Fugitive American whistleblower Edward Snowden has charged
that the Stuxnet virus, known for sabotaging Iranian computers linked to the
country’s nuclear program, was the byproduct of an American and Israeli spy
agency project.
In a interview with Der Spiegel, a German weekly, published
Sunday, the former NSA contractor said the US spy agency and Israel cooperate
on security matters through a branch of the organization known as the Foreign
Affairs Directorate.
Snowden told the newsmagazine that the coordination
between the countries was organized so that foreign authorities could “insulate
their political leaders from the backlash” in case “how grievously they’re
violating global privacy” becomes public knowledge.
When asked whether the NSA helped write the Stuxnet program,
Snowden said “the NSA and Israel wrote Stuxnet together.”
Stuxnet made international headlines in 2010 when it wrought
havoc on equipment at Iran’s Natanz nuclear plant and complicated the
manufacture of highly enriched uranium, which the West suspects is intended for
making atomic weapons. Stuxnet temporarily disabled 1,000 centrifuges that the
Iranians were using to enrich uranium.
Iran claims the Stuxnet virus was part of a campaign against
its nuclear program by Western states.
In 2012, New York Times reporter David Sanger wrote that
Stuxnet was part of a Bush-era joint Us and Israeli program, codenamed Olympic
Games, designed to sabotage Iran’s nuclear program.
The report claimed the attacks against Iran’s nuclear
program were ordered sped up by US President Barack Obama.
Neither Jerusalem or Washington have never acknowledged any
connection to the virus or others like it that have struck Iran.
However, according to a report in semi-official Iranian Fars
news agency, “US intelligence officials revealed in April 2012 that the Stuxnet
malware was not only designed to disrupt Iran’s nuclear program, but was part
of a wider campaign directed from Israel that included the assassination of the
country’s nuclear scientists.”
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