
over the years," the inquiries had "been halted before the actual
equipment has ever been thoroughly tested for leaks." Cameron also
cited a 1999 internal FCC document indicating that "several
government agencies expressed deep concerns that too many
unauthorized non-law enforcement personnel can access the wiretap
system." Much of this access was facilitated through "remote
maintenance."
The Fox News report
reverberated throughout U.S. law enforcement, particularly at the
Drug Enforcement Agency, which makes extensive use of wiretaps for
narcotics interdiction. Security officers at DEA, an adjunct of the
Justice Department, began examining the agency’s own relationship
with Comverse/Verint. In 1997, DEA had transformed its wiretap
infrastructure with the $25 million procurement from Comverse/Verint
of a technology called "T2S2" -- "translation and transcription
support services" -- with Comverse/Verint contracted to provide the
hardware and software. The company was also tasked with "support
services, training, upgrades, enhancements and options throughout
the life of the contract," according to the DEA’s "contracts and
acquisitions" notice. In the wake of the Fox News investigation,
however, the director of security programs at DEA, Heidi Raffanello,
was rattled enough to issue an internal communiqué on the matter,
dated Dec. 18, 2001. Directly referencing Fox News, she worried
that "Comverse remote maintenance" was "not addressed in the C&A
[contracts and acquisitions] process….It remains unclear if Comverse
personnel are security cleared, and if so, who are they and what
type of clearances are on record….Bottom line we should have caught
it." It is not known what resulted from DEA’s review of the issue
of remote maintenance and access by Comverse/Verint.
Bamford devotes a portion of
his argument to the detailing of the operations of a third Israeli
wiretap company, NICE Systems, which he describes as "a major
eavesdropper in the U.S." that "keeps its government and commercial
client list very secret." Formed in 1986 by seven veterans of Unit
8200, NICE software "captures voice, email, chat, screen activity,
and essential call details," while offering "audio compression
technology that performs continuous recordings of up to thousands of
analog and digital telephone lines and radio channels." NICE
Systems has on at least one occasion shown up on the radar of U.S.
counterintelligence. During 2000-2001, when agents at the FBI and
the CIA began investigating allegations that Israeli nationals
posing as "art students" were in fact conducting espionage on U.S.
soil, one of the Israeli "art students" was discovered to be an
employee with NICE Systems. Among the targets of the art students
were facilities and offices of the Drug Enforcement Agency
nationwide. The same Israeli employee of NICE Systems, who was
identified as a former operative in the Israeli intelligence
services, was carrying a disk that contained a file labeled "DEA
Groups." U.S. counterintelligence officers concluded it was a
highly suspicious nexus: An Israeli national and alleged spy was
working for an Israeli wiretap company while carrying in his
possession computer information regarding the Drug Enforcement
Agency -- at the same time this Israeli was conducting what the DEA
described as "intelligence gathering" about DEA facilities.
***
A former senior
counterintelligence official in the Bush administration told me that
as early as 1999, "CIA was very concerned about [Israeli wiretapping
companies]" -- Verint in particular. "I know that CIA has tried to
monitor what the Israelis were doing -- technically watch what they
were doing on the networks in terms of remote access. Other
countries were concerned as well," said the intelligence official.
Jim Bamford, who notes that Verint "can automatically access the
mega-terabytes of stored and real-time data secretly and remotely
from anywhere," reports that Australian lawmakers in 2004 held
hearings on this remote monitoring capability. "[Y]ou can access
data from overseas," the lawmakers told a Verint representative
during the hearings, "but [the legislature] seems restricted to
access data within that system." The Australians found this
astonishing.
In 2000, the Canadian
intelligence service, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, conducted
"a probe related to allegations that [Israeli] spies used rigged
software to hack into Canada's top secret intelligence files,"
according to an article in the Toronto Star. Several sources in the
U.S. intelligence community told me the Canadians liaised with their
American counterparts to try to understand the problem.
According to the Bush
administration official who spoke with me, "the Dutch also had come
to the CIA very concerned about what the Israelis were doing with
this." The Dutch intelligence service, under contract with Verint,
"had discovered strange things were going on -- there was activity
on the network, the Israelis uploading and downloading stuff out of
the switches, remotely, and apparently using it for their own
wiretap purposes. The CIA was very embarrassed to say, ‘We have the
same problem.’ But the CIA didn’t have an answer for them. ‘We
hear you, we’re surprised, and we understand your concern.’"
Indeed, sources in the Dutch
counterintelligence community in 2002 claimed there was "strong
evidence that the Israeli secret service has uncontrolled access to
confidential tapping data collected by the Dutch police and
intelligence services," according to the Dutch broadcast radio
station Evangelische Omroep (EO). In January 2003, the respected
Dutch technology and computing magazine, C’T, ran a follow-up to the
EO story, headlined "Dutch Tapping Room not Kosher." The article
states: "All tapping equipment of the Dutch intelligence services
and half the tapping equipment of the national police force [is]
insecure and is leaking information to Israel."
"The key to this whole thing
is that Australian meeting," Bamford told me in a recent interview.
"They accused Verint of remote access and Verint said they won’t do
it again -- which implies they were doing it in the past. It’s a
matter of a backdoor into the system, and those backdoors should not
be allowed to exist. You can tell by the Australian example that it
was certainly a concern of Australian lawmakers."
Congress doesn’t seem to
share the concern. "Part of the responsibility of Congress," says
Bamford, "is not just to oversee the intelligence community but to
look into the companies with which the intelligence community
contracts. They’re just very sloppy about this." According to the
Bush administration intelligence official who spoke with me,
"Frustratingly, I did not get the sense that our government was
stepping up to this and grasping the bull by the horns." Another
former high level U.S. intelligence official told me, "The fact of
the vulnerability of our telecom backbone is indisputable. How it
came to pass, why nothing has been done, who has done what -- these
are the incendiary questions." There is also the fundamental fact
that the wiretap technologies implemented by Verint, Narus and other
Israeli companies are fully in place and no alternative is on the
horizon. "There is a technical path dependence problem," says the
Bush administration official. "I have been told nobody else makes
software like this for the big digital switches, so that is part of
the problem. Other issues," he adds, "compound the problem" --
referring to the sensitivity of the U.S.-Israel relationship.
And that, of course, is the
elephant in the room. "Whether it’s a Democratic or Republican
administration, you don’t bad-mouth Israel if you want to get
ahead," says former CIA counterterrorism officer Philip Giraldi.
"Most of the people in the agency were very concerned about Israeli
espionage and Israeli actions against U.S. interests. Everybody was
aware of it. Everybody hated it. But they wouldn’t get promoted if
they spoke out. Israel has a privileged position and that’s the way
things are. It’s crazy. And everybody knows it’s crazy."
Christopher
Ketcham is working on a book about the dissolution of the
United States and its replacement by bioregional republics. He can
be reached at
cketcham99@mindspring.com
This article
originally appeared on
Alternet.
Source:
http://www.counterpunch.org/ketcham03122009.html
|