Attack on Hezbollah/ It is suspected that a spy program was installed on the electronic devices, with a self-destruct command

2024-09-19 08:57:24Kosova&Bota SHKRUAR NGA REDAKSIA VOX
The devices that exploded

As the September 17 and 18 remote-controlled explosion of thousands of electronic communication devices belonging to Hezbollah members in Lebanon and Syria has so far left at least 31 dead, over 4,300 injured and 500 blinded, how the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad, suspected to be behind the explosions with a message or button (although it has not yet given an official reaction), is one of the biggest puzzles.

An espionage solution almost perfect in its dynamics, culminating in the physical dismantling of a vast network of Israel's most sworn and dangerous enemy. Apparently, according to experts, this organized attack required a lot of time for realization and was Tel Aviv's "ace up the sleeve".

The implementation of the plan has been done only now, with the execution of the order, at the very moment that Israel is preparing to open a new war front in Lebanon, after the battle in Gaza with Hamas. But the installation of battery-bombs or explosives has been done for a long time, as a precautionary measure.

There is still no information on when Hezbollah's latest supply of pagers and walkie-talkies was made. This would also shed a lot of light on Israeli infiltration and espionage plans.

Experts have two questions: When were the explosive devices placed and where?

If there was a mini-charger or extra battery inside the device, it would have been dictated by the users who were in their thousands and would have alerted the Hezbollah headquarters. Shipment cannot be purchased without security and control. The strongest suspect remains the electronic package of the device. So a type of software or spy program that can be controlled remotely, with a self-destruct command on the battery.

This is the most reliable option so far from the investigations, although not official or based on cyber expertise. Otherwise, Hezbollah would dictate. The company that produced it is suspected to have infiltrated the manufacturing plant, or to have been aware of the action it was carrying out.

If he ordered the electronic package of pagers and cell phones elsewhere, then investigators should go back to the origin of the supplier. The fact that until now the Hungarian company in Budapest, "Bac Consulting" has not reacted, leaves much to be doubted.

A spy program inside the devices would be difficult for Hezbollah to track, while an additional mini-explosive battery inside the device would be more detectable. Sending the "beep" message to the device for 10 seconds (referred to the evidence), seems to have activated the battery's self-destruction program: its overheating and finally exploding.

If it were explosive, experts think that it would explode at the first signal that the bell or sound frequency would ring, but this is only a hypothesis, without having an expert result.

Users recalled receiving a message, but it turned out to be the secret spyware code that triggered the explosion. And it seems that the luckiest were those who did not have the device with them at that moment, did not hear it, or did not keep it close to vital organs, such as the head or heart.

Is it possible to remotely control the explosion of an electronic device with a spy program? In the innovative times of cybernetics and technology, it already seems more than possible and moreover untraceable, or undetectable, when devices are so small and complicated.

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