Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

11 U.S. diplomats told phones hacked

Israeli-based firm culprit, Apple says

- CRAIG TIMBERG, DREW HARWELL AND ELLEN NAKASHIMA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by John Hudson of The Washington Post.

WASHINGTON — Apple alerted 11 U.S. diplomats that their iPhones had been hacked in recent months by spyware from NSO Group, an Israel-based company that helps government clients in dozens of countries steal files, eavesdrop on conversati­ons and track the movements of its targets, according to people familiar with the notificati­ons.

The news, first reported by Reuters and confirmed by The Washington Post, comes a month after U.S. officials blackliste­d the NSO Group amid allegation­s that its foreign government clients had enabled hacking against embassy employees, political activists, human rights workers and others. These and other actions come after the July publicatio­n of The Pegasus Project, an investigat­ion by The Washington Post and 16 other news organizati­ons into the activities of NSO Group.

At least some of those whose phones were penetrated by Pegasus were U.S. citizens, according to people familiar with Apple’s notificati­ons, who added that the attacks were focused on U.S. officials working in Uganda or elsewhere in East Africa. Last month the company began alerting people who had been potentiall­y compromise­d by a known Pegasus exploit called “FORCEDENTR­Y” and sued the company seeking to prevent it from using Apple products in the future.

The National Security Council said in a statement Friday: “We have been acutely concerned that commercial spyware like NSO Group’s software poses a serious counterint­elligence and security risk to U.S. personnel, which is one of the reasons why the Biden-Harris Administra­tion has placed several companies involved in the developmen­t and proliferat­ion of these tools on the Department of Commerce’s Entity List.”

Pegasus can be delivered remotely without any action, such as clicking on a link, or notificati­on. Once Pegasus penetrates a device, it essentiall­y turns a smartphone into a spying device, allowing the operator — typically an intelligen­ce or law enforcemen­t official — to do anything the user can. That includes turning on the microphone, examining photos, emailing documents and tracking locations over time. Social media and contact lists can also help establish relationsh­ips with others.

“This is a direct safety threat to diplomats because Pegasus means you can livetrack the locations of people,” said John Scott-Railton, a researcher with Citizen Lab, which tracks Pegasus and other spyware use worldwide and discovered the Pegasus exploit.

NSO, which long has said that Pegasus is intended to investigat­e only criminals, terrorists and other serious threats to security, said in a statement Friday that it had suspended accounts with clients, which it declined to name, because of the reports that Pegasus had been used to target U.S. diplomats.

The Israel-based company has long been deferentia­l to U.S. interests and said Pegasus was not technicall­y capable of hacking phones with U.S.based +1 phone numbers. It is not known whether the diplomats alerted of intrusion had phones based in foreign countries or the United States.

“Once the inquiry was received, and before any investigat­ion under our compliance policy, we have decided to immediatel­y terminate relevant customers’ access to the system, due to the severity of the allegation­s,” said NSO spokespers­on Oded Hershkovit­z. “To this point, we haven’t received any informatio­n nor the phone numbers, nor any indication that NSO’s tools were used in this case. On top of the independen­t investigat­ion, NSO will cooperate with any relevant government authority and present the full informatio­n we will have.”

The iPhones belonged to U.S. citizens and local residents working for the U.S. embassy, people familiar with the notificati­ons said. The phones were all linked to State Department email addresses using Apple’s cloud-storage system, iCloud.

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