Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Poland needed spyware, ex-premier testifies

- MONIKA SCISLOWSKA

WARSAW, Poland — Former Polish Prime Minister Jarosław Kaczynski told a parliament­ary committee Friday that he believes Poland needed advanced spyware but that, despite his leadership position, he wasn’t interested in how or against whom it was used.

Kaczynski testified before the committee in a televised session about the purchase and allegedly illegal use of advanced spyware by a government headed by his Law and Justice party, which was in power from 2015 to 2023. For part of that term, he was deputy prime minister for national security.

“As far as Pegasus [spyware] goes, I was aware that it’s a tool for breaking into communicat­ion devices, and that Poland needs it, and that other countries also have it,” Kaczynski said. But he stressed that he was “not directly interested in the operationa­l activity of the [security] services.”

However, he later said the “use of Pegasus was in accordance with the law, there were no shortcomin­gs, and in 99% it was used against criminals.”

Most of the time Kaczynski avoided directly answering questions, saying he did not remember the facts or digressing to praise the Law and Justice government. The questionin­g went on for many hours.

The Israel-based NSO Group’s Pegasus spyware was used to spy on mobile devices belonging to opponents of the party, according to findings by the University of Toronto’s nonprofit Citizen Lab. Recent details suggest it was also used to eavesdrop on some key members of Kaczynski’s right-wing party.

The revelation­s, first reported by The Associated Press in 2021, shocked Poland and added to the European Union’s concerns that the Law and Justice government was underminin­g the rule of law. They also hurt the credential­s of Kaczynski’s populist party. The Polish hacks are considered particular­ly egregious because they occurred in an EU member country.

As the hearing began, Kaczynski sought to avoid testifying and argued he should not have to give evidence, saying that he has only marginal knowledge of how the Pegasus spyware was used but that what he does know is classified and should not be revealed in a public hearing.

Kaczynski refused to repeat the portion of the witness oath that promises “the whole truth,” causing a delay as the committee debated whether he had been properly sworn in.

When the proceeding­s continued, Kaczynski attacked his political rivals, the current government, saying that the commission’s probe was a “political undertakin­g” aimed at proving an “illusionar­y notion that there was dictatorsh­ip in Poland” during his party’s term in power.

Kaczynski, 74, was prime minister in 2006-2007, but continued to play a key role in Poland’s politics after leaving the job, especially when his party ruled again in 2015-2023. He was considered Poland’s most powerful politician during the period the spyware was used.

In January 2022, Kaczynski acknowledg­ed that the country bought advanced spyware from the NSO Group, but denied that it was being used to target his political opponents.

Current Prime Minister Donald Tusk has said the previous government used Pegasus illegally and targeted a “very long” list of victims. Poland’s license for the use of Pegasus was discontinu­ed in 2022, following the reports that the government used it against political opponents.

Pegasus gives operators complete access to targeted mobile devices, allowing them to extract passwords and to activate the microphone and camera for real-time eavesdropp­ing.

Law and Justice lost power in December following an electoral defeat. The new parliament dominated by a pro-EU coalition has set up the special committee to dig into the previous government’s use of the spyware. The committee is also to question other members of the Law and Justice government and cybersecur­ity experts.

 ?? (AP/Czarek Sokolowski) ?? Jaroslaw Kaczynski, Poland’s main opposition leader, is questioned on Friday by a parliament­ary commission at the parliament building in Warsaw, Poland.
(AP/Czarek Sokolowski) Jaroslaw Kaczynski, Poland’s main opposition leader, is questioned on Friday by a parliament­ary commission at the parliament building in Warsaw, Poland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States