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News ID: 103750
Publish Date : 17 June 2022 - 21:50

U.S. Military Group in Talks to Buy Blacklisted Zionist Pegasus Spyware

WASHINGTN (Dispatches) – The U.S. military contractor L3Harris Technologies is in talks with the Zionist regime’s notorious NSO Group surveillance technology to purchase the firm’s spyware tools despite it being placed on a U.S. blacklist.
The administration of U.S. President Joe Biden is warning that this potential acquisition is deeply concerning and would raise serious counterintelligence and security concerns for the U.S. government, according to the Washington Post.
Last November, the U.S. Department of Commerce added the occupying regime’s NSO and Candiru cyber intelligence companies to the blacklist of companies that it describes as engaging in activities that undermine U.S. national security and the foreign interests of America.
Florida-based L3Harris is traded on the NYSE with a market cap of $43.7 billion. The company has $400 million cash in its coffers so if the deal were to go ahead it would be required to seek financing. The company’s share price fell 2.7 percent after news of the negotiations were published, reported Globes.
U.S. Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, who chairs the finance committee and is a critic of government-sanctioned spying, said in a statement to the Guardian: “If the U.S. plans on using foreign-made surveillance technology, it might as well bcc the country that produces it on every intercept. It’s a serious national security risk, similar to the concerns associated with using foreign communications technology. The White House is right to raise concerns about this deal.”
According to the Financial Times, an Israeli official, who declined to address the progress of any talks because they were “a private commercial matter”, said the Zionist regime’s war ministry, “will have a clear interest in ensuring that this crucial technology remains in safe hands that Israel can trust”.
“Such a transaction, if it were to take place, raises serious counter-intelligence and security concerns,” the official added.
The occupying regime has been under global pressure to stop the export of spyware since last July, after a group of international rights and media organizations revealed that the Pegasus program produced by NSO was used to hack the phones of journalists, prime ministers, officials and human rights activists in many countries.