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 GLOBEANDMAIL.COM <http://www.theglobeandmail.com/imagesv3/print_mast.gif> 

Hezbollah highly skilled at infiltrating technology, experts say


By MARINA JIMÉNEZ 

Tuesday, December 20, 2005 Posted at 12:15 PM EST

Security experts say it's no surprise that a group linked to Hezbollah
cloned the cellphones of Ted Rogers and other high-level Rogers executives.

The Iranian-backed radical Shia group based in Lebanon -- regarded by many
as even more sophisticated than al-Qaeda -- has sharpened its
counterintelligence expertise over the years by keeping a step ahead of
Mossad, Israel's secret service. Hezbollah, whose name means Party of God,
has become ever more adept at intercepting electronic surveillance,
penetrating cellphone networks and recruiting computer science technicians.

"Hezbollah has a long history of underworld wrestling, matching wits with
Israeli intelligence agents," said Wesley Wark, an intelligence expert at
the University of Toronto. "Hezbollah has become technologically more
sophisticated to avoid detection. It's an ironic spinoff of having Western
agencies monitor their communications."

Cindy Hopper, a manager at Rogers security department, told a Toronto fraud
conference in September, 2005, that a group linked to Hezbollah not only
cloned Mr. Rogers' cellphone, but search warrants revealed the group was
also making phony passports, credit cards and other false documents. She
discovered the individuals were taking their scanners to Rogers' north
building, where the senior executives worked, knowing that nobody would want
to cut off the cellphones of Mr. Rogers or those directly reporting to him.
The impostors would call Iran, Lebanon, Kuwait and Syria on the cloned
phones.

Martin Rudner, head of the Canadian Centre of Intelligence and Security
Studies at Carleton University, said Hezbollah's terrorist arm raises funds
in Canada, and has also been involved in the stealing of cars that are
shipped to southern Lebanon. 

"Hezbollah successfully recruits computer scientists and is very effective
in telecommunications and in encrypting their messages in order to defeat
national security agents in Canada and the U.S.," he said.

In December, 2002, Hezbollah, whose goal is to establish a radical Shia
theocracy in Lebanon and to destroy Israel, was declared a terrorist
organization in Canada. 

A recent high-profile case involving cigarette smugglers based in North
Carolina revealed a Hezbollah cell had penetrated Vancouver three years
earlier.

In their book, Lightning out of Lebanon, authors Tom Diaz and Barbara Newman
describe the 1999 case. They note that CSIS began tracking a group of
Hezbollah agents in Vancouver. They were buying high-tech equipment, using
money sent to them from Hezbollah in Lebanon and from a cigarette-smuggling
ring in North Carolina. 

Mr. Diaz and Ms. Newman note that Hezbollah in Canada is also known to
recruit operatives.

*       © Copyright 2005 Bell Globemedia Publishing Inc. All Rights
Reserved.

 


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