Given India’s Military Ties With Israel, Modi Would Have Had No Problem Acquiring Pegasus

In all likelihood, the sale of Pegasus to India was possibly intended to ensure that the symbiotic strategic and security grid between the two countries continues apace.

Chandigarh: The reported deployment by India’s government of Israeli military-grade Pegasus spyware to monitor smartphones belonging to the country’s opposition politicians, journalists, lawyers and civil rights activists amongst others, is one more instance of the ever proliferating – but always covert – cooperation between New Delhi and Tel Aviv in the defence and intelligence sphere.

In Israel, Pegasus, which is considered among the world’s deadliest spyware tools for smartphones given its zero-click capability, is classified as a weapon, and hence officially transferable only to governments. Consequently, its sale to any country, like all other Israeli materiel exports, requires the Ministry of Defence’s approval.

This hugely expensive spyware – estimates for its deployment cost range from $25,000 to $50,000 per target with limits on simultaneous deployment, in addition to hardware and installation costs – is every ‘snooper’s dream.

Pegasus gives the attackers who use it total access to targeted smartphones, including their conversations, data, images, photographs, camera and geolocation. Pegasus operators can even  activate a target phone’s  inbuilt microphone when not in use, enabling its operators to listen in to offline conversations.

The Pegasus malware was specifically developed by cyber-arms firm NSO Group Technologies located at Herzliya near Tel Aviv, which takes its name from its three founders Niv, Shalev and Omri. The NSO trio are former members of Unit 8200 of the Israeli Intelligence Corps, tasked with gathering signals intelligence.

This specialised unit also referred to as the SIGINT National Unit operates autonomously under Israeli Military Intelligence, better known as Aman, but functions independent of the country’s three armed services. Most militaries and security agencies consider Unit 8200, which fields Pegasus, as one of the world’s foremost technical intelligence agencies, on par with the US’s National Security Agency in its overall capability, despite its far smaller size. Understandably, the skills by the three NSO owners in creating Pegasus, remain formidable.

Last week, however, a group of 17 media organisations from around the world, including The Wire,  Washington Post and The Guardian, simultaneously revealed via the umbrella ‘Pegasus Project’ a list of 50,000 telephone numbers that were earmarked for potential surveillance by NSO clients for at least two years, till mid-2019.

Also read: Pegasus Project: 136 Names Revealed by the Wire on Snoop List So Far

Other than the numbers of known criminals and terrorists to battle whom the NSO malware is believed to have been originally created the list included heads of state, leading politicians, human rights activists, journalists, diplomats and businessmen and others from various countries. Besides India, these included Egypt, France, Iraq, Lebanon, Mexico, Morocco, Pakistan, South Africa, Uganda and Yemen and some 13 other countries across Europe, North Africa and the Middle East.

Pegasus Project’s credibility was further reinforced by Amnesty International’s Forensic Laboratory that scientifically examined some of these specified smartphones, including some from India, confirming beyond reasonable doubt their infiltration by the Israeli malware. On Saturday, the CEO of WhatsApp, Will Cathcart confirmed to the Guardian that the Pegasus targets his company had identified in 2019, included government leaders and officials,

Ever since the Pegasus Project revelations surfaced on July 18, the Indian government has at best been ambivalent or at worst duplicitous over whether New Delhi had or had not acquired Pegasus. This was because the list of 300 verified India numbers included Indian Opposition leaders, civil servants, businessmen, journalists and even a woman who had accused the former chief justice of India of sexual harassment.

Government ministers in New Delhi have dismissed the allegations of snooping via Pegasus as ‘baseless’ and ‘motivated by the ubiquitous ‘foreign hand’, but dissembled on whether Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration had actually procured and domestically deployed Pegasus 2017 onwards against its political opponents, critics and assorted dissidents.

India’s newly appointed Minister of Electronics and Information Technology (IT) Ashwani Vaishnaw and his immediate predecessor Ravi Shankar Prasad stridently quoted the IT and Telegraph Acts, to iterate their claim that all electronic interception in defence of national security had followed due process of law. But the two and some other senior ministers doggedly refused to confirm or deny whether, indeed, the government had acquired Pegasus for this purpose or executed eavesdropping which they tacitly conceded via indigenously developed software.

However, in an earlier obfuscation, the IT minister had informed parliament that the Indian Computer Emergency Team (CERT-In)taken note of the threat posed by Pegasus and its impact on Indian users. This, in turn, raises a disturbing question: if in reality India had not acquired Pegasus, why would the government seek its operational details and outcome. Or was the former IT minister hinting that India was the victim of snooping? But if so, why would a power inimical to India spy on mediapersons, activists and government officials concerned predominantly with localised issues?

“Considering the government’s response to the Pegasus Project, it’s highly unlikely that it will ever admit to acquiring the malware or order an inquiry into the snooping allegations,” said a former senior security official. In all likelihood, he stated, declining to be identified, the government will brazenly pursue its  strategy of incessant denial, wearying all parliamentary and media demands for an investigation. And even if a judicial review into the matter was by some miracle instituted, as demanded by the Opposition, he lamented that the government could easily resort to exploiting national security as its alibi to frustrate and stymie all further scrutiny into the matter.

Be that as it may, security and military sources indicate a ‘strong possibility’ of India having acquired NSO’s Pegasus in 2017 considering the close strategic, military and security links between Delhi and Tel Aviv.

Israel as key supplier

Over the past three decades India has steadily emerged as Israel’s largest materiel and security-related equipment provider worth an estimated at $7-8 billion just between 2009-18. Israel has either transferred military kit directly or indigenously manufactured it via collaborative ventures through a transfer of technology. Retired military officers concede that Israeli access to India’s defence sector to be ‘awesome’ and one which service officers remained helpless to restrict or dilute as it is staunchly supported by the BJP administration.

Presently, Israel is India’s fourth largest armaments provider after Russia, the US and more recently France following the $7.92 billion acquisition of 36 Dassault Rafale fighters in late 2016. These weapon and related equipment sales have increased significantly after the BJP government assumed office in 2014. Modi was also the first Indian prime minister to visit Israel in July 2017.

But despite this rapidly proliferating strategic and military association that has emerged as Israel’s most significant in Asia, it is one that remains deeply shrouded in secrecy, operating in an undefined smoke-and-mirrors environment. Israel instinctively goes to great lengths to play down this strategic freemasonry with India, while the latter responds similarly for fear of straining ties with Arab states and Iran, upon whom New Delhi depends for nearly 70% of its hydrocarbon imports.

And though the diplomatic, political and security environment has changed recently in West Asia, with states like the United Arab Emirates (UAE) establishing formal ties with Israel, and even Saudi Arabia making overtures to Tel Aviv, New Delhi continues to mechanically and inexplicably pursue a cloak-and-dagger approach to all bilateral military, materiel procurement and intelligence issues with Israel. Reciprocal visits to New Delhi and Tel Aviv by defence, security and intelligence officials, Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) technicians and scientists and armament company executives too remain strictly under wraps, as does all bilateral military commerce executed through the private or public sectors.

Also read: How India Has Moved With Israel: A Timetable of Milestone Events

India-Israel relations

Before 1992 Israel reportedly assisted India stealthily, providing it limited military aid and weaponry during its brief, albeit disastrous war with China in 1962 with its Chief of Staff, General David Shaltiel, visiting Delhi surreptitiously in 1963. Israel provided similar, albeit limited assistance during India’s subsequent conflicts with Pakistan in 1965 and 1971, largely through ammunition supplies.

Clandestine ties continued thereafter with senior Indian security officials travelling to Israel via Cyprus as no direct air links between the two countries existed to ensure that their passports would have no record of their visit to the Jewish state. However, after Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s assassination in 1984, India is believed to have sought, and secured Israeli help in upgrading its VIP protection by training and arming its newly raised Special Protection Group and National Security Guard personnel. These commandos too reportedly utilised the Cyprus route. Israeli specialists also seemingly devised former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s security architecture that broadly continues with minor alterations for his successors, including Modi.

But the disintegration in the early 1990s of the Soviet Union, India’s long-standing ally and principal weapons supplier was a turning point in New Delhi’s military ties with Israel. Crucial supplies of arms and spares for military equipment either ceased or were interminably delayed, as overnight numerous suppliers found themselves located in independent neighbouring republics that were inimical to Moscow. Consequently, India was compelled to consider alternate materiel sources at a critical period that coincided with the eruption of Kashmiri insurgency in late 1989.

The establishment of official diplomatic ties with Israel in January 1992 under then Prime Minister Narasimha Rao enabled both sides to fast track their strategic and defence relationship based on mutual security and commercial interests. Israel, for its part, rightly perceived a lucrative commercial opportunity, while India looked upon Tel Aviv as a reliable materiel provider, especially of varied ammunition and missile systems which India’s military badly lacked and still does.

Nonetheless, it still took another six-odd years and the BJP’s ascent to power under then Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee for Israel’s defence machinery to definitively establish itself in India, second only to the Russians and thereafter to the US and France. Being a ‘closet’ nuclear weapon state, Israel’s decision not to condemn India’s May 1998 Pokhran nuclear tests also helped considerably, further endearing Tel Aviv to New Delhi and vice-versa.

Then prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee with his Israeli counterpart Ariel Sharon in New Delhi, September 9, 2003. Photo: Pawel Kopczynski/Reuters

However, it was India’s 11-week long Kargil war with Pakistan in 1999 that catapulted Israel’s defence industry to centre stage domestically. As the seriousness of the deadly conflict unfolded, commercially savvy Israel dug deep into its military reserves to supply India high-end hardware especially badly needed 155 mm howitzer rounds for its 155mm Bofors guns, laser-guided munitions and other ordnance that contributed largely to the Pakistan Army vacating the mountainous regions siege and ending hostilities.

Soon after, Israel began claiming its dues in materiel and related force multiplier equipment sales and continues to do so, prospering greatly in the process.

Alongside, the Indian military exhibited interest in the Israel Defence Forces’ successful warfare strategies and concepts, particularly with regard to countering armed insurgencies. Intelligence sharing on terrorism issues also proliferated, as did Israeli military training assistance to India’s Special Forces. The rationale that Israel and India shared similar, but un-publicised, concerns over threats posed not only by a nuclear-weapon capable and increasingly Islamised Pakistan, but the rapid radicalisation of its society and armed forces further cemented bilateral security and military ties.

Israel is also believed to have provided India with counter-terrorism assistance to help it deal with the Kashmiri insurgency in the early 2000s. It made available over a dozen technical teams to assist India in augmenting its border intelligence gathering capabilities, in addition to anti-terrorism counter measures like upgraded border fencing, ground sensors and handheld thermal imagers for use by army and paramilitary border guards.

In all likelihood, exporting Pegasus to India was possibly intended to ensure that this mutually beneficial symbiotic strategic and security grid between the two countries continues apace.

Pegasus Snooping Row: Sachin Pilot Demands Independent Probe

Anil Kumar Chaudhary, president of the Delhi Congress, has also demanded a joint parliamentary committee probe into the alleged use of Pegasus spyware.

Jaipur/New Delhi: An international media consortium, of which The Wire is part, reported Sunday that over 300 verified mobile phone numbers, including Union two ministers, over 40 journalists, three opposition leaders and one sitting judge besides scores of businesspersons and activists in India could have been targeted for hacking through Pegasus spyware.

Former Rajasthan deputy chief minister Sachin Pilot on Wednesday demanded an independent probe into the charges of snooping on politicians, journalists and others using Pegasus spyware.

He said privacy has been breached and it has been established with the facts, and the Centre has no reason for not initiating an independent inquiry into the matter.

“This is a very serious issue and an independent inquiry is necessary to get to the bottom of it. The probe should be conducted by a joint parliamentary committee or in the supervision of the Supreme Court because impartiality cannot be expected from the Government of India,” he said.

Also read: Pegasus Project: 115 Names Revealed By The Wire On Snoop List So Far

“It is the responsibility of the government to order an independent inquiry into the matter. The Government of India is under question and there is no reason for not initiating an inquiry,” the Congress leader said.

Pilot said when the government of France can order an inquiry, there is no reason why the Union government should not do the same.

He said there is resentment among people, and any attempt to undermine democracy will not be tolerated.

“Any illegal malware, hacking of mobile and digital data of any individual is an infringement of an individual’s privacy, which is guaranteed by the Constitution. It is under challenge and it is the duty of the government to order an independent inquiry because the government cannot investigate its own actions,” he said.

He said, “it is high time that people are assured that their privacy is safe.”

There is an atmosphere of fear in society that anything is now hackable and people in power are misusing authority to invade people’s privacy and lives, he said.

Pilot said Congress is the only party that has the national footprint and can challenge the BJP at the national level.

Also read: BJP Fields State Leaders to Tackle Pegasus Allegations , Uses ‘International Conspiracy’ Bogey

He exuded confidence that the Congress with its allies will form the next government at the Centre.

People have realised that the UPA rule was far better than the present government’s rule, Pilot added.

He also said the Congress party will hold demonstrations across the country, including in Jaipur, against the matter.

When asked about the phone tapping charges against the Ashok Gehlot-led Congress government in Rajasthan, Pilot said that the state government has already said in the assembly what it had to clarify.

On the other hand, Delhi Pradesh Congress Committee (DPCC) president Anil Kumar Chaudhary on Wednesday demanded a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) probe into the alleged use of Israeli spyware, Pegasus, to snoop on at least 300 phone numbers, including those of opposition leaders, activists and journalists.

He also claimed that Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, whose name is also in the list of possible targets of surveillance, became a “target” of the ruling government as he has been constantly “raising uncomfortable issues” such as corruption in the Rafale deal, ongoing farmers’ agitation and mismanagement of the Covid pandemic.

“The Modi government should come clean on the issue through a JPC probe,” said Kumar during a press conference at the DPCC office.

Kumar also questioned the silence of Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal on the alleged snooping of phones of opposition leaders and other prominent citizens.

“The Kejriwal-led government’s survival depends on BJP government’s gratuitousness, whether it is for getting free oxygen supply, free Covid vaccine doses, hospital beds, managing the pandemic, and other aspects of governance,” he claimed.

The opposition BJP had accused the Congress government of phone tapping during a political crisis last year after the rebellion of Pilot against the leadership of Gehlot.

The allegations were levelled after some audio clips having conversations related to an alleged conspiracy to topple the Gehlot government surfaced.

Later in the assembly, the chief minister had denied the allegations and said there is no tradition of phone tapping in Rajasthan.

(With PTI inputs) 

Regional Newspapers Have More Detailed Coverage of Pegasus Than National, Business Dailies

Regional newspapers have been more enthusiastic about explaining the Pegasus spyware to their readers with the help of infographics, unlike some national and business dailies which preferred to put the story on the back pages.

New Delhi: An investigative news report by The Wire and other international publications revealed on Sunday that thousands of telephone numbers, including 200 Indian mobile numbers of ministers, opposition leaders, businessmen, journalists and others, were on a list of potential targets for clients of an Israeli surveillance technology firm. Forensic tests were also conducted on a small cross-section of phones as part of this project which revealed that Pegasus spyware was used in 37 phones, of which 10 are Indian.

According to the reports, published at 9:30 pm IST, the Israeli company NSO Group, which sells Pegasus worldwide, said it only sold the spyware to “vetted governments”.

The leaked database was accessed by Paris-based media nonprofit Forbidden Stories and Amnesty International and shared with The Wire, Le Monde, The Guardian, Washington Post Die Zeit, Suddeutsche Zeitung and 10 other Mexican, Arab and European news organisations as part of a collaborative investigation called the ‘Pegasus Project’.

The Prime Ministers’ Office was sent a detailed questionnaire earlier this week by the Pegasus project partners, to which the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology responded as saying: “The allegations regarding government surveillance on specific people has no concrete basis or truth associated with it whatsoever.”

On Monday morning, how traditional media, including Indian newspapers and news channels, covered the Pegasus Project story indicates the stance each media organisation takes when it comes to potential violations of citizens’ fundamental right to privacy. Regional newspapers have been more enthusiastic about explaining the Pegasus software to their readers with the help of infographics, unlike some national and business dailies which preferred to put the story on the back pages.

Also read: Pegasus: The New Global Weapon for Silencing Journalists

English newspapers/websites

Most English newspapers, including Hindustan Times and Mint covered the news report as a single column on their front pages. The Economic Times India’s largest business daily published the report on page 3. The Times of India, The Financial Express and Indian Express carried the story as the lead on their front flap/pages. The Telegraph carried it as lead on page 2, headlined “Judge and ministers on ‘hack wish list'”. Business Standard has not carried the report, but they have published a PTI copy on their website. The Hindu decided not to give it space on the front page, and carried the story on page 8 in a double column.

Most of the news stories didn’t have any infographics. When covering Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s announcements or other government-related reports, they usually do use graphics and other visual aids. 

Regional newspapers

Interestingly, many regional newspapers gave more importance to the Pegasus Project than national and business dailies.

Two of the most widely read Telugu dailies, Eenadu and Andhra Jyothy, gave substantial space to the explosive allegations. While Eenadu had a page 1 story detailing the people who were targeted by Pegasus, Andhra Jyothy had a second page report.

Bangla newspaper Anandabazar Patrika carried the story as the lead on its front page, headlined “Surveillance weapon on the phone”, with an infographic explaining how the software works. Divya Bhaskar, the most widely circulated Gujarati newspaper, along with Sandesh and Gujarat Samachar, also published the report on their front pages.

Loksatta, a widely circulated Marathi newspaper, also carried the story on its front page, with a small infographic explaining what is Pegasus.

Hindi newspapers

Among Hindi newspapers, only Dainik Bhaskar carried the full news report on its front page, with the headline “Spying in India…40 journalists, 3 opposition leaders, 2 ministers, one judge in the first list”, along with an infographic on how the Pegasus software works.

A Facebook post shared by senior journalist Ravish Kumar has expressed dismay over the placement of the news report in Amar Ujala, another leading Hindi daily, that has carried the story in a single column on page 11. The story has been placed along with three other stories, headlined “Pegasus had spied on more than 300 numbers, including 40 Indian journalists.”

The story was available to all media publications at the same time, since it was published at 9:30 pm. However, how each media organisation has placed and presented the report is indicative of the importance given to such a story.

Hindustan, the Hindi newspaper of HT, has carried only the government’s denial of the report, that too in a small space of around 50 words, continued to page 9. Navbharat Times, the Hindi newspaper of the Times Group, has placed the story on the front page, and just like HT, focuses more on what the government had to say on the allegations.

Other Hindi newspapers like Dainik Jagran, Jansatta, Punjab Kesari and Navoday, have not given any space to the news report on their front pages.

English and Hindi TV news channels

Except NDTV, no other English news channel has carried the full report. Other channels including Times Now and Zee News have only carried the government or the NSO Group’s versions.

The Pegasus Project is a collaborative investigation that involves more than 80 journalists from 17 news organisations in 10 countries coordinated by Forbidden Stories with the technical support of Amnesty International’s Security Lab. Read all our coverage here.