The Former Israeli Spies Overseeing US Government Cyber Security
https://www.donotpanic.news/p/the-former-israeli-spies-overseeing
A company with deep ties to Israeli intelligence
oversees cyber security across more than seventy US government agencies,
including the Department of Defense and Homeland Security.
Axonius was founded by former spies in Israel’s Unit
8200 and its software, which allows an operator ‘visibility and control over all
types and number of devices,’
collects and analyses the digital data of millions of US federal employees.
The stated aim of the Axonius platform is to
centralise IT tools to identity and fix security breaches. As a product of
Israeli intelligence, however, the scale of Axonius’s use across the US
government raises serious questions.
Axonius was founded and is currently run by Israelis
Dean Sysman, Ofri Shur and Avidor Bartov, who met in the 2010s while working on the same team
within Israel’s Unit 8200 spy
service. On his LinkedIn profile, Sysman offers few details of their work for
the IDF, describing it simply as having ‘far-reaching implications.’
Sysman left the IDF in 2014 after five years and set
up a cyber hacking outfit, while Shur and Bartov stayed on until 2017, a period which encompassed
Israel’s 2014 war of aggression against Gaza, during which the IDF murdered
more than two thousand Palestinian civilians.
Axonius was established with curious speed. After
leaving the IDF in 2017, Shur and Bartov teamed back up with Sysman and
immediately received $4 million in seed funding from Yoav Leitersdorf, a San Francisco-based Israeli-American and fellow
Unit 8200 veteran, to start Axonius. Leitersdorf, the managing partner at
US-Israeli venture capital firm YL Ventures, is a prolific early-stage investor
in Unit 8200 cyber start-ups.
The same year Sysman, Shur and Bartov also received
millions in seed financing from Israeli firm Vertex Ventures which is run by
veterans of Israel’s spy units. Tami Bronner, a partner at Vertex, spent
four years in Israeli military intelligence.
Following this early financing from investors close to
Israel’s intelligence establishment, the company went on to receive hundreds of
millions in investment from a network of US venture capital firms with
intelligence links to Israel.
These include Palo Alto-based Accel Partners, which
has invested in more than thirty Israeli tech companies, including another Unit 8200 cyber spin-out,
Oasis. Nir Blumberger, an Israeli who served in the IDF, was recruited by
Accel from Facebook to open its Tel Aviv office in 2016.
Other Axonius backers include San
Francisco-headquartered Bessemer Venture Partners which employs former Israeli
intelligence operatives in a Tel Aviv office led by Adam Fisher. An American
who emigrated to Israel in 1998, Fisher has acted as an intermediary between
Zionists in Silicon Valley and the IDF, and during the genocide gave a presentation on how Israel can win the online war. Israeli
Amit Karp, a partner at Bessemer Ventures and another former Israeli
intelligence officer, sits on the Axonius board.
Menlo Park-based Lightspeed Venture Partners, which
has backed Axonius with around $200 million over numerous funding rounds, also
has significant ties to Israeli spy units. Yonit Wiseman, a partner at
Lightspeed, spent six years in Israeli military intelligence, leaving in
2018. Her colleague, Tal Morgenstern, was a special forces commander in the IDF.
Given the evidence that Axonius is an Israeli
intelligence cut-out, the scale of its penetration within the US federal
government structure is extraordinary.
The company says its platform is ‘deployed in more than 70
federal organizations’ and is used by four of the five major US Department of Defense service agencies.
The US federal government contract award website shows Axonius awards for the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps,
which in itself means millions of personnel and their devices.
In November 2024, the company was selected by the Department of
Homeland Security to
modernise its cybersecurity abilities by centralising ‘data coming from
hundreds of separate data sources residing across dozens of federal, civilian,
and executive branch agencies.’ Just a month later, in December 2024, the
company was contracted by the Department of
Defense to upgrade
its system of 24/7 surveillance which oversees all on-site and off-site DoD
computers and IT networks, a capability known as ‘continuous monitoring and
risk scoring.’ And in April this year Axonius obtained authorisation for any US federal agency to use its cloud-based
cyber surveillance system.
Other federal departments integrating Axonius software
include energy, transportation, the US Treasury and many others. Data from the US spending awards
site shows the US
Defence Logistics Agency, responsible for managing America’s global weapons
supply chain, is the single largest Axonius customer, spending $4.3 million in
2023 alone. The Department of Agriculture has paid nearly $2 million for
Axonius tools and the Department of Health and Human Services has spent $1.3
million since 2021.
Axonius is commonly described as an American company.
While its headquarters and administrative functions are in New York, its
founders, senior executives, and its primary financiers are all Israeli, and,
critically, its software and engineering functions are based in Tel Aviv.
Axonius has more than eight-hundred employees, and a search of LinkedIn profiles confirms that a majority of Axonius’s engineers
in Tel Aviv have a background in Israeli military intelligence.
The pitch for the Axonius system is that it
centralises data from all the security and IT tools an organisation uses into
one place for easier analysis, control and fixes. And that place is Tel Aviv,
where the hundreds of former Israeli spies working as engineers for Axonius
have unprecedented access and visibility into the habits and movements of
millions of US federal government employees.
With this visibility an Axonius operator can connect
individual devices with individual IDs as well as seeing all login/logoff data
and website usage. An operator can also order an account to be disabled, a
device to be quarantined, or a user to be removed from a group.
In addition to this, Axonius has a separate R&D
division within the company known as AxoniusX, a skunkworks unit focused on
developing new cyber tools, run by another Unit 8200 spook, Amit Ofer.
Perhaps none of this matters, and Axonius is simply
indicative of the sleazy, symbiotic nature of the relationship between the US
and its colonial outpost.
This would be a fair argument if it wasn’t for
Israel’s long history of espionage in the United States. From recruiting Hollywood producers who ran front companies that stole nuclear
technologies, to selling bugged software to foreign governments, spying (especially cyber
spying), has been central to Israel’s foreign policy. Robert Maxwell, the
father of Ghislaine Maxwell, was a spy for Israel, and a significant amount of
circumstantial evidence suggests Jeffrey Epstein was also an Israeli military intelligence asset.
More recently, during Trump’s first term, Israel planted miniature spying
devices around the
White House and other US government buildings in Washington DC to monitor US
officials.
US authorities, then, have allowed former spies from a
country with a known history of espionage within the United States to establish
a framework of cyber intelligence access across almost the entire federal
government apparatus.
To put it another way, the US has effectively
subcontracted its federal-level cyber security infrastructure to Israeli
intelligence.
Whether Axonius has used, or has any intent to use its
unprecedented access maliciously, is impossible to know. For anyone with
knowledge of Israel’s history of spying, however, the embedding of cyber
software made by former Israeli spies within the US federal computer system
network should raise serious alarms.
More broadly, Axonius shows how a militarised Israeli
state takes billions in American funding every year to build its digital
architecture of apartheid and genocide, and then sells these capabilities back
to the US. American taxpayers, then, effectively pay Israel twice. And when the
US buys back the technologies their taxpayers funded in the first place, they
are inviting in trojan horse capabilities and making Israeli war criminals rich
in the process.
The good news is that millions of ordinary Americans are
wising up to the
reality that Israel is not the great deal for the US that political leaders
have, for so long, sold it as.
The Axonius story confirms, once again, just how bad
this deal is.