Israeli Foreign Minister Distances Government From Blacklisted NSO Group
Error: Contact form not found.
by Reuters and Algemeiner Staff

Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid speaks during a news conference as he meets with Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita in Rabat, Morocco August 11, 2021. REUTERS/Youssef Boudlal
Israel’s Foreign Minister Yair Lapid on Saturday distanced the Israeli government from the NSO Group, a firm blacklisted this week by the United States over alleged misuse of its phone hacking spyware.
An investigation by 17 media organizations published in July said NSO’s Pegasus software had targeted smartphones of journalists, rights activists and government officials in several countries.
The company sends its products abroad under licenses from Israel’s Defense Ministry, which has launched its own probe of the company’s practices after the alleged software misuse emerged.
No results have been announced and Israel has given no indication so far that it was considering limiting the scope of NSO’s exports.
“NSO is a private company, it is not a governmental project and therefore even if it is designated, it has nothing to do with the policies of the Israeli government,” Lapid told a news conference in Jerusalem. “I don’t think there is another country in the world which has such strict rules according to cyber warfare and that is imposing those rules more than Israel and we will continue to do so.”
His comments are the first made publicly by a senior Israeli minister since the US Commerce Department announced the blacklisting on Wednesday.
In the past, NSO Group has been accused of selling hacking tools to authoritarian regimes. NSO says it only sells its products to law enforcement and intelligence agencies and takes steps to curb abuse.
Its inclusion on the US list for engaging in activities contrary to US national security or foreign policy interests, means that exports to them from US counterparts are restricted.
NSO has said it was “dismayed” by the US decision and that it has ended contracts with government agencies that misused products it promotes as legitimate tools to help crime-fighting authorities battle terrorism.
Students Supporting Israel Launch Fall Tour to Promote Black, Ethiopian, Jewish Unity
Trump Says He Has Been ‘Best President’ For Israel, Questions Why Jews Vote Democrat
Majority of American Jews Still Hiding Identity to Avoid Hate Crime, New Survey Reports
Harvard Faculty Pen Letter Detailing Ongoing Antisemitism Crisis On Campus Amid White House Investigation
A New Book Reveals Perhaps the Most Important Lesson of October 7
California Jews Bear Disproportionate Share of Religion-Based Hate Crimes, New State Report Finds
Azerbaijani Jewish Leaders Urge Israel to Halt Armenian Genocide Bill Amid Fears of Strained Baku-Jerusalem Ties
How Latin America’s Political Realignment Is Shaping Israel’s Future
Ahead of the 2028 Presidential Election, Competing Worldviews on Iran Will Be on Full Display
On His Way Out, UNRWA Chief Faces Calls for Criminal Probe Into Hamas Infiltration









