The Guardian (USA)

Top Israeli spy chief exposes his true identity in online security lapse

- Harry Davies and Bethan McKernan

The identity of the commander of Israel’s Unit 8200 is a closely guarded secret. He occupies one of the most sensitive roles in the military, leading one of the world’s most powerful surveillan­ce agencies, comparable­to the US National Security Agency.

Yet after spending more than two decades operating in the shadows, the Guardian can reveal how the controvers­ial spy chief – whose name is Yossi Sariel – has left his identity exposed online.

The embarrassi­ng security lapse is linked to a book he published on Amazon, which left a digital trail to a private Google account created in his name, along with his unique ID and links to the account’s maps and calendar profiles.

The Guardian has confirmed with multiple sources that Sariel is the secret author of The Human Machine Team, a book in which he offers a radical vision for how artificial intelligen­ce can transform the relationsh­ip between military personnel and machines.

Published in 2021 using a pen name composed of his initials, Brigadier General YS, it provides a blueprint for the advanced AI-powered systems that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have been pioneering during the six-month war in Gaza.

An electronic version of the book included an anonymous email address that can easily be traced to Sariel’s name and Google account. Contacted by the Guardian, an IDF spokespers­on said the email address was not Sariel’s personal one, but “dedicated specifical­ly for issues to do with the book itself”.

Later on Friday, in a statement to the Israeli media, the IDF described the book’s exposure of Sariel’s personal details as “a mistake”, adding: “The issue will be examined to prevent the recurrence of similar cases in the future.”

The security blunder is likely to place further pressure on Sariel, who is said to “live and breathe” intelligen­ce but whose tenure running the IDF’s elite cyber intelligen­ce division has become mired in controvers­y.

Unit 8200, once revered within Israel and beyond for intelligen­ce capabiliti­es that rivalled those of the UK’s GCHQ, is thought to have built a vast surveillan­ce apparatus to closely monitor the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

However, it has been criticised over its failure to foresee and prevent Hamas’s deadly 7 October assault last year on southern Israel, in which Palestinia­n militants killed nearly 1,200 Israelis and kidnapped about 240 people.

Since the Hamas-led attacks, there have been accusation­s that Unit 8200’s “technologi­cal hubris” came at the expense of more convention­al intelligen­ce-gathering techniques.

In its war in Gaza, the IDF appears to have fully embraced Sariel’s vision of the future, in which military technology represents a new frontier where AI is being used to fulfil increasing­ly complex tasks on the battlefiel­d.

Sariel argued in the published book

three years ago that his ideas about using machine learning to transform modern warfare should become mainstream. “We just need to take them from the periphery and deliver them to the centre of the stage,” he wrote.

One section of the book heralds the concept of an AI-powered “targets machine”, descriptio­ns of which closely resemble the target recommenda­tion systems the IDF is now known have been relying upon in its bombardmen­t of Gaza.

Over the last six months, the IDF has deployed multiple AI-powered decision support systems that have been rapidly developed and refined by Unit 8200 under Sariel’s leadership.

They include the Gospel and Lavender, two target recommenda­tion systems that have been revealed in reports by the Israeli-Palestinia­n publicatio­n +972 magazine, its Hebrew-language outlet Local Call and the Guardian.

The IDF says its AI systems are intended to assist human intelligen­ce officers, who are required to verify that military suspects are legitimate targets under internatio­nal law. A spokespers­on said the military used “various types of tools and methods”, adding: “Evidently, there are tools that exist in order to benefit intelligen­ce researcher­s that are based on artificial intelligen­ce.”

Targets machine

On Wednesday, +972 and Local Call placed the spotlight on the link between Unit 8200 and the book authored by a mysterious­ly named Brigadier General YS.

Sariel is understood to have written the book with the IDF’s permission after a year as a visiting researcher at the US National Defense University in Washington DC, where he made the case for using AI to transform modern warfare.

Aimed at high-ranking military commanders and security officials, the book articulate­s a “human-machine teaming” concept that seeks to achieve synergy between humans and AI, rather than constructi­ng fully autonomous systems.

It reflects Sariel’s ambition to become a “thought leader”, according to one former intelligen­ce official. In the 2000s, he was a leading member of a group of academical­ly minded spies known as “the Choir”, which agitated for an overhaul of Israeli intelligen­ce practices.

An Israeli press report suggests that by 2017 he was head of intelligen­ce for the IDF’s central command. His subsequent elevation to commander of Unit 8200 amounted to an endorsemen­t by the military establishm­ent of his technologi­cal vision for the future.

Sariel refers in the book to “a revolution” in recent years within the IDF, which has “developed a new concept of intelligen­ce centric warfare to connect intelligen­ce to the fighters in the field”. He advocates going further still, fully merging intelligen­ce and warfare, in particular when conducting lethal targeting operations.

In one chapter of the book, he provides a template for how to construct an effective targets machine drawing on “big data” that a human brain could not process. “The machine needs enough data regarding the battlefiel­d, the population, visual informatio­n, cellular data, social media connection­s, pictures, cellphone contacts,” he writes. “The more data and the more varied it is, the better.”

Such a targets machine, he said, would draw on complex models that make prediction­s built “on lots of small, diverse features”, listing examples such as “people who are with a Hezbollah member in a WhatsApp group, people who get new cellphones every few months, those who change their addresses frequently”.

He argues that using AI to create potential military targets can be more efficient and avoid “bottleneck­s” created by intelligen­ce officials or soldiers. “There is a human bottleneck for both locating the new targets and decision-making to approve the targets. There is also the bottleneck of how to process a great amount of data. Then there is the bottleneck of connecting the intelligen­ce to the fire.” He adds: “A team consisting of machines and investigat­ors can blast the bottleneck wide open.”

Intelligen­ce divide

Disclosure of Sariel’s security lapse comes at a difficult time for the intelligen­ce boss. In February, he came under public scrutiny in Israel when the Israeli newspaper Maariv published an account of recriminat­ions within Unit 8200 after the 7 October attacks.

Sariel was not named in the article, which referred to Unit 8200’s commander only as “Y”. However, the rare public criticism brought into focus a divide within Israel’s intelligen­ce community over its biggest failure in a generation.

Sariel’s critics, the report said, believe Unit 8200’s prioritisa­tion of “addictive and exciting” technology over more old-fashioned intelligen­ce methods had led to the disaster. One veteran official told the newspaper the unit under Sariel had “followed the new intelligen­ce bubble”.

For his part, Sariel is quoted as telling colleagues that 7 October will “haunt him” until his last day. “I accept responsibi­lity for what happened in the most profound sense of the word,” he said. “We were defeated. I was defeated.”

• Guardian Newsroom: Crisis in the Middle EastOn Tuesday 30 April, 7-8.15pm GMT, join Devika Bhat, Peter Beaumont, Emma Graham-Harrison and Ghaith Abdul-Ahad as they discuss the fast-developing crisis in the Middle East. Book tickets here or at theguardia­n.live

 ?? Illustrati­on: Getty images; Guardian Design ?? Yossi Sariel’s 2021 book The Human Machine Team offers a radical vision for how AI can transform warfare.
Illustrati­on: Getty images; Guardian Design Yossi Sariel’s 2021 book The Human Machine Team offers a radical vision for how AI can transform warfare.
 ?? Photograph: Manuel de Almeida/EPA ?? The aftermath of the 7 October attacks at the Supernova music festival. Some have blamed Unit 8200’s ‘technologi­cal hubris’ for the intelligen­ce failure.
Photograph: Manuel de Almeida/EPA The aftermath of the 7 October attacks at the Supernova music festival. Some have blamed Unit 8200’s ‘technologi­cal hubris’ for the intelligen­ce failure.

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