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The CIA Secretly Ran One of the World’s Largest Encryption Firms for Decades

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For decades, Swiss firm Crypto AG supplied governments around the world with encrypted communication systems. Most of its 62 customers never suspected anything was amiss, but a new report from The Washington Post and German broadcaster ZDF reveals that Crypto AG was actually owned by the CIA and West German intelligence (BND). For decades, the agencies effortlessly eavesdropped on the secure communications of allies and enemies alike.

Crypto AG didn’t start as a CIA operation — it was the brainchild of Russian-born inventor Boris Hagelin. Hagelin fled to Sweden when the Bolsheviks took power in Russia and then fled again to the US when the Nazis swept into Sweden. While in the US, he helped develop the M-209 encryption machine for US forces. After the war, Hagelin returned to Europe to reestablish Crypto AG in Switzerland. There, he developed more advanced versions of the pin-and-lug type encryption he used in the M-209.

According to the classified CIA documents obtained by The Post and ZDF, the CIA became concerned that Hagelin’s machines would allow other nations to completely obscure their communications, so it developed a plan to “deny” that technology to them. Knowing Hagelin held a great fondness for the US, intelligence officials approached him with a proposal. The CIA would pay Crypto AG to keep its more sophisticated cipher machines out of the hands of select nations. That would make their communications easier to intercept.

That arrangement suited the CIA just fine throughout the 1950s and 1960s, but the agency worried what would happen when Hagelin retired or died. In the mid-60s, the CIA and Crypto AG began cooperating more closely. As integrated circuits replaced geared encryption, the CIA designed a seemingly secure system that it could easily decipher. That formed the basis of Crypto AG’s new flagship products. In 1969, the CIA and BND purchased Crypto AG in secret, obscuring their control of the company with the help of a law firm in Liechtenstein.

Crypto AG continued operating as one of the world’s most successful secure communication firms throughout the late 20th century. Employees of the company thought they were providing powerful encryption systems to customers like Argentina, Libya, Iran, Brazil, India, and Egypt. However, the CIA and BND were able to read any correspondence they intercepted from Crypto AG machines.

Several nations became suspicious of Crypto AG in the late 80s when US President Ronald Regan chastised Libya for the way it gloated over a Berlin terrorist attack. He was so specific that Iran became concerned that the US had compromised the Crypto AG systems both it and Libya used. Iranian authorities detained a Crypto AG salesman for nine months. Upon his release, the man spoke to the media about his suspicions that Crypto AG was not what it appeared to be.

BND pulled out in the early 90s, fearing the operation might be revealed. However, the CIA remained in control of Crypto AG until 2018 when the firm was liquidated. By then, widely available online technologies had largely replaced Crypto AG products, but its hardware is still in use around the world. Probably not for much longer, though.


https://www.extremetech.com/extreme/306088-the-cia-secretly-ran-one-of-the-worlds-largest-encryption-firms-for-decades
 
For decades, the CIA secretly monitored government communications from allies and adversaries through its previously undisclosed ownership of a Swiss firm, The Washington Post reported Tuesday.

Beginning in 1970, the CIA and National Security Agency controlled nearly every aspect of Crypto AG, which started as a code building asset for U.S. troops during World War II.

Crypto's operations — hiring decisions, technology design, subverting algorithms and sales target management — were controlled by the CIA and West German intelligence until the early 1990s.


The arrangement allowed the U.S. and its West German allies to make money off foreign governments while simultaneously stealing sensitive foreign government data and information. Crypto AG sold equipment and made millions of dollars from the governments of Iran, India, Pakistan, the Vatican and military juntas in Latin America, who were all unaware of the CIA's involvement.

In the early 1990s the BND, the German spy agency, reportedly saw the risk of exposure as too high and left the operation. The CIA bought Germany's stake and kept the operation going, using Crypto AG for all its reconnaissance worth until 2018, when the agency sold the company's assets, according to current and former officials cited by the Post and ZDF, a German public broadcaster.

The CIA and the BND declined to comment to the Post, though U.S. and German officials reportedly did not dispute the authenticity of the documents.

Andreas Linde, the chairman of Crypto AG, told the two publications he did not know about the company's connection to the CIA and BND before confronted with the details.

Linde said Crypto AG is now investigating all of the technology it sells to determine whether it has any hidden vulnerabilities.


"We have to make a cut as soon as possible with everything that has been linked to Crypto," he said.

The U.S. and other governments have become extremely cautious of foreign technology that they believe could assume the same role as Crypto AG to spy on sensitive U.S. intelligence information.

The U.S. has argued that Chinese smartphone maker Huawei poses a national security threat with its next-generation cellular networks.

President Trump spoke last week with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson about the United Kingdom's decision to allow Huawei a limited role in developing its 5G mobile network. Previously, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo made a trip to the U.K. to discuss similar telecommunications matters with Johnson.

Attorney General William Barr proposed last week that the U.S. consider buying stakes in tech companies Ericsson and Nokia to create more international competition.

"It's all very well to tell our friends and allies they shouldn't install Huawei's, but whose infrastructure are they going to install?" Barr said.

The Hill has reached out to the CIA but has not immediately heard back.

https://thehill.com/regulation/international/482522-cia-used-encryption-company-to-spy-on-other-countries-for-decades
 
Americans spy on everyone all the time.. when the Chinese started doing it, apparently it was a big nasty business! Haha
 
Somehow more than America , Switzerland infuriates me , could be coz am currently in States but in the amount of grey issues where India is affected Switzerland occupies a huge part.

Like somehow all their systems are made to screw developing world.
 
Chinese mobiles had a backdoor for them to use. What’s to say most of American companies aren’t doing something similar at the behest of the US govt?
Some of the big American tech products used the world over:

Apple MacBooks and macOS
iPhones
iPads
iPod touches
Microsoft Windows, pretty much 95% corporate environments use windows
Google as web search engine and chrome as the browser.

Internet itself (TCP/IP) was a tool of US DoD in the late 70s and early 80s before it became public in the 90s or so.

IPv6 itself is rumored to be a big backdoor for NSA to snoop on you.
 
Not to mention, post 9/11 possibly even before then, US has been spying on allies and enemies alike with regularity.
 
Cisco routers.. oracle databases.. and the list goes on and on and on..
 
Chinese mobiles had a backdoor for them to use. What’s to say most of American companies aren’t doing something similar at the behest of the US govt?
Some of the big American tech products used the world over:

Apple MacBooks and macOS
iPhones
iPads
iPod touches
Microsoft Windows, pretty much 95% corporate environments use windows
Google as web search engine and chrome as the browser.

Internet itself (TCP/IP) was a tool of US DoD in the late 70s and early 80s before it became public in the 90s or so.

IPv6 itself is rumored to be a big backdoor for NSA to snoop on you.

TCP was actually a mechanism to provide reliability to IP communications, along with fragmentation.

You can snoop on any internet traffic by mirroring a switch-port, or commonly referred to as SPAN.

IP is not the actual backdoor, it's the packet header and payload.

It is rumored that the Mossad have access to the most popular Firewall vendors, including PaloAlto by sending malformed packets, discarded by every network stack, to the public IP of the firewall.
 
What I meant was that TCp/IP was invented by DARPA, (USDoD) as technology and not that it is a backdoor in itself but just the fact that US scientists were so far ahead of others and visionaries in this form of communication and all the encompassing protocols, that’s it’s ridiculous to think they didn’t have a leg up in the snooping field. Most IT relates products and inventions come from the US asad US is the center of innovation, but this privilege is also used as a subterfuge weapon..
 
Not to mention, post 9/11 possibly even before then, US has been spying on allies and enemies alike with regularity.

And you think that others like Russia & China don’t do it? Possibly this has been happening since the world war/cold war days, just the modes of spying have changed.

Any government has to be incredibly naive to assume that a Big brother ain’t watching every move they make!
 
Why do you think the Americans are objecting so strongly to Huwaei providing the technology for 5G networks? It takes a thief to know a thief, the yanks are obviously worried that the Chinese would be in a position to do what they have done for decades.
 
And you think that others like Russia & China don’t do it? Possibly this has been happening since the world war/cold war days, just the modes of spying have changed.

Any government has to be incredibly naive to assume that a Big brother ain’t watching every move they make!
You didn’t get my point.
They all do it.. but it’s considered kosher only when US does it. And US does it much much more because of its superior tech and most tech giants being US based.

When others do it, all of a sudden it’s evil and dastardly.
Right now there is a war going on between US and Chinese tech companies. US is banning Phones and devices from certain Chinese firms and have issued warning that they are not secure and used for spying by the Chinese government. When was the last time such warnings were issued for iPhones and windows when we know they have more security holes in those devices than Swiss cheese and NSA has been known to use them to snoop on people
 
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