By accessing video feeds of Israeli aircraft, the NSA and GCHQ intelligence services ‘monitor IDF operations in Gaza, watch for potential strike on Iran’
The
two countries have reportedly used this access to monitor IDF
operations in Gaza, watch for a potential strike on Iran, and keep tabs
on the drone technology that Israel exports.
Based on documents and photos leaked by US
intelligence whistle-blower Edward Snowden, which had previously been
classified, the US and Britain has for years been able to track the
transmissions of Israeli aircraft, and effectively view images and
videos broadcast to IDF commands during drone operations in the Gaza
Strip, the West Bank, and near the Jewish state’s northern border.
The tracking has been done from a Royal Air
Force installation in the Troodos Mountains, near Mount Olympus, the
highest point on the Island of Cyprus, according to The Intercept, which, along with German newspaper Der Spiegel, first published the documents.
The IDF encryption code was cracked as part of
a major intelligence operation that has been conducted by the US’s
National Security Agency (NSA) and its British counterpart, the GCHQ,
since 1998, the Ynet news site reported. Throughout the operation, many
ciphers for advanced weapons systems used by Hezbollah, Egypt, Turkey,
Iran and Syria were broken.
‘This access is indispensable for understanding Israeli military training and operations and thus an insight to possible future developments in the region’
However, much of the focus of the operation, code-named Anarchist, was Israel.
“This is an earthquake,” a senior security
source — who spoke on condition of anonymity — told Ynet. “It means that
they have forcibly stripped us, and, no less important, that probably
none of our encrypted systems are safe from them. This is the worst leak
in the history of Israeli intelligence.”
The US and the UK, said The Intercept, have
been “monitoring (Israeli) military operations in Gaza, watching for a
potential strike against Iran, and keeping tabs on the drone technology
Israel exports around the world.”
In the photos leaked by Snowden, shots from
video recordings taken by Israeli aircraft can been seen in detail, as
well as slides prepared by members of the US and British intelligence
organizations explaining the significance of the findings.
“This access is indispensable for maintaining
an understanding of Israeli military training and operations and thus an
insight to possible future developments in the region,” a GCHQ report
from 2008 read, The Intercept reported. “In times of crisis this access
is critical and one of the only avenues to provide up to the minute
information and support to US and Allied operations in the area.”
In 2008, according to The Intercept, the NSA’s
internal newsletter, SIDToday, enthused that on January 3, after an
Israeli airstrike on terror targets in Gaza, analysts had “collected
video for the first time from the cockpit of an Israeli Air Force F-16
fighter jet,” which “showed a target on the ground being tracked.”
In another leaked document, intelligence
analysts are requested to record and send a video of IDF operations to
GCHQ. “Due to the political situation of the region, there is a
requirement for Israeli UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) operations in
certain areas to be intercepted and exploited so that assessments can be
made on what possible actions maybe [sic] taking place,” the request,
dated July 29, 2008, reads.
Twenty snapshots identified by The Intercept
in the documents include several video stills taken from Israeli drones,
dating between February 2009 and June 2010.
According to a report in The Wall Street
Journal late last month, even after US President Barack Obama announced
two years ago he would limit spying on friendly heads of state, the NSA
kept watch on Netanyahu and top Israeli officials as the Jewish state
sought to thwart the nascent deal with Iran over its nuclear program.
In the process, the agency caught some conversations with US lawmakers, according to the report.
According to the Journal report, some of the
exchanges in question involved Israeli strategy around the Iran nuclear
deal that Netanyahu ardently opposed, as did congressional Republicans.
In some cases the NSA overheard Israeli officials trying to convince
undecided lawmakers to oppose the deal, which Congress ultimately failed
to block.
The White House declined to comment on
specific intelligence activities carried out by the US. But White House
officials said the US doesn’t spy overseas unless there’s a specific,
validated national security reason to do so, emphasizing that the
principle applies both to world leaders and regular citizens.
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