JUST OUTSIDE THE MAIN DOWNTOWN part of Athens lies Kolonos, an old Athenian neighborhood near the archaeological park of Akadimia Platonos, where Plato used to teach. Along the maze of narrow streets, flower-filled balconies hang above open-air markets, and locals gather for hours at lazy sidewalk cafes, sipping demitasse cups of espresso and downing shots of Ouzo in quick gulps.
It was a neighborhood Costas Tsalikidis knew well. He lived at No. 18 Euclid Street, a loft apartment just down the hall from his parents. Slim and dark-haired, with a strong chin and a sly smile, he was born in Athens 38 years earlier to a middle-class family in the construction business. Talented in math and physics from an early age, he earned a degree in electrical engineering from the National Technical University of Athens, considered the most prestigious college in Greece, where he specialized in telecommunications, and later obtained his master’s in computer science in England. Putting his skills to good use, for the last 11 years he had worked for Vodafone-Panafon, also known as Vodafone Greece, the country’s largest cell phone company, and was promoted in 2001 to network-planning manager at the company’s headquarters in the trendy Halandri section of Athens.
On March 9, 2005, Costas’ brother, Panagiotis, dropped by the apartment. He thought he’d have a coffee before a business meeting scheduled for that morning. But as he entered the building, he found his mother, Georgia, running up and down the corridor yelling for help.
“Cut him down!” she was saying. “Cut him down!”
Panagiotis had no idea what she was talking about until he went inside his brother’s apartment and saw Costas hanging from a rope tied to pipes above the lintel of his bathroom door, an old wooden chair nearby. He and his mother cut the rope and laid Costas down on the bed.
Costas Tsalikidis
Photo: Courtesy of the Tsalikidis family
For a year, the eavesdropping case remained secret, but when the affair finally became public, it was regarded as Greece’s Watergate. One newspaper called it “a scandal of monumental proportions.” And at its center was the dark underside of the 2004 Summer Olympic Games in Athens. While the athletes were competing for medals as millions watched, far in the shadows spies had hacked into the country’s major telecom systems to listen and record.
A decade later, Costas’ death is caught up in an investigation into what now appears to have been a U.S. covert operation in Greece. Last February, Greek authorities took the extraordinary step of issuing an international arrest warrant for a CIA official the Greeks believe was a key figure in the operation while based in Athens. Unnoticed by the U.S. press, the warrant was a nearly unprecedented action by an allied country. The intelligence official, identified as William George Basil, was accused of espionage and eavesdropping. But by then he had already left the country, and the U.S. government, as it has done for the past 10 years, continues to stonewall Greek authorities on the agency’s involvement.
The Greek charges only touch the surface, however, and Basil may be less a key figure than simply a spy guilty of poor tradecraft. An investigation by The Intercept has uncovered not only the role of the CIA, but also that of the NSA, as well as how and why the operation was carried out. The investigation began while I was producing a documentary for PBS NOVA on cyberwarfare, scheduled to air on October 14, for which some of the interviews were conducted. In addition, I have had exclusive access to highly classified and previously unreported NSA documents released by Edward Snowden.
The Intercept, along with the Greek newspaper Kathimerini, interviewed over two dozen people familiar with the wiretapping case, ranging from U.S. intelligence officials and Greek government officials to those involved in the investigation and its aftermath. Many of those interviewed agreed to talk on condition that their names not be used, fearing criminal prosecution for speaking on intelligence matters or professional retribution. While some questions remain, the evidence points to a massive illegal eavesdropping program that may have led to Costas’ tragic death.
“COSTAS WAS ENGAGED,” his brother, Panagiotis, told me last year. “He was planning to get married.” Like Costas, who was three years younger, Panagiotis spoke fluent English, the product of frequent trips to the U.S., both on business and vacation.
After a dinner of lamb and hummus at a restaurant not far from the apartment where Costas died, Panagiotis spoke emotionally about his brother. “He had met the woman of his life and they were planning to get married really soon. And for that reason, they were looking to get a house and they had already started buying things that they could use in their new household. Costas was happy and optimistic and things had been working out really good for him.”
At the time, Panagiotis couldn’t understand what had happened; Costas was in good health and, at least until recently, seemed to love his job at Vodafone. “I thought there was no reason for him to commit suicide,” he said, although he acknowledged Costas had been under more pressure than usual. “In the last year of his life, he was working very hard because Greece had undertaken the Olympic Games of 2004,” he said. “And that meant a lot of hours at work and a lot of planning to beef up the networks.”
Given the enormous numbers of journalists and tourists who were planning to attend the events, all wanting to communicate, Costas’ workload increased enormously in the months before the games were to begin. Eventually, the technical infrastructure created by the Athens Olympics Organizing Committee for staff and media involved more than 11,000 computers, 23,000 fixed-line telephone devices, and 9,000 mobile phones. But the Olympics ended more than six months before Costas’ death, so there had to be another reason.
At work, things suddenly began to change. Costas told his brother that he wanted to quit. “He tendered his resignation to the company, but it wasn’t accepted,” Panagiotis told me. “He wanted to get out.” And he sent a text to his fiancée, a piano teacher named Sara Galanopoulou, saying he had to leave his job, adding cryptically that it was a “matter of life and death.”
As Costas Tsalikidis and his colleagues at Vodafone worked overtime in the months leading up to the games, thousands of miles away another group was also getting ready for the Summer Olympics in Greece: members of the U.S. National Security Agency. But rather than communicating, they were far more interested in listening. According to previously undisclosed documents from the Snowden archive, NSA has a long history of tapping into Olympic Games, both overseas and within the U.S. “NSA has had an active role in the Olympics since 1984 Los Angeles games,” according to a classified document from 2003, “and has seen its involvement increase with the recent games in Atlanta, Sydney, and Salt Lake City. During the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, the focus was on counterterrorism, and NSA acted largely in support of the FBI in a fusion cell known as the Olympics Intelligence Center (OIC). … NSA’s support to the 2004 Olympics in Athens will be much more complicated.”
In 2004, for the first time since the 9/11 attacks of 2001, the Summer Olympic Games would be held outside the U.S., and thus the difficulties would be far greater. “Several factors will make the Athens Olympics vastly different,” the document continued, “not the least of which is the fact these Olympics will not be held at a domestic location. Also different is that the security organization that NSA will support is the EYP, or Greek National Intelligence Service. NSA will gather information and tip off the EYP of possible terrorist or criminal actions. Without a doubt, the communication between NSA and EYP will take some coordination, and for that reason preparations are already underway.”
According to a former senior U.S. intelligence official involved with the operation, there was close cooperation between NSA and the Greek government. “The Greeks identified terrorist nets, so NSA put these devices in there and they told the Greeks, OK, when it’s done we’ll turn it off,” said the source. “They put them in the Athens communications system, with the knowledge and approval of the Greek government. This was to help with security during the Olympics.”
The Olympic Games ran smoothly — there were no serious terrorist threats and Greece had its best medal tally in more than a century. On August 29, 16 days after the games began, closing ceremonies were held at the Athens Olympic Stadium. As 70,000 people watched, Greek performers displayed traditional dances, a symbolic lantern was lit with the Olympic Flame, and Dr. Jacques Rogge, president of the International Olympics Committee, gave a short speech and then officially closed the games.
Two weeks later, the Paralympics ended, and at that point, keeping their promise to the Greek government, the NSA employees should have quietly disconnected their hardware and deleted their software from the local telecommunications systems, packed up their bugging equipment, and boarded a plane for Fort Meade. The problem was, they didn’t. Instead, they secretly kept the spying operation active, but instead of terrorists, they targeted top Greek officials. According to the former U.S. intelligence official involved with the operation, the NSA began conducting the operation secretly, without the approval or authorization of the CIA chief of station in Athens, the U.S. ambassador, or the Greek government.
“We had a huge problem right after the Greek Olympics,” the source said. “They [NSA] said when the Olympics is over, we’ll turn it off and take it away. And after the Olympics they turned it off but they didn’t take it away and they turned it back on and the Greeks discovered it. They triangulated some signals, anonymous signals, and it all pointed back to the embassy.”
At that point, the source said, someone from the Greek government called Richard Eric Pound, the CIA chief of station at the embassy in Athens and the person officially responsible for all intelligence operations in the country. Pound had arrived in May 2004, replacing Michael F. Walker, the agency’s former deputy director of the paramilitary Special Activities Division, as chief of station in Athens. Describing himself as “a small town boy from Indiana who set off to see the world,” Pound had joined the agency in 1976. Hefty and mustachioed, he was a veteran of the agency’s backwater posts in Africa.
Pound, according to the source, knew nothing about the operation having been turned back on, so he called his boss at CIA headquarters to ask about it. “He says, ‘What in God’s name is this all about?’” said the source (Pound declined to speak to The Intercept). Pound’s boss then immediately called his NSA counterpart. “Oh, yeah, we were going to tell you about that,” the NSA official told Pound’s CIA boss, according to the source. “They didn’t take it out and they turned it back on.”
National Security Agency Deputy Director John Chris Inglis in Washington, D.C., June 18, 2013.
Photo: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images
In 2006, Chris Inglis became the NSA’s deputy director, the agency’s No. 2 official, who was thus in a position to discover what had happened. In an interview, I questioned him about the scandal and the illegal bugging operation. “Was the NSA involved?” I asked. Inglis offered no denial. “I couldn’t say whether NSA was involved in that or any other activity that might have been alleged to be conducted by an intelligence service, let alone NSA.”
Inglis did confirm, however, that NSA operations in foreign countries would normally have the approval of the CIA chief of station. “The chief of station,” he said, “would speak on intelligence matters for the nation, or essentially be expected to adjudicate matters on behalf of the nation.” He added, “So if NSA was expected to conduct an intelligence operation physically in some particular place of the world, I would expect that the chief of mission — the ambassador — and that the chief of station — the intelligence rep — would have some influence on that, some kind of ability to understand what it was and to ensure that it was done in the proper way.”
I also put the question to Gen. Michael Hayden, the NSA director at the time. “Do you remember the incident that came up involving Greece?” I asked. “Not anything we’re going to talk about here,” he said. “Did that come to your attention?” I pressed. “Not something I can talk about,” he replied.
At the time of the Greek bugging operation, Hayden was also secretly running the NSA’s illegal warrantless eavesdropping and metadata dragnet surveillance programs, the largest domestic spying operations in U.S. history.
An aerial file photo of the U.S. Embassy in Athens, Greece, Dec. 6, 2002.
Photo: Thanassis Stavrakis/AP
Stonewalled by the U.S., over the past decade Greek investigators were nevertheless able to follow a digital trail right to the front door of the U.S. Embassy in Athens, and then to William George Basil, a mysterious embassy official with a Greek background.
Although very little is publicly known about Basil, interviews with his relatives and childhood friends in Greece, as well as fellow embassy employees and intelligence officials in Athens and the U.S., shed light on his background.
Basil was born on December 10, 1950, in Baltimore, where many of his relatives had settled after emigrating from Greece. Much of his extended family came from the small Greek island of Karpathos in the Aegean Sea, a port of call for the Argonauts traveling between Libya and Crete, and mentioned in Homer’s Iliad. There, his ancestors worked as stonemasons and as farmhands in mountainside wheat fields.
His father, George, had emigrated to the U.S. where Basil and his sister, Maria, spent their early years. But when Basil was 9, his now-divorced father became engaged to a woman from Karpathos and they all traveled to the island for the wedding. An old snapshot shows a young Basil in a suit jacket sitting uneasily on the back of a donkey. After a few months, the family returned to the U.S., then in the 1960s, when Basil was in his early teens, moved back to Karpathos for good.
Today, childhood friends there still remember Basil as “Billy,” an Americanized youth who liked to spend time on the beach. His cousin Nikos Kritikos often played sports with him. “He played rugby when he was young,” Nikos said. “He was amazingly smart. … We grew up in the same house; his stepmother, Marigoula, raised us.” And Basil’s uncle Manolis Kritikos, a local schoolteacher, remembered him as “a happy kid who smiled.” “He was always restless as a young man, he searched things,” he said. “Most of all he liked the history of this place, the folklore. … And he loved Greece and [the Karpathos village of] Olympos more than anything.”
After graduating from high school at the American Community Schools in Athens in 1968, Basil joined the Army for five years and was posted to Alaska. Then, according to Basil’s former CIA colleague, he took a job as a Baltimore County deputy sheriff and later joined the CIA’s Office of Security as a polygraph expert. But, after nearly two decades, said the colleague, he grew bored with strapping recruits and potential agents to lie detector machines and sought a position in the agency’s Directorate of Operations. Largely based on his Greek heritage and fluency in the language, he was accepted and quickly disappeared behind the agency’s heavy black curtain, emerging undercover as a Foreign Service Officer with the State Department.
With a black diplomatic passport in his pocket, he was soon on his way to Athens, a city he knew well; he had owned an apartment in the city for many years, which he rented out. Soon after arriving, he moved into an apartment near the beach in Glyfada, one of the most exclusive areas of the city, home to ship owners and wealthy business executives. A long-time biker, he would often cruise around the city on his motorcycle.
At the U.S. Embassy in Athens, he was officially a second secretary in the regional affairs section, later promoted to first secretary. In reality, he joined the CIA station as a terrorism expert. The station, located on the embassy’s top floor (with the forgery section in the basement), was one of the largest in Europe, because it often served smaller Middle East stations with logistical help and temporary personnel. Protected by a bulletproof vest under his shirt, a 9 mm pistol strapped to his belt, and a small M38 handgun on his ankle, Basil, who had a reputation as an Olympic-level shooter, drove around the city in an armored car looking for informants to recruit and liaising with the Greek police organization. According to a confidential report by Greek prosecutor Yiannis Diotis, obtained by The Intercept, Basil played a role in a March 2003 operation — just prior to the U.S. invasion of Iraq — that involved an informant recruited by the embassy’s CIA station. The operation, code-named “Net,” led to the discovery, by a joint U.S.-Greek team, of a small cache of guns and explosives in the basement of the Iraq Embassy in Athens.
While most CIA assignments to Athens were two years, Basil kept extending his tour, giving him an opportunity to spend time on Karpathos, visiting friends and relatives and playing backgammon. “He never withheld where he was working or what he was doing,” recalled his cousin Nikos. “A lot of times we would call each other and he would tell me, ‘I am in the Middle East.’ His job was to report on the sentiment of those countries’ society. … From what he said he had a lot of friends in high places. I understood that he was acquainted with Ministers of Interior and Ministers of Public Order in Greece.”
One person who knew Basil in passing was John Brady Kiesling, a now-retired career Foreign Service Officer who had worked as the embassy’s political officer from July 2000 to March 2003. I spoke to him in his apartment in the historic Plaka section of Athens, a labyrinth of winding streets and colorful shops in the shadow of the Acropolis. After leaving his post at the embassy, he decided to remain in Greece, where he has followed the bugging case closely. When I brought up the possibility of the NSA conducting a covert operation out of the embassy, without the knowledge of either the ambassador or the CIA chief of station, he looked surprised. “I would say that a rogue agency was performing it if it was performed without the prior clearance with the ambassador, as the president’s representative in Greece,” he said. “It definitely is something that is hanging as a sort of swinging sword blade over the U.S.-Greek relationship.”
But according to Basil’s former CIA colleague in Athens, there are occasions when an ambassador is not informed by the agency because of the sensitivity of the operation. However, there was never a time when a chief of station was kept in the dark. “There were times we didn’t inform the ambassador — it was just too sensitive — and we would have to get a waiver signed,” the source said.
A half-dozen miles southwest of Athens is the city of Piraeus. The largest passenger port in Europe and the third largest in the world, it services about 20 million passengers a year. Piraeus is to ships what Chicago’s O’Hare Airport is to planes. There are long rows of ferries, endless quays, hydrofoils and mega-yachts, tankers and cruise ships. It was here, not far from the pier for ferries to Karpathos that the planning ended and the operation began. According to the Greek prosecutor’s report, on June 8, 2004, someone entered the Mobile Telecommunication Center at 31 Akti Miaouli Street, and in the name of a “Markos Petrou,” purchased the first four of what would eventually be 14 prepaid cell phones.They would become the “shadow” phones. As normal calls from Vodafone went to and from legitimate parties, a parallel stream of digitized voice and data — an exact copy — was directed to the NSA’s shadow phones. The data would then be automatically transferred miles away to NSA receivers and computers for monitoring, analysis, and storage.
Not long after, according to the Snowden documents I reviewed, the NSA contingent began arriving at US-966G, the surveillance agency’s code for the Athens embassy. The planning had already been underway. “Although the first race, dive, and somersault are still a year away,” noted a Signals Intelligence Directorate document, “SID Today,” dated August 15, 2003, “in truth, NSA has been gearing up for the 2004 Olympics for quite some time, in anticipation of playing a larger role than ever before at the international games.” The document then noted that NSA would be sending “the largest contingent of personnel in support of the games in our history. A team of 10 NSA analysts will arrive in Greece anywhere from 30-45 days before the Olympics and stay until the flame is extinguished. … The scope of the Olympics is tremendous, and so will be the support of SID [Signals Intelligence Directorate] and NSA.”
Then, in a note of unintended irony, the writer added, “The world will be watching and so will NSA!”
A key part of the operation would be obtaining secret access to the Greek telecom network. And it is here that Costas Tsalikidis may have entered the picture. As a senior engineer in charge of network planning, working for the country’s largest cellular service provider, he would have been one of those in a position to become the team’s inside person. But he was also far from the only one. “Of course, it could have even been me,” said another Vodafone technician interviewed.
The operation could have been accomplished a number of ways. At the beginning, the installation of the bugging software, while illegal according to Greek law, had been secretly authorized by the Greek government. Thus, an inside person would have been operating outside the law in providing assistance to U.S. intelligence, but with the patriotic objective of helping protect Greece from terrorists. Also, the person may never have been told that the software was supposed to be removed following the conclusion of the games. In any case, it is unlikely that the person would have known who the targets were since they were just lists of phone numbers.
In fact, recruiting a foreign telecom employee as an “inside person” for a major bugging operation was standard operating procedure for both the NSA and the CIA, according to the senior intelligence official involved with the Athens operation. “What the NSA really doesn’t like to admit, about 70 percent of NSA’s exploitation is human enabled,” the former official said. “For example, at a foreign Ministry of Post and Telecommunications, if NSA determines it needs to get access to that system, NSA and/or the CIA in coordination would come up with a mechanism that would allow them to replicate the existing switch to be swapped out. The CIA would then go and seek out the person who had access to that switch — like a Nortel switch or a router — go in there, and then it would be the CIA that would effect the operation. And then the take from it would be exploited by the NSA.”
And according to a highly classified NSA document provided by Snowden and previously published by The Intercept, covertly recruiting employees in foreign telecom companies has long been one of the NSA’s deepest secrets. A program code-named “Sentry Owl,” for example, deals with “foreign commercial platform[s]” and “human asset[s] cooperating with the NSA/CSS [Central Security Service].” The document warns that information related to Sentry Owl must be classified at an unusually high level, known as ECI, or Exceptionally Controlled Information, well above top secret.
“Human intelligence guys can provide sometimes the needed physical access without which you just can’t do the signals intelligence activity,” Gen. Hayden, the NSA head at the time of the Athens bugging, who later ran the CIA, told me.
Basil’s ties to Greece made him very good at developing local agents. “He was the best recruiter the station had, the best,” said the former CIA associate in Athens. “[Basil] may have been in charge of recruiting the guy on the inside. He may have made the initial recruitment.”
With an agent in place inside the network, the next step would be to implant spyware capable of secretly transmitting the conversations of the NSA’s targets to the shadow phones where they could be resent to NSA computers. Developing such complex malware is the job of the NSA’s Tailored Access Operations (TAO) organization. And, according to the previously undisclosed Snowden documents, members of the group “performed CNE [Computer Network Exploitation] operations against Greek communications providers” as part of the preparations for the Olympics. In lay terms, this means they developed malware to secretly extract communications data. Also involved were members of the Special Source Operations (SSO) group, the specialists who work covertly with telecom companies, such as AT&T — or in this case Vodafone — to get secret access to their networks.
The key to the operation was hijacking a particular piece of software, the “lawful intercept” program. Installed in most modern telecom systems, it gave a telecom company the technical capability to respond to a legal warrant from the local government to monitor a suspect’s communications. Vodafone’s central switching equipment was made by Ericsson, the large Swedish company, and on January 31, 2002, Ericsson delivered to Vodafone an upgrade containing the lawful intercept program, a piece of software known as the Remote Control Equipment Subsystem (RES). According to a report by Greece’s Authority for Communication Security and Privacy (ADAE), Costas was the Vodafone employee who accepted delivery of the upgrade.
Normally, when a lawful warrant is submitted to a company such as Vodafone Greece, the information, including the target phone numbers, would first be logged into a program called the Interception Management System (IMS). This creates a permanent record of the request that can later be audited. The information is then sent to the RES, which initiates the actual monitoring by secretly creating a duplicate communications stream for the targeted number. That duplicate stream is then transmitted, along with the metadata — date, time, and number calling or being called — to the law enforcement agency.
But despite having the capability to initiate wiretaps with the RES program, at the time of the Olympics Greece did not have laws in place to permit them. As a result, Vodafone never paid the additional fee to Ericsson for the IMS program and the digital key to activate the system. Far behind the NSA, the Greek government had only simple wiretap technology. “All they had was some primitive suitcase methods that would allow very limited surveillance of very specific targets,” said Kiesling, the former U.S. Embassy official. “From an American point of view, that was terrifyingly primitive.”
Thus, according to Greek sources, prior to the Olympics U.S. officials began asking the Greek government for permission to secretly activate the lawful intercept program, which led to the government agreeing to the U.S. bugging operation. Ironically, the presidential decree permitting widespread eavesdropping was finally enacted on March 10, 2005, the day after Costas’ death.
For NSA, the missing IMS program was the technical opening its operatives needed. In essence, they created malware that would secretly turn on the RES program and begin tapping. But without the IMS program there would be no audit trail, no indication or evidence that eavesdropping was going on as the target numbers were being tapped and transmitted to the shadow phones by the RES. “It was a very complex system, because it was invisible to detection,” Vodafone Greece CEO George Koronias told investigators. “It functioned independently of whether the lawful interception system was activated, and bypassed the security alarm.”
Exploiting the weaknesses associated with lawful intercept programs was a common trick for NSA. According to a previously unreleased top-secret PowerPoint presentation from 2012, titled “Exploiting Foreign Lawful Intercept Roundtable,” the agency’s “countries of interest” for this work included, at that time, Mexico, Indonesia, Egypt, and others. The presentation also notes that NSA had about 60 “Fingerprints” — ways to identify data — from telecom companies and industry groups that develop lawful intercept systems, including Ericsson, as well as Motorola, Nokia, and Siemens.
There are also a variety of “Access Methods” used to penetrate other countries’ lawful intercept programs. These include using the highly secret Special Collection Service. Known internally as “F-6,” it is described in another Snowden document as “a joint NSA-CIA organization whose mission is to covertly collect SIGINT [Signals Intelligence] from official U.S. establishments abroad, such as embassies and consulates.” The organization’s job, according to the PowerPoint, is to intercept microwaves, the thousands of communications-packed signals that crisscross a city. The PowerPoint also suggested using the Special Source Operations unit, the people who work out secret arrangements with the local telecom companies. And with the Tailored Access Operations unit, techniques could be developed to hack into the country’s telecom systems. For the Athens Olympics operation, it would be a full house.
With the malware installed, the NSA was set to go, with more than a dozen shadow phones purchased and a contingent of employees from at least 11 different NSA organizations poised to begin eavesdropping during “24-hour watches.” According to the ADAE report, the tappers first activated the malware at Vodafone’s communications centers on August 4, 2004, and five days later they began inserting the target phone numbers. Then on September 28, following the conclusion of the Paralympic Games, some of the malware was removed. But less than a week later, long after the Olympic Torch had been extinguished, new malware was implanted.
“And then,” said Kiesling, looking both troubled and perplexed, “the mystery becomes why it continued after the Olympics, and that’s a mystery that still has not been solved.” It was a question I asked a former senior NSA official with long involvement in worldwide eavesdropping operations. “They never [remove it],” the official said with a laugh. “Once you have access, you have access. You have the opportunity to put implants in, that’s an opportunity.”
“FEVER,” COSTAS WROTE. Several of the antennas used for the bugging operation were heating up, and to Costas, it was as if they had a fever. After the Olympic Games concluded, Costas started having problems at work. In the weeks following Costas’ death, his brother discovered one of his notebooks, dating from October and November 2004, after the Olympics, and it described a number of incidents. “In his notes he said that at certain points in time certain antennas seemed to get overworked and they were trying to figure out why that was happening,” said Panagiotis. “Now it turned out that those antennas were the same antennas that were connected with the system of the wiretapping.” In another entry, which Panagiotis submitted to the prosecutor, Costas wrote about a month before he died: “Something is not right at the company.”
Then, at 7:56 p.m. on January 24, 2005, someone installed a routine update in the NSA’s bugging software at Vodafone’s facility in the Paiania section of the city. It would turn out to be anything but routine. Within seconds, errors appeared, which caused hundreds of text messages from customers to go undelivered, and people began complaining. At the same time, an automatic failure report was sent to Vodafone management. It was as if a burglar alarm had gone off during a robbery. As normally happens, Vodafone sent the voluminous logs and data dumps to Ericsson for analysis, while those involved quietly waited — and worried. The once cheerful and upbeat Costas turned glum and angry. “We have heard that Costas was in meetings inside the company, in meetings that were very loud and a lot of people were arguing,” said Panagiotis. “He tendered his resignation to the company, but it wasn’t accepted. … He wanted to get out.”
On March 4, after weeks of investigation, Ericsson notified Vodafone that it had discovered a sophisticated piece of malware, containing a hefty 6,500 lines of code — evidence of a large bugging operation. The company also turned up the target phone numbers of the prime minister and his wife, the mayor of Athens, members of the Ministerial Cabinet, and scores of high officials, as well as the numbers for the shadow phones and the metadata describing when the calls were made.
Three days later, Vodafone technicians isolated the malware. Then on March 8, before law enforcement had an opportunity to get involved, Koronias, the Vodafone Greece CEO, ordered the software deactivated and removed, thus hampering any future investigation. Apparently alerted, those involved in the bugging operation immediately turned off their shadow phones. “Vodafone’s decision to deactivate the software meant our hands were tied,” Yiannis Korandis, the chief of the EYP, the Greek National Intelligence Service, told investigators.
The next morning Panagiotis discovered his brother’s body hanging from a white rope tied to a pipe above the bathroom doorway. To this day, he is convinced that Costas was murdered to keep him quiet and prevent him from quitting and going public with the details. “He probably wanted answers there and then and I think that led to his demise,” he said. The bugging, Panagiotis suspects, may have been the reason Costas sent the text to his fiancée about leaving his job being a “matter of life and death.”
Vodafone Greece CEO George Koronias holds documents in April 2006 before the start of a parliamentary committee hearing investigating the phone-tapping scandal.
Photo: Louisa Gouliamaki /AFP/Getty Images
The Tsalikidis family’s former lawyer, Themistoklis Sofos, believes that Costas discovered the spy software by chance and then reported it. “Some people were afraid that he would talk so they killed him in a professional manner,” he told a Greek newspaper. Although the official coroner’s report said he took his own life, no suicide note was ever found, and the initial forensic report was inconclusive.
Nevertheless, Supreme Court prosecutor Dimitris Linos said that Costas’ death was clearly tied to the eavesdropping operation. “If there had not been the phone tapping, there would not have been a suicide,” he said in June 2006. In his report, prosecutor Yiannis Diotis also said that Costas had knowledge of the illegal phone-tapping software. And Giorgos Constantinopoulos, a former colleague in charge of communications security for Vodafone, reportedly told prosecutors that he was sure Costas was in a position to know about the spy software, and that his death was likely connected to that discovery.
THROUGHOUT THIS PAST SUMMER in Athens as the debt crisis mounted, crowds of pro-government demonstrators filled Syntagma Square shouting angry chants against European creditors. A few blocks away on Panepistimiou Street, an anarchy symbol was spray-painted on the walls of the headquarters of the Bank of Greece. And behind the Doric columns and yellow neo-classical façade of the Parliament Building, nervous politicians huddled and debated what to do next.
But a mile and a half away, in a heavily guarded compound near Pedion tou Areos, one of the largest parks in Athens, prosecutors were finally bringing to a close a decade of investigations. And on June 26 the finger of guilt was pointed directly at America’s Central Intelligence Agency. Now it is up to the Justices’ Council to decide how to proceed, and it may prove very embarrassing for the United States.
From the very start, according to a former senior Greek official involved in the investigation, there was no doubt within the highest levels of government that the U.S. was behind the bugging. On Friday, March 25, 2005, two weeks after Panagiotis cut the rope from his brother’s neck, Greeks celebrated Independence Day, followed by a weekend of festivities. But in Maximos Mansion, the Greek White House, the talk was far from jubilant. As Greek Navy helicopters flew low over the Acropolis during a military parade, members of the Greek inner circle were meeting with Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis about the bugging scandal that had targeted him and his wife.
A few days before, Foreign Minister Petros Molyviatis was in Washington engaged in high-level meetings with top officials. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke of the “excellent state of relations between Greece and the United States,” and President George W. Bush issued a proclamation declaring “our special ties of friendship, history, and shared values with Greece.” He noted, “Our two Nations are founded on shared ideals of liberty.” But based on the investigation up to that point, close aides, including Foreign Minister Molyviatis, were convinced that U.S. intelligence was behind the operation. Although at least one member of the group wanted to bury the whole matter rather than cause a rupture in relations with the U.S., Karamanlis disagreed, according to the source. “No way,” Karamanlis said. “If they find this on us 10 years from now, things will prove really difficult.”
The decision was made to have the police and the EYP intelligence service launch an investigation. Although far from exhaustive, with many questions left unanswered, Minister of Public Order George Voulgarakis and several other officials finally held a televised press conference in February 2006. Scribbling with a blue marker on a white board, they noted that the 14 shadow cell phones were using four mobile phone antennas with a radius of about 2 kilometers in central Athens.
Within that area was the U.S. Embassy on Vassilissis Sofias Avenue, which turned out to be a matter of great embarrassment for both the U.S. and Greek governments. “The U.S. has been fingered in the media as the culprit,” U.S. Ambassador Charles P. Ries noted in a classified memo to Washington, released by WikiLeaks. Ries suspected Voulgarakis of the leak. Calling him “a less reliable ally,” Ries said Voulgarakis “has allowed rumors to circulate that the U.S. is behind [the] major eavesdropping case in Greece.” Nevertheless, both sides wanted to pretend all was normal. Thus, Foreign Minister Molyviatis suggested to Ries that they move a previously scheduled meeting between them from the ambassador’s residence to the very public Grande Bretagne Hotel in central Athens. There, Ries noted in his memo, “All could see that the U.S.-Greece relationship was unimpaired.”
It was an odd lunch. Molyviatis was sitting across from the man whose embassy, he believed, had been listening in on his cell phone for months. And Ries, out of the loop because it was a rogue NSA/CIA operation, still may not have known of his embassy’s involvement. “Addressing the eavesdropping case,” Ries said in his memo, “Molyviatis gave his opinion that the whole hullabaloo [the press conference] had been unnecessary. It would have been sufficient to hand the matter to the judicial authorities for investigation and, if appropriate, prosecution, he said. But now, both he and the Prime Minister were keen to show that the current hysteria did not detract from excellent U.S.-Greece relations.”
For some, however, the cozy relations only seemed to increase the anger. In May, a Greek terrorist organization, “Revolutionary Struggle,” attempted to assassinate Voulgarakis with a remote-controlled bomb. Pointing to the wiretapping scandal and weakening Greek sovereignty as a key reason for the attack, the group said it opposed state-sponsored “terrorism of mass surveillance.” At the U.S. Embassy, the deputy chief of mission sent a classified cable to Washington, released by WikiLeaks, with a warning. “This group is to be taken seriously,” he said. “While there is no mention thus far of targeting foreign ‘capitalist-imperialists,’ it would not be a leap of faith for RS to focus its attention on the U.S. presence in Greece.” Ten months later, the group fired a rocket at the embassy.
Around the time the eavesdropping was discovered, Basil left the country, apparently with a quick reassignment by CIA to Sudan. Then, according to Greek documents obtained by The Intercept, on August 4, as things quieted down, he obtained a visa at the Greek Embassy in Khartoum and returned 10 days later to Athens and his cover job as first secretary for regional affairs. The diplomatic position gave him immunity from arrest.
The investigation was the first of what would be five major probes stretching over a decade in which more than 500 witnesses would be questioned, including agents of the EYP. Evidence built up slowly as investigators picked apart the telltale computer logs, traced the cell phone signals, and dissected layers and layers of software. Over the years, piece after piece, the puzzle began to come together.
In his testimony, Ericsson’s managing director for Greece, Bill Zikou, laid out the “how,” describing the method by which the bugging was accomplished. “What happened in this incident,” he said, “is that a complex, sophisticated, non-Ericsson intruder piece of software was planted into the Vodafone Greece network,” which by activating the RES function “thus made illegal interceptions possible.”
Then investigators turned to the “who.” At the conclusion of its operation, the NSA was hoping that it could disappear into the night without leaving a trace. “Unlike the athletes, when the Olympics are over, the NSA team is hoping you won’t even know they were there,” said one of the classified documents. It bore the ironic title, “Another Successful Olympics Story.” But as a result of sloppy intelligence tradecraft by the American spies, each step pointed the investigators closer and closer to the U.S.One person who spent a great deal of time buying shadow phones was William Basil. “We used to call him the telephone man,” said the former CIA colleague in Athens. “All we do is we buy burner phones. Just drive in any direction you want and go to a random phone store and just buy a phone, make a call, and throw the phone away.”
But Basil wasn’t the only one buying shadow phones. According to the prosecutor’s confidential report, issued June 26, 2015 and obtained by The Intercept, investigators traced four of the shadow cell phones to the shop in Piraeus. There, the prosecutor showed pictures of Basil and his wife, Irene, to the store’s manager. “She is known” to the store, the manager said. The prosecutor then noted in his report that Irene was “acting as designated by him [Basil] and on his behalf.” And according to registered deeds, the family of Irene Basil has long owned a home in Piraeus just a few miles from the shop.
Things got even sloppier. After purchasing the four shadow phones, meant to be untraceable, the SIM card from one of them was removed and placed in a cell phone registered to the U.S. Embassy. It was a direct link between the covert operation and the U.S. government. Investigators then traced more than 40 calls to and from the U.S. Embassy involving the phone. The numbers listed in the ADAE report include the embassy’s main number, the emergency after-hours number, the Marine guard, and the FBI office. There was even a call to a women’s clothing store in Athens, Rouge Paris.
Then, on the same shadow phone using another SIM card, investigators found calls to Maryland. Based on the phone numbers, The Intercept was able to determine that those calls were made to Ellicott City, where Basil and his wife used to own property, and to neighboring Cantonsville, both bedroom communities for NSA. The implications greatly worried the investigators. “We were scared,” one told a parliamentary committee. “This is something that the Foreign and Justice Ministries should investigate.”
Finally, after years of slow, ineffective, and politically hindered investigations that produced more fog than clarity, the determined work of the ADAE and a few others began paying off. The evidence pointed at the U.S. Embassy, and with a bit of luck and thanks to the American spies’ mistakes, prosecutors came up with a name, William Basil, and the international arrest warrant was issued last February.
But by then, he was long gone. After Athens, Basil was promoted to deputy chief of station in Islamabad, Pakistan, then sent back to a desk job at headquarters, that of director of human resources at the agency’s Counterterrorism Center. Now retired and no longer protected by diplomatic immunity, he may never see Greece again, the country where his wife currently lives in her family’s home in Piraeus. In 2012, according to a petition he signed protesting a planned marine park on Karpathos, he wrote, “I own property in Karpathos and plan to retire there next year.”
Today the two-story house near the beach in Diafani sits empty; construction materials are stacked on the porch, its exterior unpainted. Nearby, friends and relatives can’t believe that Billy from Karpathos could have secretly wiretapped their top officials, or spied on their government. “There’s no way he did what they say he did,” said Basil’s cousin Nikos. “Because of his love [for] Greece, they would know that if that thing [the wiretapping] needed to be done, they would most certainly ask somebody else to do it. No way he did it. It is well known that he was first and foremost a Greek patriot.”
Months before the arrest warrant was issued, Basil had been in touch by phone with a prominent criminal lawyer in Athens, Ilias G. Anagnostopoulos, according to a Greek source, who asked not to be named because of the confidential nature of the information. When asked by the attorney if he would be willing to testify if it came to that, Basil, according to the source, replied: “If there are questions, of course I can answer them.” The attorney met with the prosecutor, but after leaks to the press, Basil told Anagnostopoulos to drop the matter for the time being. Complicating matters, the prosecutor has filed the eavesdropping case alongside a much larger, but unconnected, conspiratorial case involving an assassination attempt on former Prime Minister Karamanlis, a key target of the wiretapping operation.
CIA Chief of Station Eric Pound left Athens in 2007, returning to headquarters to become chief of the External Operations and Cover Division, the organization responsible for creating front companies overseas for clandestine officers masquerading as business executives or other occupations. After he retired in September 2009, Pound mentioned to a college audience that the CIA has an obsession to learn the truth. He added, “But obsession does not always lead to success.”
Panagiotis and other family members also want the truth. In 2011, Costas’ family asked two coroners to reexamine the medical records. One was Dr. Steven Karch, a forensic pathologist and former medical examiner in San Francisco, and the other was Dr. Theodoros Vougiouklakis, an associate professor of forensic medicine in Greece. Karch called the original autopsy “farcical.” Based on pictures of the body, the coroners concluded that the marks to Costas’ neck couldn’t have come from simply jumping off the chair. “Something was done to him prior,” Karch told The Intercept.The family agrees with this conclusion. “I believe there are people who know what happened, what exactly and who exactly did it and they will give us those facts,” said Panagiotis. “I believe that as time goes by the reasons for protecting the perpetrators will fade and mouths will open.” Last March, on the 10th anniversary of Costas’ death, his mother spoke to a local Greek reporter for the first time. “I want to know what happened to my child and nobody that investigated until now, 10 years [later], gave me the slightest response,” she said. “As long as I live I will live with this suffering. I want to punish those who are guilty for what happened, and those who know [but] do not speak.”
There appears little chance that her questions will be answered, however. It is extremely unlikely the Obama administration will ever allow Basil, or any other intelligence official, to be extradited. Nor is it likely that Basil will return to Greece voluntarily with an arrest warrant waiting for him. Around 2009 he appeared in a Facebook picture, seemingly in disguise, sporting a long white beard and moustache. “Dude, Santa’s job isn’t available for what … another seven months,” a friend joked on Facebook. Though he has not responded to requests for an interview, pictures online show him in Greece in 2013 attending his daughter’s wedding, without the beard, in the Glyfada section of Athens. Multiple attempts to reach Basil by phone, and through family members, were unsuccessful. Both the CIA and NSA declined to comment on any issue surrounding the Athens wiretapping, including Basil’s indictment.
As for the NSA, a classified review of the Greek Olympics asked the now ironic question, “After this year’s gold medal performance, what comes next?” Next will certainly be the Olympics scheduled for Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, next summer. According to a previously published top-secret NSA slide, the agency has already planted malware throughout the country’s telecommunications system. And, if history is any guide, in the weeks leading up to the start of the games, teams from the SCS, SSO, TAO, and other organizations will arrive once again to begin 24/7 eavesdropping. And as in Greece, they may just happen to leave some of their monitoring equipment behind.
Sitting in his apartment overlooking Athens’ Plaka, John Brady Kiesling could make little sense of it all. “I don’t see a shred of evidence that this wiretapping did the U.S. government any good,” he said. “I think it’s just important to underscore that intelligence gathering is never free. It always comes at a human and political cost to someone. In this case it was paid by an innocent Vodafone technician.”
Aggelos Petropoulos of the Athens-based newspaper Kathimerini contributed reporting from Greece, and Ryan Gallagher, senior reporter at The Intercept, contributed research and reporting from the Snowden Archive.
Documents published with this story:
How is what the CIA and NSA does *not* considered to be Christian terrorism? And the local citizens who collaborate with the terrorists to commit treason against their own countries, how are they *not* charged with treason? I never understood how the United States terrorist monsters who do this manage to get locals to turn treasonous against their own country, against their own people.
Before edward snowden , this story would have been fluffed off as a typical nut case crack pot.
Now … it will receive serious consideration.
I still don’t know how accurate it is , but the NSA and it’s ruined reputation and daily debacles , you really have to give it more weight don’t you ?
Could somebody who has bothered to wade through all of the fat in this story please just write a ten paragraph version? I gave up.
For a far more detailed and technically coherent account of what happened see > http://spectrum.ieee.org/telecom/security/the-athens-affair https://duckduckgo.com/?q=ieee%2C+panafon%2C+greece&t=ffnt Giorgos Koronias George Koronias <.
Presently George Koronias is Chairman of the Board at Azerfon, Executive Chairman and Founding Partner at MEAZON SA, Partner and Chairman of the Board at INACCESS UK. See: http://meazon.com/team-view/george-koronias/.
The US embassy was located in a low rise building near The Glassman art and the Hilton Athens. The embassy is very open with it's rooftop and grounds clearly visible from public areas. To it's rear was a wooded hillside.
Missing from the INTERCEPT article is the matter of the three strange antennae in the embassy grounds that also disappeared when the spy system was rolled up. It is believed these were antennae used with the 'burner' cell handsets that were bought around Athens.
Giorgos Koronias cannot discuss this matter publicly and therefore has no means of defending himself but we friends and family know much more.
The death of Costas Tsalikidis still weighs on Giorgos conciousness for Panafon was a family of colleagues, a family that grew into a Greek success story.
For the technically educated check out the Ericsson Interception Management System user manual is available through a Google search: http://www.google.com/search?q=IMS+ericsson+manual or at http://cryptome.org/ericsson-ims.htm.
TYPO CORRECTION:
For a far more detailed and technically coherent account of what happened see > http://spectrum.ieee.org/telecom/security/the-athens-affair<.
I was in Greece at the time of the 2004 summer Olympics, and every Greek citizen at the time suspected this from the US. Politicians advised their citizens to spray paint camera’s installed for the Olympics because they knew it would be used to spy on them. They even had a blimp that they wanted to keep in the sky after the Olympics to spy on “terrorists”….. I used to think they were crazy for suspecting such a crazy idea…
As implied by the article, the assignment of this particular case to the Greek Court Investigator Dimitrios Foukas was a pitiful excuse for a real, unbiased investigation. Truth is that ever since the loss of Costas Tsalikidis, the Greek Government has been trying to cover the whole story.
Not surprisingly, CIA and NSA had accomplices in EYP, the Greek Secret Agency. In short, their mission was as follows: At the beginning ie before the Olympics, they had to convince the Greek Authorities on the necessity of this spying operation. Afterwards, ie during the Olympics and on, they manipulated EYP by carefully hiding the implications of the spying software. And finally ie after the Olympics, they conspiratorially silenced to put the spying software in oblivion, so that it continues its operation in the dark.
The accomplices of CIA and NSA in EYP are well known to the Greek Intel Community. Above all, they did nothing to hide it! On the contrary, they were as conspicuous as possible by claiming overtly that they act in the name of the Americans. Some used to say that the Americans had personal trust in them.
To date, the well known accomplices of CIA and NSA in EYP enjoy impunity. Even more, they occupy priviledged positions and take special assignments in order to blur their sinful past.
The attitude of the USA is understandable, because they need to avoid a colossal diplomatic embarrassment. What is utterly unforgiven is the attitude of the Greek Governments. Many different Governments have been brought to power since the Olympics of 2004. None of them dared give justice to the family and some pride to the country.
Will the Left Government of Alexis Tsipras do any better?
Paragraph seven: “Unnoticed by the U.S. press…” Or deliberately quashed perhaps?
Says it all about the U.S. press.
A minor correction-Basil is a graduate of the ACS class of 69- not 68.
Speaking of the surveillance state, have a look at http://www.engadget.com/2015/09/30/freevolt-free-energy/ . Imagine continuous goddamned surveillance EVERYWHERE, even where the sun don’t shine.
James, if you ever come to meet this Basil guy, tell him he is very, very, very unwelcome in Greece, even if the greek gov lets him walk. To the geek community here he is guilty of conspiracy to murder and we will try to make him face the court up to the day he dies. Even after his death, his name will be remembered as a curse and his family will always have the disgrace upon them. We will see to it.
Basil, in case you read this thread, you killed Kostas. You are a murderer and a lowlife traitor and that’s how you will always be remembered among those who don’t forget.
14 pages on a 24 inch monitor.
“He lived in Athens and he had dark hair. Kolonos, an old Athenian neighborhood near the archaeological park of Akadimia Platonos, where Plato used to teach. Along the maze of narrow streets, flower-filled balconies hang above open-air markets, and locals gather for hours at lazy sidewalk cafes, sipping demitasse cups of espresso and downing shots of Ouzo in quick gulps”.
Blah blah blah. What happened? who did it? and why? Amazon, sells books news reports report news, and investigation journalists report news. But Amazon sells books.
I get up in the morning I go to work. I pay my electricity bill my telephone bill my Internet bill. I live my social life. I talk to people we exchange opinions and we say did you know about so and so, and we spread news. But Amazon sells books. I don’t want to read your book I only wanted to read the news. I do not want to read an Athens, tourist brochure.
Look say what happened to begin with: Who why and what is being done about it. Once you have done that then people can continue Reading the 14 pages long story. No offence. Snappy. Thank you.
Nice try troll. You guys really do suck at propaganda!
Let’s simply admit that Athens is a hotspot for all kinds of weird games between rival agents then and now.
I wont even go to any of the “shady” terrorists that do assignements/hits, drop a 70’s era supporting text along a brand new name,a revolutionary star, then fade into obscurity.There have been at least 4 in the last decade alone,always forwarding agendas with seemingly leftist views,but so epidermic in that, it cant be for real.
Tsalikidis story just happened to be at the beggining of a tumultuous era in Greek Politics,with hints all around,some evidence but not yet a clear goal..
Besides the rise of new powers.
There was a wikileaks document back in 2010(?) that was suggesting the former leader of a party was forced/blackmailed to step down from his position and make way for someone else.Guess who stepped down (in the period described in the document only one party leader stepped down for allegedly “health reasons”-he is still healthy though) and who is the one that took over (and in what position is he today).That would make a good story too.
For a proper researcher.
Mr. Bamford, thank you. Due to my limited time in the library ( I have no working computer at home), I have printed out this story to read at home tonight, and so what I have to say here has no reference to this story.
I just wish to thank you.
A 90+ year old wife of a retired surgeon saw a copy of “No Place to Hide” by Greenwald that I was reading at a home of one of their friends, the wife of a now deceased doctor and said to me: “Good for you!” I have a copy of a great book that I’d like to give you as a gift. I have read it so many times I almost know it by heart. Do you know James Bamford?”
It was “The Puzzle Palace”. Thank you again.
I have difficulty publishing anything that I write. But I do have a sample that I have very sound reasons to believe it will more than interest you. And it can be found here:
http://freedomfchs.lefora.com/topic/7442322/nanodevices-in-sensory-overload-mind-control-torture
After reading this, please do all you can in your power to help us stop the abuses. And feel free to refer any of your friends of conscience to the documentation.
A simple congratulatory comment that I posted on an ACLU site recently, which included the URL above meant to be read by Dr. Jean Maria Arrigo, the Social Psychology who stood up to the torture arguing against the practice in many documents that I have read, was not posted by the ACLU.
I’d like to believe that this was a result of interception by the torturers that do not wish Dr. Arrigo to read this documentation because of its damning content, rather than by ACLU.
I still want Dr. Arrigo to read this documentation and circulate it among his colleagues, especially those who support the torture activities inside the APA. Thank you.
Meanwhile.. if only Murika could have it’s face shoved into the collective pool of blood that their hard work paid for by virtue of the 16th Amendment…they couldn’t handle it.
I’m going to say it like it is. PERIOD I’m 71 yrs old. I was born at a time during
WW2. It only took 20 yrs for my generation, to see, recognize and act upon the decisions of our “representatives” to initialize the most degenerate waste and abomination use of taxpayers hard earned money to destroy human life, unprecedented in the history of life on this planet, in the quest to expand capitalists refutation of communism. Vietnam..circa 1968
And here we are. America. Facing their own Surveillance State and it’s recalcitrant Legal Imperialism. Facing the Christian beliefs they were born into including 12 yrs of indoctrination into a State mandated propaganda that forced them to recite a nationalistic pledge of Allegiance to a flag, GOD, and nation…that was a lie of biblical proportions.
What more do you need to figure out where this is heading?
Gripping. Unbelievable! (not) Thanks.
Athens News Agency: News in English, 06-02-13
http://www.hri.org/news/greek/apeen/2006/06-02-13_1.apeen.html
Excerpt:
According to the lawyer acting on behalf of Tsalikidis’ family Themistokles Sofos, the new evidence showed that the last person to speak with Tsalikidis before he was found dead on March 9, 2005 was not his fiancee Sara Galanopoulou, as previously believed.
Analysis of the dead man’s mobile phone software showed that he also spoke with a person who has not yet been identified on the phone at 11:15 on the night of March 8, 2005 and that he had previously received a call that probably came from a Vodafone telephone. After the conversation at 11:15, there were two more calls to Tsalikidis’ phone that he did not answer.
Sofos also gave public prosecutor Ioannis Diotis a second notebook belonging to Tsalikidis, in which he kept notes on technical issues between April 2004 and January 24, 2005.
Finally, he included an official request sent by Tsalikidis’ family to the police last June, asking them to investigate the dead man’s e-mail account and expressing doubts regarding the circumstances of his death.
In addition, Sofos included the phonebook listings from Tsalikidis’ mobile and the entire contents of an e-mail sent to Vodafone by the deceased a few hours before his death.
The lawyer said the e-mail had been addressed to senior Vodafone executives and concerned issues that Tsalikidis’ considered to be of the greatest importance and was related to work for improving Vodafone’s network. In the e-mail, Tsalikidis had estimated that he would complete the actions that needed to be done from July until September 2005, at the latest.
ut oh.. would it be the PTB are gettin scared to the point they’re utilizing every Tom Dick and Harry propaganda agent and mechanism at their disposal?
Thank you.
This article is implicitly accusing US intelligence operatives of involvement in the murder of a foreign national citizen of an allied nation. Thats pretty serious business! The very credible Bamford will take some heat, and lets hope the narrat8ve here cannot be simply dismissed.
And this is just one case in thousands no doubt, because this is what the CIA does. They act like the mob. They just rub someone out because he knows too much and starts to get a little antsy.
Shut down the CIA!
EXCELLENT, as always!!! The intelligence community has access to a clear, tasteless knockout drug that clears the human system quickly, within an hour.
Mixed with water or juice, it will knock a person unconscious in about ten minutes, making it easy to string them up for a hanging.
Because the death appears to be a suicide, extensive toxicology is rarely performed. This looks like a contract killing.
I had to stop reading this article when the author referenced espresso drinking and ouzo gulping in Athens… Please, if you’re going to write about something, have the courtesy to know what you’re writing about.
Says one who prefers to focus on a fly while an army of ants are eating him alive.
His brother should remember that we have a thing call vendetta..
If I wasn’t so week I’d get incensed again, but now I just get tired reading more of the same bullshit the US government does all over the planet. These guys are deluded and still fighting the cold war. However some of these actual stories are better than a good spy yarn. How could anyone make this shit up? For more just watch Putin talk about going after the people responsible for the political assassinations in his country(the Charlie Rose interview), the cold war is still alive;( I don’t think it ever ended)!!
I love these guidos who know people, especially those who once were made and still got away with their lives. A fink, a weasel, I just go wild for a BS detector! But it is a type, a faction of lit and journo that can get worno out. Like I think I got every leak The Weasel took down, but he don’t coordinate well with all the other finks. Trouble with the mob, they liked to claim hits they didn’t do just to keep you know who undercovers with them. Look Dad, two hands!
Thanks James Bamford so very much for this research & narrative. Do you know, has any investigation been undertaken into Costas’ finances circa 2003-2005 as reflected in extant bank statements — and/or even testimony from his bereaved fiancee and family members? I would imagine that bribes are the basic currency by means of which the NSA & CIA operate, often in combo with blackmail (pre- and/or post hoc). A competitive narrative here to consider — that Costas had, yes, been complicit with the pre-Olympics infiltration of the Greek Vodafone network; that he was himself then fully aware of, and even legally liable thereby, for the lack of any subsequent takedown of the ‘anti-terrorist’ spyware and for its tactical redeployment vis-a-vis Greek government officials and the like; another senior employee (or employees) then discovered the infiltration and Costas’ complicity in it; whereupon the NSA / CIA did the bloke in simply because he knew way too much and thereby, in any prosecution @ Athens, would threaten to compromise them, the one or the other or both. — In any case, thanks again JB for a splendid piece of work. It seems to me that US MSM are morally obligated to pick up and to develop this Intercept story.
And of course all credit to Wikileaks and to Snowden, too.
Back in 2013 Jacob Applebaum made reference to the Athens Affair in his EU submission ( see: https://auerfeld.wordpress.com/2013/09/08/european-parliament-starts-investigation-into-surveillance/) stating that the perpetrator was not known at the time. Because the Greek press was already covering the developments in the case which had by Sep 2013 clearly identified the US Embassy in Athens as the perpetrator of the wiretapping, I felt compelled to summarise the case and investigation for an English audience at WikiLeaks-Press Blog see here: https://archive.is/VSwzJ I am now delighted that the story has been picked up by the Intercept and that the Snowden Documents include evidence confirming the investigation of the Greek Parliamentary committee as well as adding new unreported facts. The death of Tsalikidis will have to be yet again examined and the people responsible for his death punished for what they did. His family and people sympathising with them for his bitter fate will never give up searching for answers. Also let us not forget, he may not be the only victim of this operation.
I am also delighted to read reference been made in this article to Basil’s role in the Iraq Embassy arms find as well as his potential role in the Pythia plot to assassinate the Greek Prime Minister Karamanlis, which I hope will be the subject of a second Intercept article :-) NSA as well as CIA operation in Greece have been proven to be Agents of Chaos, destabilising democratically elected governments.
Are you expecting anyone to read this? Irrelevant information was used to bulk up the facts!
Not to minimize this story in any way, but get a load of this…
http://gizmodo.com/the-nsas-deeply-weird-official-love-notes-will-forever-1733409405
If I hadn’t seen this with my own eyes, I’d have bet it was an Onion piece. However, notwithstanding the incredible weirdness, this has to go down as numero uno in the annuls of Great Moments in Monumental Hubris, if not the Big Bang of Incredulous. Given these motherfuckers will KILL YOU should you be in a position to expose their world wide criminal exploits, to see such monumentally asinine, weird propaganda written by some NSA schmuck to seduce new recruits, is living proof the NSA knows the US is the Dumbest Fucking Country on the Planet. Meanwhile, it’s citizens reinforce the proof by virtue of buying the latest and greatest iPhone to the tune of MILLIONS on the opening day of sales.
Notwithstanding Michael Hayden, Barnum must be rolling on the floor in gut splitting laughter. While wishing he had been born a century later with chance to buy Apple stock.
thanks for that link, I think…
Unbelievable — how much of our tax money went to fund those cards?
But there was definitely something wrong at the site; either too big ads or something – the page caused my browser to totally freeze. Had to shut down the computer and start again to get back and post a reply.
Outstanding!! More proof of the degenerate nature of CIA/NSA psychopaths.
Now, if only Murika would open it’s eyes, realize their Constitutional prerogative to dissolve this pathetic excuse of a government, load their weapons, and amass around WDC ready to drag these scumbag motherfuckers out of their granite palaces and hang them from lamp posts. After a short, speedy exercise in due process, of course.
Now, let’s try…ummm… scum sucking US war criminals for $2k. I’ll take door #1…Michael Hayden.
“Did a Rogue NSA Operation…”
Perhaps it would not attract as much attention, but I think it would be correct to replace that phrase with “Did the Normal Everyday Activities of the NSA…”
When did that agency ever turn down an opportunity to collect information? It is their mandate, after all. Some of us might disagree with how they carry it out.
Yeah. .. ‘rogue’ implies these operations were not countenanced by the, uh, ‘decision-makers’ of the US government. As Mr. Bamford, who seems to write everything like a Bourne Identity thriller (which I like.), makes clear in his closing paragraphs … it wasn’t a ‘rogue’ operation?
Maverick: But who knows … it’s all classified.
‘call-sign’ Charlie: Somebody must know something?
Maverick: Yeah … somebody knows everything.
quote” It is their mandate, after all. Some of us might disagree with how they carry it out.”unquote
Spare me, schmuck. Since when is murder part of the NSA’s so called mandate., hmmm? Or the USG’s. I’d submit the USG has LOST it’s Mandate of Heaven a long time ago.
I think you have a real problem with reading comprehension.
I think you have a problem with which side of the line in the sand you are standing on
How would you know?
What I don’t understand: “He wanted to leave the company but was denied”. He wasn’t a slave. He could just left work.
Everytime I read about people giving “crypting” messages like “life or death” – if its that serious, I would rather have runned directly to the next federal police building and made my full statement. I would have given them all copies of my data; and another copy at a safe place.
Then stay with friends somewhere where the cost of “removing” you is extremly high.
And the Moral of the Story is: Beware Americans Bearing Intel-Assisting Gifts.
If you close your eyes to danger, do not be surprised when you get run over crossing the road.
The Greek Government are naive in allowing the security assistance over the Olympics, and then not ensuring all was returned as before. They are also naive in letting their top government personnel use unencrypted phones over a public network.
Vodafone are naive for not having an “antivirus” type system that can sweep its active software for changes from a controlled “mirror” or a hard-copy on a chip that is unchangeable but can be replaced with updated software on it.
Anyone at an even junior level within the Telecomms industry is fully aware that Telecomms is the key to mass surveillance and spying and that it has critical points at which it can be compromised. To not have the most secure of protocols and systems in place is to be complicit in their failure. I grew up with the first generation of guys who went to work with CISCO and SUN Micronics CNEs installing Network systems in the early 90s when they first arrived in a big way, and they were warning then of how vulnerable the internet and digital phones were, and a box of memory chips the size of a PC box cost $25,000 then, limiting both storage and processing abilities, but now costs less than $1 and is smaller than a fingernail. The cost of memory was always the limiting factor, the inability to store huge volumes. That time is over.
I also grew up with regular terrorist attacks in London that made loud bangs, but rarely killed the volume of people they could easily have done (especially if you’ve ever seen Clapham Junction, Oxford Street or Soho at peak times). I never once thought the way to solve it was mass surveillance or phone tapping or spying on the PMs of allied states.
Good people need to open their eyes and find mechanisms to ensure that potentially bad people within their institutions get their hands tied, because they seem far more dangerous than the IRA ever did. I would probably end up with John Lydon, Chris Morris, Ed Snowden and Glenn Greenwald running the show, now that Chomsky’s too long in the tooth!
We are heading into a future unlike anything previously known. The technology level of humanity did not dramatically change from the time of Ancient Greece to just over 500 years ago. Even then it was simple things like gunpowder and clocks and improvements in navigation that changed the world.
The US government has shamefully demonstrated that we are walking blindly into a trap set by them that would become our worst nightmare at a time that presents us with the greatest opportunity for coordinated world peace and a shared development. I cannot understand their desire – it is Miaria and Miasma, brutality and defilement.
Its too late to expect mass change. As you say good people need to do their thing. How many good people are left in Sodom and Gomorrah? Not enough is my view to save the world from its destruction.
Every man for himself (and the devil take the hindmost).
http://www.lyricsfreak.com/l/laurie+anderson/big+science_20081555.html
snip
You can’t miss it.”
And I said “This must be the place.”
Ooo coo coo.
Golden cities.
Golden towns.
Golden cities.
Golden towns.
And long cars in long lines and great big signs and they all say “Hallelujah.
Yodellayheehoo.
Every man for himself.”
Ooo coo coo.
Golden cities.
Golden towns.
Thanks for the ride.
Big Science.
Hallelujah.
Big Science.
Yodellayheeho
snip
Anarchy really is the absence of government and the absolute freedom of the individual, regarded as a political ideal.
Democracy is a sham.
The comments here are second only to the article itself! Rock On! lol
While I wouldn’t use the word “fluff”, I agree that the article would have been more successful if it had been written in the form of a hard-news article. After reading the title, I really did want to know whether the NSA caused Costas’ death. But to find that out, I had to skim through a lot of writing that didn’t do much to answer the question. I would have more confidence in the author’s case if it were actually presented as a case.
This is investigative magazine writing, and a very good example.
Why skim through such a great story? If you only want the bullet point facts, this is the wrong venue for you.
It could have been twice as long and I would have read every word.
I don’t see why I have to like this particular author’s writing style to want to read the Intercept. Other Intercept writers do a better job of getting their points across, while still managing to write with style.
Isn’t it great that we have a government of lying, murdering psychopaths? No doubt these scum think they’re superior, but the truth is that they’re cowards and weaklings who rely on association with Big Brother government in order to feel powerful and valuable. I’d pity them if they weren’t so evil and deserving of hatred.
So, what to do about this evil system?
The typical “conservative” thinks nothing needs to be done. He’s perfectly comfortable with living in a fascist state, since he imagines that he shares in its power. He also stupidly believes that “If I’m not doing anything wrong, then I have nothing to worry about” — as if right and wrong were determined by government fiat rather than justice and empathy. Little does he know that being a toady is no guarantee that the system won’t turn on him in the future. It’s not exactly a secret that nearly all of recorded history is one long story of governments doing terrible things on a massive scale.
The typical “liberal” is rightly troubled by the surveillance, corruption, and murder — at least if the GOP is in control of the government. Still, he is in favor of higher taxes, which are inevitably used to further fund the government’s evil. He is in favor of “common-sense” gun restrictions that promise to allow militarized police to brutalize the population with minimal fear of retribution. He may even be in favor of laws that criminalize certain kinds of speech (“hate speech”), never stopping to consider that the creation of such a precedent can easily lead to the criminalization of his own speech and thoughts when power changes hands.
The cognitive dissonance and doublethink need to end yesterday. Everyone, regardless of which “camp” he belongs to, needs to quit trying to steer this ship of state; it’s already going over the giant waterfall. The federal government needs to be dissolved. It CANNOT be reformed. Any attempt to do so is like putting a Band-Aid on cancer.
There needs to be a push back to a union of independent states operating under agreements for mutual defense (coordinating the nuclear deterrent) and trade. Government should be as weak as possible, with no more laws than needed for a functioning society, and it should be administered at the local level for maximum accountability.
Whenever power is centralized, even for noble purposes, it WILL lead to corruption and evil. “The road to hell is paved with good intentions.” That’s how we got to where we are today.
Hear hear!
I used to write a lot on some football (soccer!) websites, and one thing that always made me laugh was grown men were always saying things like “the government should do more to stamp out…” about something totally unrelated to government within the sport, like government is the cure to all problems. It will take a long time to become apparent to guys like that, that government involvement IS the problem most of the time!!!
We forget that these people are just idiots like us, whose shit stinks the same, but have dedicated their time, resources and moral-bankruptcy to getting their own way for a profit.
It is worryingly ironic that the supposed greatest enemy of Communism’s state-run philsophy has its dirty federal mitts in all sorts of places they should not be. The Soviet Union collapsed rapidly and systemically and so maybe it’s former dance partner is on the verge of doing so too.
My, this story deserves more readers and more comments for sure. I couldn’t stop reading; my blood was boiling too much. Thanks for an excellent piece, James (and the other contributors).
I’m enraged that the investigation wasn’t a full one. but I think of all the lines in the piece, this made me steam the most: “Ironically, the presidential decree permitting widespread eavesdropping was finally enacted on March 10, 2005, the day after Costas’ death.” The sheer allowance of this mass spying is outrageous. And what a horrible sort of epitaph for Costas T.
Although it will probably not happen, I wish for answers and justice for Costas T. and his family. Mr. Kiesling in the article mentioned that surveillance takes a human toll and in this case it was paid by Costas T. May he rest in peace.
“””Thanks for an excellent piece, James (and the other contributors).”””
Yes this is the standard the Intercept should seek to produce.
Thought, knowledge, inquiry, research and skill masterfully produced.
It is articles like this that make a difference.
Ther seems to be many more documents the Intercept should be publishing
“””According to previously undisclosed documents from the Snowden archive, NSA has a long history of tapping into Olympic Games, both overseas and within the U.S. “NSA has had an active role in the Olympics since 1984 Los Angeles games,” according to a classified document from 2003, “and has seen its involvement increase with the recent games in Atlanta, Sydney, and Salt Lake City.”””
I hope the Intercept puts its reporters to work on these unpublished documents and stops book reviews and short go no where MSM articles.
Hey, TomBrown…
“I hope the Intercept puts its reporters to work on these unpublished documents and stops book reviews and short go no where MSM articles.”
You’re onto something. I would love to see them do some things about the problems with Windows 10; the privacy issues with things like smart tvs; and what about home security systems? I can only imagine that these systems – especially the ones that advertise you can monitor your home online – send all sorts of data, pictures, maybe even conversations —- who knows where, but I might hazard a guess. Would THAT get folks’ attention?
TI is just showing the tip of the iceberg for sure. Now if we can even get folks to admit these icebergs exist. Sigh.
This must be an excerpt from an upcoming book. Two or three paragraphs would have got the point across. If a story is important NOW, it doesn’t need fluff.
His books have covered the NSA’s operations extensively, so I doubt that this is the case. Are you familiar with his writings?
Wow! A lot of work went into this. Top notch! –THX
Jim: Thank you for your excellent books and for this expose’. Unfortunately, we know that no one in either agency will ever be held accountable. I still can’t believe I considered a career in the CIA after my days in Army Intelligence and am glad my son decided against joining them. Great article.
I believe it’s “Glyfada” (???????), not “Gylfada”.
cia kills with impunity they killed jfk mlk malcomx bobbyk millions in SEA southamerica middle east all innocent they can kill anyone and they do
question is what will we do about it?
we all know cia is a paracite that needs to be removed
lets begin the proceedure immeaditly …. sooner the better
Whether it’s the CIA, or the DoD, or any agency within America’s intelligence establishment, the pattern is always the same, with extravagant amounts of money paid for little or nothing.
Recently, we witnessed the event of $500 million supposedly buying the services of 4 or 5 Syrian rebels; but who would believe that for a minute?
(If that were really true, no wonder those multimillionaires have given up their weapons to al Qaeda and disappeared?)
Whether it’s the above, or Robert Baer relating how one or more individuals at the CIA funnel monies to a consultant based in London (“See No Evil“), believing it a rare event, instead of simply one event he has just become aware, one event among too many such crimes, or the CIA funneling money to Rochester Institute of Technology (or an individual, or individuals, at that college), then receiving a position there (such as former acting deputy director of the CIA, Keith Hazard, who I learned of recently because he loves to blurb poorly written fiction books), there is ZERO oversight over the CIA, NSA, DIA, FBI, etc., and probably the same at the NRO, NGA, etc.
There’s never been a complete, professional forensic audit of the CIA — and the last time one was supposed to have been in the works, the president who ordered it (John F. Kennedy) had his head partially blown off!
Typical of the CIA-NSA and those associated with it, acting as simpleton gods over the lives of innocent, decent and just people.
Recommended reading:
Story of A Death Foretold, by Oscar Guardiola-Rivera
The Pinochet File, by Peter Kornbluh
See No Evil, by Robert Baer
Kissinger’s Shadow, by Greg Grandin
Rockefellerocarcy, by Richard James DeSocio
That’s what you do when you don’t want to smaller case to go anywhere.