Recent reports about two Polish opposition figures being spied on with the help of the Israeli NSO Group-developed software Pegasus may further inflame the Warsaw-Brussels row over the rule of law, according to Politico.
The US news outlet also quoted Radoslaw Sikorski, a Polish member of the European Parliament (MEP), as saying that the situation around the spyware scandal “puts Poland, unfortunately, in the same category as other authoritarian regimes who misuse criminal and technological capabilities for targeting not the bad guys but political rivals”.
Sikorski was partly echoed by German MEP Moritz Korner, who said that the EU does not have the authority to decide how the bloc’s member states should handle their internal security when it comes to pervasive surveillance practices.
Polish Opposition Figures Accuse Warsaw of Spying
The remarks come after lawyer Roman Giertych and prosecutor Ewa Wrzosek claimed that the Pegasus spyware had been used against them, with Giertych pointing the finger at Polish authorities and arguing that “they scanned my life totally”.
Government spokesperson Stanislaw Zaryn, for his part, declined to confirm or deny whether Warsaw ordered the hacks or purchased the Israeli group’s spyware, only insisting that "suggestions that Polish services use operational methods for political struggle are unjustified".
As for the NSO Group itself, it came under fire in July, when it was revealed that the group’s Pegasus spyware had been used to spy on the phones of about 50,000 targets, including politicians, businessmen, activists, journalists, and opposition figures around the world.
A logo adorns a wall on a branch of the Israeli NSO Group company, near the southern Israeli town of Sapir, Aug. 24, 2021
© AP Photo / Sebastian Scheiner
The politicians included French President Emmanuel Macron, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, King of Morocco Mohammed VI, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, and President of the European Council Charles Michel, among others.
The scandal was followed by the US Department of Commerce in November including the NSO Group in its list of entities engaging in activities that run counter to American national security.
Also in November, Apple launched a lawsuit against NSO Group for the surveillance and targeting of the company’s customers. The company is also seeking a permanent injunction to ban the group from using any Apple software, services, or devices.
As far as the Brussels-Warsaw dispute regarding the rule of law is concerned, it escalated in early October, when Poland's constitutional court ruled that its basic national law had primacy over some parts of EU treaties.
The move raised concerns within the bloc, while the European Commission opened a probe into the ruling to decide on further measures.