South Africa’s intelligence agency unearthed information about a covert satellite surveillance program between Pretoria and Moscow with the help of a mole with “direct access to the Russian government,” leaked cables reveal.
The $100 million (£65 million) surveillance satellite system, codenamed Project Condor, was launched into orbit by Russia in December 2014. Initially shrouded in secrecy, with Moscow refusing to reveal the identity of its client, details have since emerged of Pretoria’s involvement in the program with Moscow, according to leaked spy cables obtained by Al-Jazeera and shared with The Guardian.
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The leaked intelligence document, dated August 28, 2012,
relies on information provided by an agent, codenamed “Agent
Africanist,” whose involvement in the program gave South Africa’s
intelligence agency top secret details of the satellite
surveillance system, which provides “coverage of the entire
African continent.”
Project Condor would give South Africa the ability to
“conduct its own aerial surveillance in Africa, potentially
right up to Israel for strategic military purposes.”
The briefing from Agent Africanist details changes with regards
to the degree of cooperation between South Africa and Russia’s
foreign intelligence service, the SVR, and its deployments in the
country.
“Project Condor is regarded as a significant part of the
envisaged strategic cooperation” between Moscow and
Pretoria, the leaked document claims. “Currently, there are
30 Russian technicians working in South Africa in close
cooperation with South African authorities on the project.”
To complement Project Condor, the intelligence document mentioned
another satellite system being developed
“simultaneously” by Moscow. “The aim is to
eventually integrate the two satellite systems and capabilities
providing wider strategic coverage with obvious benefits for both
countries,” the intelligence document said.
It was also reported that the South African government was
“seriously deliberating” offering an IPO (initial public
offering) in the state-owned arms manufacturer Denel.
“This has attracted the interest of the Russian arms
industry,” Agent Africanist says. In the event of such a
sale, “Russia will strongly consider entering into a
strategic arrangement with Denel, providing technical support,
knowhow and technology transfer.”
Such a joint enterprise between Russia and South Africa would be
“geared specifically towards the African market, taking on
the likes of France and the US,” the document said.
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Meanwhile, in a separate cache of secret documents, entitled
“Security Vulnerabilities in Government” (2009), obtained by
Al-Jazeera, South Africa emerges as a hotbed of espionage.
The leaked documents provide the identities of 78 foreign spies
operating in Pretoria, along with their photographs, addresses
and mobile phone numbers – as well as 65 foreign agents
identified as working undercover. Among the countries performing
espionage work in South Africa are the US, India and Britain.
One of the more shocking revelations from the leaked intelligence
documents appears to undermine Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu’s assertion before the UN General Assembly in September
2012 that Iran was readying to complete its "plans to build a
nuclear weapon.”
An October 2012 memo from Israeli intelligence
agency Mossad appears to contradict that claim. While conceding
that Iran was “working to close gaps in areas that appear
legitimate, such as enrichment reactors, which will reduce the
time required to produce weapons from the time the instruction is
actually given,” it also stated that Tehran was “not
performing the activity necessary to produce weapons.”
Another leaked document suggests that despite the US government’s
ban on contact with the Palestinian Islamist movement, the CIA
attempted to gain access to Hamas through a South African proxy
in 2012.
US and South African intelligence agents met in East Jerusalem
during a period of hostilities between Hamas and Israeli forces.
The leaked cables describe US forces as “desperate to make
inroads into Hamas in Gaza and possibly would like SSA
[South African State Security Agency] to assist them in
gaining access.”