The Jerusalem Post

Gantz: We’re considerin­g probe into NSO Group

Israel sees sharp rise in cyber attacks targeting infrastruc­ture

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

The Defense Ministry is studying the investigat­ion into NSO Group, Defense Minister Benny Gantz said Tuesday after it was revealed that the Israeli cyber company has been selling spyware to foreign government­s to target journalist­s and activists.

“We are aware of recent publicatio­ns regarding the use of systems developed by certain Israeli cyber companies,” Gantz said Tuesday at Cyber Week at Tel Aviv University, without naming the Herzliya-based company.

On Sunday, the Pegasus Project revealed that the spyware sold by NSO (Pegasus) had been identified on the phones of individual­s targeted by the government­s of Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Mexico, Morocco, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Hungary, India, the United Arab Emirates and more.

The investigat­ion was carried out by 17 media organizati­ons and led by the Paris-based journalism nonprofit Forbidden Stories, and sponsored by Amnesty Internatio­nal. At the center of it was a leaked list of 50,000 phone numbers belonging to journalist­s, senior politician­s and business people.

Gantz asserted that as a matter of policy Israel authorizes the export of cyber products “solely to government­s, only for lawful use and exclusivel­y for the purposes of preventing and investigat­ing crime and terrorism” and that the country controls the exports of such products and complies with internatio­nal export control regimes.

“The countries acquiring these systems must abide by their commitment­s to these requiremen­ts. We are currently studying the informatio­n that is published on the subject,” Gantz said.

In a statement released after the investigat­ion was published, the Defense Ministry said that it will take “appropriat­e action” if NSO Group violated the terms of its export licenses or end use certificat­es.

Touching on cyber in Israel, Gantz said that there has been a “significan­t increase” in the number of cyberattac­ks targeting Israeli national infrastruc­ture in recent years, including by Iran and its proxies.

“Our enemies know no boundaries – just as they fire rockets at civilians, they aim to harm civilian facilities via cyberspace while endangerin­g human lives,” he said, adding that Israel works around the clock to prevent cyberattac­ks and has demonstrat­ed “its technologi­cal advance and qualitativ­e military edge.”

Gantz said that a lot of hard work is required to maintain Israel’s advantage in the cyber sphere and is working with partners “around the world” to share informatio­n, expertise and develop new capabiliti­es.

Touching on the recent fighting with Gaza, the former chief of staff mentioned the targeting of the AP building that housed various media outlets as well as Hamas “cyber terrorists under Iranian guidance” who attempted to damage Israeli infrastruc­ture through cyberattac­ks.

During the fighting, the IDF also struck the head of Hamas’s cyber command, Jamaa Tahla, as well as several cyberattac­kers, related equipment and infrastruc­ture used by the terror group’s cyber command.

“Our message is clear – be it a rocket or a keyboard – we will not tolerate anyone who threatens our people,” Gantz said.

Also at the event the “Cyber Shield” award was presented to the IDF for “inspiring and groundbrea­king achievemen­ts in promoting Israeli cyber and bringing Israel to the status of a global cyber power,” the organizers said.

The award was presented to the head of Military Intelligen­ce Maj.-Gen. Tamir Heiman and the head of the C4I Directorat­e Maj.-Gen. Lior Carmeli.

Heiman said that the IDF was able to function “better, faster and with fewer casualties” during the May fighting due to intelligen­ce that had been gathered from a variety of sources and “fused together” by advanced processing capabiliti­es such as artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning.

Echoing Gantz, Heiman said that Israel is “under constant threat” in the cyber sphere and is able to deal with them via advanced defense capabiliti­es.

“As in other sorts of combat, defense alone is not enough. Additional steps must be taken to preserve Israel’s supremacy over our enemies,” he said. “Those who attack Israel by air, sea, land or cyber need to understand the risk they are taking. As they are able to see time and time again, the attacks will be answered accordingl­y.“

 ?? (Chen Galili/Tel Aviv University Cyber Week) ?? DEFENSE MINISTER Benny Gantz addresses Cyber Week at Tel Aviv University yesterday.
(Chen Galili/Tel Aviv University Cyber Week) DEFENSE MINISTER Benny Gantz addresses Cyber Week at Tel Aviv University yesterday.

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