How the US and its ‘friends’ keep stealing each other’s secrets
Western spooks targeting Russian industry have long indulged in a spying orgy among themselves
“There is an active hunt not only for promising research, the data and
parameters of our weapons, but also for our specialists who are especially
valuable,” Russian Industry and Trade Minister Denis Manturov recently said,
referring to Western spies and their efforts to seek information about Russian
defense production by targeting industry experts.
Well, approaching “soft target” experts for info is certainly a better bet for
spies than trying to chat up a soldier whose BS-detector is more finely tuned to
espionage. And Western spooks know this better than anyone else since they’ve
been busy practicing – among themselves.
Ultimately, all spying is about getting an economic advantage – whether in
conflict or war, where the outcome determines the prominence of any future
economic foothold, or more directly through theft of economically valuable
secrets or the subversion of trade or competition. The current focus on the
military conflict between Russia and the Western military alliance via Ukraine
obscures the fact that for all the public proclamations of unity and solidarity
by Western leaders, they’d all screw each other over economically if given even
the slightest chance.
The Ukraine conflict has really underscored the American view of Germany as an
economic rival, which once translated into Washington’s systemic criticism of
Germany’s Nord Stream economic lifeline of Russian gas (before it was
mysteriously blown up). Now, it’s seen in the form of Uncle Sam’s enticing of
German companies to US shores with green tax breaks and plentiful energy as
limited and pricey replacement American liquified natural gas sold to Europe has
sparked German deindustrialization. It was a longtime dream come true for the
US, having considered Germany a key competitor on the global stage since the
early ’90s.
In 1995, the Los Angeles Times reported that President Bill Clinton’s
administration directed the CIA to “take economic espionage off the back
burner,” and that even before Clinton, “it became clear that economic rivalry
with industrial superpowers such as Japan and Germany was being viewed by the
White House and Congress as a critical national security issue following the
collapse of the Soviet Union.”
By 1999, the European press was reporting the theft of wind turbine blueprints
from German company Enercon, to the benefit of an American rival. The US
electronic espionage service (the National Security Agency) was blamed for it,
and for targeting at least 30 German firms.
Berlin was apparently so outraged by US spying that its BND foreign spy service
actually helped the same NSA industrially spy on German business interests and
on its neighbor and fellow US ally, France, for over a decade in the wake of
this incident, as the German press reported in 2015. It’s no secret that the
Franco-German-led Airbus Group (the known as EADS) is really the only major
global rival to Pentagon contractor and commercial jet maker Boeing, yet
Germany’s Sueddeutsche Zeitung reported at the time that Germany helped the US
spy on it, too. So when current German Chancellor Olaf Scholz stood beside Biden
before the Ukraine conflict and smiled while the latter mused like a mafioso
about taking care of the Nord Stream pipeline of cheap Russian gas, it wasn’t
the only time that Berlin appeared enthusiastic about bending over for
Washington.
Washington also long considered France to be an industrial powerhouse,
particularly under former President Charles de Gaulle, whose official policy of
nuclear power development turned the country into a cheap energy powerhouse to
rival American industry – and therefore into a target for US industrial spying.
The CIA station in Paris was rolled up and expelled in a 1995 French domestic
intelligence operation that ended with Paris publicly accusing the US of
economic espionage. While the details of that spy operation still remain murky
after all these years, it appears to be the same kind of trade-related espionage
that the US also practiced during the Clinton administration on another ally,
Japan, amid automobile-related trade negotiations, as the Los Angeles Times
reported in 1995.
More recently, acquisitions of French industrial knowledge by US competitors
have been the visible tip of the iceberg of Washington’s cut-throat methods of
securing industrial advantages – like when France’s nuclear know-how division of
Alstom was acquired by Pentagon contractor General Electric, as the heat was
turned up on Alstom executives, including the CEO, jailed and charged in the US
under American extraterritorial law for alleged corruption in developing
countries.
Of course, what remains unseen is far more egregious. About 100 French companies
were targeted by NSA spies, Wikileaks reported in 2015 – “including almost all
of the CAC 40” index of the country’s top businesses, according to France’s
Liberation newspaper.
Not that the French have been immune from dabbling in a little ami-on-ami
spying. In 1993, two French officials were sent back to Paris after being caught
spying on US industry under diplomatic cover. Around the same time, a French
intelligence report leaked to the press cited “49 high-technology US companies,
24 financial services companies and US officials handling sensitive trade talks…
which are being targeted by spies for their negotiating strategies,” Britain’s
Independent reported at the time.
These days, no one with even two brain cells who attends the Paris Airshow,
or the Milipol internal security summit, leaves their computer or phone in their
hotel room. Just like back in the days of France’s Concorde supersonic jet,
Canadian and American intelligence services warned their executives to treat the
plane as though it was bugged to pick up any conversations.
Not to be forgotten is America’s “best ally,” Israel, cited by the US government
in targeting American business people for research and development intelligence
as far back as 1992 – and more recently through its military-grade Pegasus
spyware and its larger cyber-surveillance industry, whose separation from the
state is highly questionable at best and nonexistent at worst.
Moscow’s public acknowledgement that it’s now actively the target of the West’s
orgy of industrial espionage means that it now has the same choice as every cat
owner. It can interpret any bite as an act of aggression, or just do what the
West does among themselves and chalk it up to a love bite, all while plotting
how to step on the offending cat’s tail – with plausible deniability, of course.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN