Whitney Webb, Meet the Israeli Intelligence-Linked Firm Using AI to Profile Americans and Guide US Lockdown Policy
Whitney Webb
An Israeli government contractor founded by a former Israeli spy has partnered with one U.S. state and is set to announce a series of new partnerships with other states and U.S. healthcare providers to monitor civilian health and use an IDF-designed AI system to profile Americans likely to contract coronavirus and to inform U.S. government lockdown policy.
A company tied to Israel’s military
signal intelligence unit, Unit 8200, has recently partnered with the
state of Rhode Island to use an artificial intelligence-based system developed in tandem with the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to profile Americans potentially infected
and/or “at risk” of being infected with coronavirus, then informing
government authorities of their “risk profile.” Once flagged, state
health officials can target those individuals as well as their
communities for mandatory testing, treatment and/or more restrictive
lockdown measures.
The firm, Israel-based Diagnostic
Robotics, is poised to announce a series of new such partnerships
with
several other U.S. states as well as major U.S. hospital systems and
healthcare providers in the coming weeks, according to a company spokesperson. The first of these announcements came on June 30 regarding
the firm’s new partnership with Mayo Clinic, which will soon implement
the Diagnostic Robotics’ “artificial intelligence platform that predicts
patients’ hospitalization risk.” They have also been in discussions
with Vice President Mike Pence about the platform’s implementation
nationwide since April.
Their creeping expansion into the U.S.’ state coronavirus response and that of other countries has been directly facilitated by the organization Start-Up Nation Central, funded by controversial hedge fund manager Paul Singer and directly partnered with an
Israeli government-backed intelligence initiative aimed at making the
United States dependent on technology developed by the Israeli military
or intelligence community as a means of preventing the adoption of
policies that support the non-violent Boycott, Divest and Sanctions
(BDS) movement at the state and local levels. This initiative also
serves the dual purpose of ensuring Israel’s political influence and
positioning as the global “cyber power,” an oft-repeated policy goal of
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Since March, Diagnostic Robotics’
AI-based “risk profiling” software for coronavirus has been utilized by
the Israeli state in the form of the National Israeli COVID-19
Monitoring System, a key component of its increasingly Orwellian
national health surveillance system. That system, which also initially
partnered with Clalit — Israel’s largest health services provider, now involves the
“daily nation-wide monitoring of coronavirus-related symptoms of the
population.” Of course, these “coronavirus-related symptoms” include
common symptoms such as headaches, coughing, abdominal pain and
confusion, which can indicate any number of minor illnesses, allergic
reactions or other conditions entirely unrelated to coronavirus.
The Diagnostic Robotics platform
specifically acquires information from individuals via an online
questionnaire, but also has access to national and private health
databases by virtue of its partnerships with Clalit as well as all four
of Israel’s health management organizations (HMOs), all of the country’s
domestic healthcare providers and Israel’s Health Ministry. That data
is then pooled and analyzed to assess a given individual’s “probability
of infection” that is then cross checked with the information of
“millions of others,” according to the company’s co-founder and Unit 8200 alumnus Kira Radinsky.
After that mass of data is pooled and
analyzed by the platform’s AI-powered algorithm, the company’s platform,
as used in Israel and now elsewhere, creates a
“personalized, AI-based risk profile for Covid-19” for individuals and
delivers that individual’s information and any “red flags” to health
authorities, providing the Health Ministry with a map of corona “hot
spots” that the government then uses to identify which communities to
target with testing and more restrictive lockdown measures. Forbes noted that
Israel’s use of Diagnostic Robotics’ platform has allowed it to
“quickly close contaminated areas…as fast as a single day from the
identification of symptomatic patients.” An internal study conducted
by the company itself claims that the platform has a predictive
accuracy of 73%, but their study has not been audited by independent
scientists.
Israel’s health ministry, led by Yuli
Edelstein, recently announced that Diagnostic Robotics “predictive”
platform would be used more intensively to inform government
decision-making as he, Netanyahu and other Israeli ministers have recently asserted that Israel is beginning to experience a “second wave” of coronavirus and must implement more restrictive measures and augment the use of existing and new “digital solutions.” Former Israeli health officials and other critics have asserted,
however, that there is no “second wave” given that the test used by the
government does not distinguish between active and inactive coronavirus
cases. Others still have argued that
the proposed measures are grossly unnecessary, given that there are
less than 40 serious cases of coronavirus in the entire country and only
22 coronavirus patients are on ventilators.
Notably, the timing of this renewed push
for more restrictive lockdowns and an expansion of its AI-driven
Orwellian “health” surveillance coincides directly with the imminent initiation of
Israel’s government plans to annex large swaths of Palestine’s West
Bank, an act that is expected to generate unrest, not only in occupied
Palestine, but also parts of Israel and internationally due to its
flagrant illegality and far-reaching implications.
Predictive Data Hotspots
After heavy promotion of Israel’s use of its platforms by media outlets and Israeli tech “advocacy” organizations,
Diagnostic Robotics’ top executives announced on April 10 that their
predictive health surveillance technology would soon be rolled out to
“assist authorities” in governments around the world, specifically the
U.S., Western Europe and Asia.
“The strong partnership [between
Diagnostic Robotics and the Israeli government] will ensure that our
solution is accessible to as many patients as possible, and available to
different government authorities in the United States, Europe and
Asia,” the company’s CEO Yonatan Amir had told the Jerusalem Post. Amir also told the Jerusalem Post that,
at the time, the company was already in discussions with the White
House Coronavirus Task Force “with the assistance of U.S. Vice President
Mike Pence” about its software being used on a nationwide scale.
Less than two weeks after the publication of that report, the state of Rhode Island announced that the state’s Health Department would partner with Diagnostic Robotics to create a site called the Rhode Island Covid-19 Self-Checker that would collect medical information on Rhode Island residents and utilize its “predictive” capabilities.
“We are incredibly excited about the partnership with Diagnostic Robotics,” Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo had said at the time of the site’s announcement on
April 22. “Diagnostic Robotics is a leader in using innovative
technology to ensure people get the right care at the right time –
including during the COVID-19 pandemic. By making it easier for people
to make decisions about how to protect themselves and when to seek care
and testing, we’re helping to slow the spread of COVID-19, support our
healthcare system, and save lives.”
However, reports on the initiative and
Raimondo’s statement, which was sparsely covered by local and national
American news media, noted that the
site “also uses predictive technology to recognize possible outbreaks
before they occur.” That functionality will combine the data obtained
from the site with “medical databases”
to which the state’s Health Department has access. The analysis of
these data, such as “likely” future coronavirus patients and potential
future hotspots, is then given to the state’s Health Department and
meant to inform their decision-making regarding in which areas of the
state to tighten lockdowns, to ramp up testing and/or mandate treatments
or vaccinations, once a vaccine becomes available.
The information collected by the site itself includes an
individual’s “risk factors” and if they have any of several common
symptoms as well as demographic and medical background information. A
user’s IP address and device information is also collected. While the
official purpose of the site is to recommend if a participating
individual should seek medical care or request a coronavirus test, the
Diagnostic Robotics-created site notes in its Terms of Use that
the site is not intended for use as a “diagnostic tool” and “does not
provide diagnosis and/or professional medical advice.” It nevertheless
states that Diagnostic Robotics “has the right (including the moral
right) to use, copy, store, reproduce and process your information and
to create derivative works therefrom and from the Intellectual Property
rights created by the use of your information without any further
consent, notice or compensation to you or to any other person.”
The terms also state that the company
“shall not be liable for any exposure or publication of the answers to
said questionnaires or the data you entered into the system to any other
party due to any malfunction or defect in the system or after
information is transmitted in accordance with the company’s privacy policy.”
Crucially, Rhode Island’s partnership
with Diagnostic Robotics’ is merely the first sign of the company’s
intentions to rapidly expand into the U.S. A few weeks ago, company
spokesperson Michal Kabatznik told the Jerusalem Post that
the company is “in advanced conversations with other states, leading
healthcare providers and some of the top hospital systems in the U.S.,”
adding that “there will be some big announcements in the coming days.”
The first of these “big announcements” came on Tuesday when the firm’s
partnership with Mayo Clinic was made public.
In addition, the company began hiring a variety of executive positions for a New York-based office soon
after Kabatznik teased the coming announcements of a series of new U.S.
partnerships. These job listings note that Diagnostic Robotics’ is
planning a major and “rapid” U.S. expansion and identifies the U.S. as
its current “strategic market.”
Bait and Switch
Diagnostic Robotics’ privacy policy,
as used in the Rhode Island partnership, allows the company to utilize
the information it acquires through this partnership in a “de-identified
manner” as part of two different coronavirus initiatives that involve
major U.S. tech firms, healthcare technology companies and/or elements
of the U.S. national security state.
The first of these initiatives, COVID 360,
was created by Diagnostic Robotics in tandem with two other companies:
Salesforce, a cloud-based software corporation closely tied to Oracle and whose CEO/founder was mentored by Colin Powell, and Deloitte Global, one of the world’s largest consulting firms with a history of hiring ex-CIA officers. COVID 360 is described by Diagnostic
Robotics’ CEO as “a comprehensive solution for individuals at risk of
COVID-19 and those experiencing symptoms of the virus.” Salesforce
Senior VP, Bob Vanstraelen, further elaborated that
the platform is “a free full Coronavirus treatment solution for
patients and citizens at risk” and is “built by Deloitte Israel, based
on Salesforce Health-Cloud, and Diagnostics Robotics Al triage and
clinical predictions platform.”
However, an official video from
the COVID 360 initiative notes that “government agencies or caretakers”
that utilize the system will send a person potentially at risk of
exposure to coronavirus, oddly referred to in the video as a
“coronavirus patient at risk of exposure,” a message telling them that
they were found to have been “in proximity to a potential positive
coronavirus case.” The message, as shown in the video, then demands that
the recipient follow a link within the message and register for the
COVID 360 system. Upon registration, an employee of the government
agency determines which person to refer for mandatory coronavirus
testing and/or treatment regimes based on government-drafted protocols
related to coronavirus. The COVID 360 system is currently being used in
India’s Odisha state, home to nearly 50 million people, according to Diagnostic Robotics spokesperson Michal Kabatznik.
The second initiative of which Diagnostic
Robotics is part is much larger than the three member group behind
COVID 360. Called the Covid-19 Healthcare Coalition, its members include
tech giants and government/intelligence contractors Microsoft, Amazon,
Palantir, Leidos, and Google as well as a number of U.S. national
laboratories, the U.S. civilian corps and the CIA’s venture capital arm
In-Q-Tel. It also includes a number of U.S. hospital systems, U.S.
universities (with MIT chief among them) and healthcare IT providers, as
well as pharmaceutical company Pfizer and Mayo Clinic. As previously
mentioned, Mayo Clinic’s partnership with Diagnostic Robotics was announced just this past Tuesday.
The coalition claims to be a
“private-sector led response that brings together healthcare
organizations, technology firms, nonprofits, academia and startups” in
order “help protect U.S. populations” and “provide data-driven,
real-time insights to improve clinical outcomes” and government
decision-making related to coronavirus. Their website notes
that “coalition members openly share plans, coordinate their combined
work wherever possible, identify best practices, communicate broadly and
openly, and distribute capabilities in an open-source manner.” Notably,
the coalition specifically directs their combined efforts to influence
policy for “healthy populations,” “people at risk of Covid-19 exposure,”
and “healthcare delivery systems.”
According to press releases present
on the coalition’s website, the coalition “represents a vast source of
data, expertise, capabilities and insights and will complement federal,
state and local government actions.” Since their formation earlier this
year, the coalition has released several resources, including the Covid-19 Decision Support Dashboard,
a tool for government officials and business leaders to navigate how to
“reopen” or lock down communities and businesses. That tool was
designed by and populated with data provided by coalition members,
Diagnostic Robotics among them.
Diagnostic Robotics’ Roots in Israeli Spy Tech “Special Ops”
Diagnostic Robotics was founded in 2017
by Kira Radinksy, Dr. Moshe Shaham and Yonatan Amir, all of whom
officially met through their affiliation (visiting professor/alumnus,
professor and alumnus, respectively) at Israel’s Technion University.
The company was originally intended to help hospital emergency rooms
gauge and predict patient load through the use of AI, ostensibly
allowing an emergency room to make preparations in advance that would
allow them to manage patient load and prioritize patients, among other
features.
It was reportedly Amir’s
idea to pivot the platform for use in combating the coronavirus crisis,
with the company modifying the platform to serve as a “one-stop shop
for managing the disease, an end-to-end centralized solution for
Covid-19 treatment,” according to company
spokesperson Michal Kabatznik. He also added that the modifications
were initially made using the U.S. Centers for Disease Control guidance
and data received from Italy and South Korea.
The company then reached out to Israel’s
Health Ministry and made further modifications in order to supply
Israel’s government with a “relevant platform.” Many of those
modifications came courtesy of the IDF, which – according to company co-founder Radinsky –
“made our algorithms part of a large operational system that had to
function smoothly in less than 2 weeks.” The resulting “operational
system” was the company’s National Israeli COVID-19 Monitoring System,
now in use in all of Israel and much of occupied Palestine. That same
system, as previously mentioned, is also the model for the Rhode Island
system and those set to be implemented in other states that are slated
to imminently announce their own partnerships with Diagnostic Robotics.
Radinsky’s involvement in founding
Diagnostic Robotics, and her current role as the company’s chairwoman
and chief technology officer (CTO), is particularly noteworthy. Her
career began at Israel’s military signal intelligence unit, Unit 8200 –
often described as Israel’s equivalent of the U.S.’ National Security
Agency (NSA) that is well known for its hacking operations and
surveillance of Palestine as well as foreign countries around the world,
including the United States. During her time in Unit 8200, she was
recruited for the unit’s even more secretive and controversial division,
Unit 81, where she worked in “special operations.”
Unit 81, specifically has been described by supporters as an “intelligence toy factory,” whose “toys” have included land mines disguised
as rocks and other weapons of war as well as tools of mass surveillance
(i.e. “signals intelligence”). In the early days of the coronavirus
crisis, Unit 81 was tasked by Israel’s Defense Ministry with creating “software
for hospitals that can store and analyze patient data, infection
tracking, test results, providing hospitals with data to help them make
sense of what they’re seeing and how best to combat the everyday
challenge,” software that sounds remarkably similar to the platform that
Radinsky’s Diagnostic Robotics would subsequently produce with help
from an unspecified unit of the Israeli military.
Radinsky was quickly recruited by Microsoft upon leaving Unit 8200 and Unit 81 to “lead strategic Microsoft incubation projects,” including algorithms to predict disease outbreaks as well as civil unrest and riots. She then created her own company, SalesPredict, which was staffed by other Unit 8200 alumni and later acquired by eBay, owned by controversial billionaire Pierre Omidyar. Radinsky subsequently became eBay’s Director of Data Science and Chief Scientist of its branch in Israel.
One month after obtaining this lucrative position at eBay, Radinsky became an advisory board member to the bank HSBC, one of the most notorious money laundering banks in the world with close ties to drug cartels, particularly in Mexico and Colombia.
Less than a year after joining HSBC, Radinsky became a board member of
the Israeli government’s Securities Authority, which works closely with
the country’s Finance Ministry and the Knesset. It has been criticized
in recent years of “tacitly consenting”
to widespread forex and binary options scams in Israel’s financial
industry. After becoming Diagnostic Robotics’ CTO, she left the Israel
Securities Authority but continues to maintain her position on HSBC’s
advisory board.
Radinsky’s close ties to the world of Israeli and global finance were likely a factor in Diagnostic Robotics’ ability to secure $24 million in funding last November, the same month when the U.S. government warned Israel of
an imminent global pandemic caused by coronavirus. Since then, the lead
investors in the company have been Accelmed Growth Partners and Mivtach
Shamir Holdings.
Accelmed Growth Partners is a venture capital firm founded and led by Dr. Uri Geiger, a former Israeli Air Force officer whose private-sector career began at the notorious law firm Sullivan and Cromwell, best known as the former law firm of the CIA’s first director Allen Dulles that has long-standing ties to the intelligence agency.
Mivtach Shamir Holdings is a venture capital firm whose CEO and main shareholder is Meir Shamir, long-time chairman of
Birthright Israel. Birthright Israel is one of the most notable
“ethno-philanthropic” endeavors of the Mega Group, the organized
crime-linked organization co-founded by Leslie Wexner and Charles
Bronfman in 1991 with close ties to the Jeffrey Epstein scandal and
Israeli espionage scandals in general. Birthright was created by Mega
Group members Charles Bronfman and Michael Steinhardt three years after
the group was founded and its main donors include the Bronfmans,
Steinhardt, Israel’s government and Sheldon Adelson.
A Foreign Ministry for Israel’s Tech Industry
One of the earliest promoters of Diagnostic Robotics and its coronavirus-related initiatives is an organization called Start-Up Nation Central (SUNC).
SUNC was created in 2012 with funding from billionaire hedge fund
manager Paul Singer, a fervent Zionist who also funds the
neoconservative think tank American Enterprise Institute (AEI), the
Islamophobic and hawkish think tank Foundation for Defense of
Democracies (FDD), the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC), and also
funded the now-defunct Foreign Policy Initiative (FPI), a successor to
the Project for a New American Century (PNAC).
Singer funded the organization into
existence with the help of his long-time associate, former Mitt Romney
advisor and neoconservative activist Dan Senor, whose sister Wendy
Singer is currently SUNC’s executive director. She was previously the
long-time head of AIPAC’s Israel office. SUNC’s current CEO is Eugene
Kandel, Netanyahu’s chief economic advisor from 2009 to 2015.
The motivation behind the creation of
SUNC was aimed at integrating Israeli start-ups, specifically tech
start-ups created by former Unit 8200 alumni, into foreign and
specifically American companies as a means of targeting the non-violent
Boycott, Divest and Sanctions (BDS) movement that promotes human rights
for Palestinians and the end of Israel’s illegal occupation of
Palestine. It has been called “a foreign ministry for Israel’s tech industry.”
SUNC’s creation was also directly related to
Benjamin Netanyahu’s “deliberate policy” to have former members of
Israel’s “military and intelligence units … merge into companies with
local partners and foreign partners” in order to make it all but
impossible for major corporations and foreign governments to boycott
Israel and to also to ensure that Israel becomes the world’s dominant
“cyber power.” Singer is a long-time supporter and donor to Netanyahu
and his ruling Likud party.
The same year as SUNC’s creation and this
“deliberate” policy of Netanyahu, Israeli intelligence – which directly
answer to the Prime Minister’s office – began instituting a policy
where military intelligence and intelligence operations that had
previously done “in house” (i.e. as part of Unit 8200, Mossad, etc.)
were spun off into private companies, specifically start-ups.
For instance, a report on this policy, published by Israeli outlet Calcalist Tech,
interviewed dozens of Israeli military, intelligence and government
officials and noted that “since 2012, cyber-related and intelligence
projects that were previously carried out in-house in the Israeli
military and Israel’s main intelligence arms are transferred to
companies that in some cases were built for this exact purpose.” The
article also states that beginning in 2012, Israel’s intelligence and
military intelligence agencies began to outsource “activities that were
previously managed in-house, with a focus on software and cyber
technologies.”
Since this policy was instituted, the
line between Israel’s tech start-up industry and its intelligence
apparatus has become increasingly blurred, with former Mossad and Shin
Bet directors serving as advisors and board members to numerous Israeli
tech start-ups. In addition, many executives and founders of these
start-ups are alumni of Unit 8200 or other intelligence agencies, with
some – such as Cybereason’s CEO Lior Div –
openly admitting that their work at these “private” companies are a
direct continuation of their prior service to Israel’s national security
state.
Unsurprisingly, Diagnostic Robotics – a
company partnered with Israel’s military and Health Ministry and created
by a Unit 8200 alumnus – fits the profile of the type of Israeli firm
whose expansion abroad is facilitated by SUNC and is represented on SUNC’s website. Indeed, Wendy Singer of SUNC recently authored an article for Forbes praising the company’s predictive population health surveillance tool and was interviewed alongside Radinksy in a Times of Israel report highlighting Israeli start-ups and technologies set to be used to combat the country’s alleged “second wave” of infections.
In addition, Diagnostic Robotics is one of the company’s promoted by the CoronaTech initiative, a joint effort between
SUNC and HealthIL – part of a joint venture involving the Ministry of
Economy and the Ministry of Social Equality. In addition, the CoronaTech
website is managed by Wix – a website building company created by a former Unit 8200 alumnus. CoronaTech’s stated purpose is
to act “as a central gateway to discover leading Israeli innovation and
best practices” “for healthcare providers, governments and other
organizations.”
Unofficial Uses, Guaranteed Outcomes
Diagnostic Robotics’ co-founder’s ties to
Israeli intelligence, the company’s backing by a Mega Group-linked
venture capital firm and its close partnerships with the Israeli
government, military and SUNC, are all causes for concern regarding
their coronavirus-specific system’s use to monitor populations both in
Israel and now in the United States. However, their partnerships with
Rhode Island and Mayo Clinic, as well as those slated to be announced in
the coming days and weeks, are particularly troubling given Israel’s aggressive history of espionage against
the United States that has been on-going for decades, much of which has
been conducted through “backdoors” in software products, hacking and
other means of electronic infiltration.
Many of these intelligence operations –
which, more often that not, combine Unit 8200, SUNC and the Israeli
government – have also appeared to have the added purpose, not just of
preventing victories for the BDS movement or ensuring Israel’s position
as a global “cyber power,” but also advancing the creation of what I
have come to call the “binational security state.”
This agenda, in the age of coronavirus, has grown by leaps and bounds.
Examples include how Israeli spy-linked tech firms are set to construct New York state’s “smart cities,” dominate the
U.S.’ 911 emergency call system and offer “remote government” options
to federal and state agencies, all in the months since the coronavirus
crisis first began in earnest.
Many of these Israeli spy-linked tech
firms also include members of the U.S.’ national security state and
intelligence communities as board members or prominent advisors,
including former heads of the Department of Homeland Security, Michael
Chertoff and Kirstjen Nielsen; former chief information security officer
for the CIA, Robert Bigman; and former member of the U.S. Military’s
Joint Special Operations Command, Geoff Hancock, among many others.
Together, the national security states of both the U.S. and Israel have
been steadily constructing an Orwellian nightmare in
both countries, a nightmare that has become closer to reality than ever
before under the guise of “healthcare” and combating the coronavirus
pandemic.
Diagnostic Robotics’ efforts to predict
and monitor entire populations with AI is a potent tool that can be used
for many purposes that have little to do with public health. Much like
“contact tracing” software that was first justified by the pandemic has
subsequently been used to target and track protesters,
Diagnostic Robotics’ predictive analytics and “hotspot” maps can be
used for the same ends. Given the track record of the national security
states of both the U.S. and Israel, such “unofficial” uses of these
“digital solutions” to the pandemic are not just speculative, they are
guaranteed.
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