Categories: SecurityWorkspace

Snowden: NSA, Israel Co-wrote Stuxnet

The US’ National Security Agency (NSA) collaborated with the Israeli government to create the program used in a cyber-attack that disrupted Iran’s uranium processing capability and delayed its nuclear ambitions, former intelligence consultant and whistleblower Edward Snowden said in an interview published in the German magazine Der Spiegel.

Allegedly conducted prior to Snowden’s release of classified intelligence documents, the interview describes the broad surveillance conducted by the NSA and other nations’ intelligence agencies.

Intelligence cooperation

In addition to other assertions, Snowden confirmed that the NSA shares surveillance and cooperates with other nations, including Israel.

“Yes, [they cooperate] all the time. The NSA has a massive body responsible for this: FAD, the Foreign Affairs Directorate,” Snowden said in the interview. When asked if the NSA helped create Stuxnet, he added: “[The] NSA and Israel co-wrote it.”

The interview was originally conducted by independent security researcher Jacob Appelbaum as a way to verify the credibility of a then-unknown NSA analyst. The edited text of the translated interview was published by Cryptome.org, a site that archives documents related to computer security and digital rights.

The assertion that Stuxnet is the work of the United States and Israel is not a new one. Many in the security community had suspected as much, when an anonymous Obama administration official confirmed that the countries had worked together to create the attack, New York Times Chief Washington Correspondent David Sanger wrote in his book Confront and Conceal: Obama’s Secret War and Surprising Use of American Power, published in June 2012.

The interview, which has been shortened and edited from the original technical interview, covers a number of other of topics as well. In the interview, Snowden discussed cooperation between national intelligence agencies, which he claims frequently share information without oversight.

TEMPORA

In addition, the United Kingdom has its own surveillance programme, dubbed TEMPORA, which can capture and buffer network communications for up to three days, he said.

“TEMPORA is the signals intelligence community’s first ‘full-take’ Internet buffer that doesn’t care about content type and pays only marginal attention to the Human Rights Act,” he stated in the interview. “It snarfs everything in a rolling buffer to allow retroactive investigation without missing a single bit.”

In addition, while the NSA has repeatedly assured US citizens that it does not collect any content from communications without a court order, Snowden maintains in the interview that the agency finds the metadata – who communicated with whom and when – far more valuable.

“In most cases, content isn’t as valuable as metadata because you can either re-fetch content based on the metadata or, if not, simply task all future communications of interest for permanent collection since the metadata tells you what out of their data stream you actually want,” Snowden said.

Do you know all about IT and the law? Take our quiz.

Originally published on eWeek.

Robert Lemos

Robert Lemos covers cyber security for TechWeekEurope and eWeek

View Comments

Recent Posts

Databricks Raises $10bn In Huge AI Funding Round

Data analytics and AI start-up Databricks completes huge $10bn round from major venture capitalists as…

21 mins ago

Congo Files Complaints Against Apple Over Conflict Minerals

Congo files legal complaints against Apple in France, Belgium alleging company 'complicit' in laundering conflict…

52 mins ago

EU Opens TikTok Probe Over Election Interference Claims

European Commission opens formal probe into TikTok after Romanian first-round elections annulled over Russian interference…

1 hour ago

China Chip Growth Slows As US Targets Legacy Chips

Growth in China's output of integrated circuits slows in November as Biden administration reportedly launches…

2 hours ago

Meta Adds ‘Live AI’ To Ray-Ban Smart Glasses

Facebook parent Meta adds AI voice chat, live translation to Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses as…

23 hours ago

US Senate Criticises Amazon Over Warehouse Safety

Senate study finds Amazon did not implement protections recommended by internal studies over risk they…

23 hours ago