The panoptic practice of producing ‘good’ citizens through surveillance but by which great powers have brought the entire world within the panoptic radius of state power has suffered a setback. The details gushing out started in a February 11th, 2020 report in which The Washington Post laid bare how governments across the world entrusted Crypto AG for more than half a century “to keep the communications of their spies, soldiers and diplomats secret”.
Starting from code-breaking technology for U.S. troops during World War II, Crypto AG, according to the newspaper, went on to becoming “dominant maker of encryption devices for decades, navigating waves of technology from mechanical gears to electronic circuits and, finally, silicon chips and software”. In the report titled “The Intelligence Coup of the Century”, The Washington Post revealed how all manner of governments, ranging from Iran to Pakistan, India and military juntas in Latin America had no idea the Central Intelligence Agency, (CIA) owned Crypto AG but in a classified partnership with West German Intelligence. As such, Crypto AG could make all its money from all manner of customers, putting the CIA in a position to know what India and Pakistan who are key actors in Asian security, for instance, were up to or not up to. Above all, the paper said their spy agencies rigged the company’s devices so they could easily break the codes that countries used to send encrypted messages.
The question though is how it happened that the CIA did not know that India had become a nuclear power until India announced its entrance into the club.
The BBC took up the season of revelations today with a Swiss dimension to the story of manipulation and cloak and daggers. The BBC News has so tightly captured the Swiss dimension in a manner simply difficult to summarise without doing damage to the text. The report by Imogen Foulkes, BBC’s Bern correspondent and titled “Swiss Crypto AG spying scandal shakes reputation for neutrality” goes as follows:
The revelation that foreign intelligence used a Swiss company’s devices for spying provokes outrage.Has the Crypto AG scandal shattered Swiss neutrality? It’s hard to exaggerate just how much the Crypto AG scandal has shaken Switzerland. For decades, US and German intelligence used this Swiss company’s encoding devices to spy on other countries, and the revelations this week have provoked outrage.
From the Cold War into the 2000s, Crypto AG sold the devices to more than 120 governments worldwide. The machines were encrypted but it emerged this week that the CIA and Germany’s BND had rigged the devices so they could crack the codes and intercept thousands of messages.
Rumours had circulated in the past but now everybody knows.
Why Swiss neutrality matters
There are only a handful of countries on the planet that have chosen neutrality; Austria is one, Sweden another. But no country has made a status symbol out of neutrality like the Swiss.
Now that the Crypto AG scandal has emerged in all its tawdry detail, there’s not a newspaper or broadcaster in the country that is not questioning Switzerland’s neutrality.
“It’s shattered,” is a common phrase.
A federal judge is already on the case and politicians across the spectrum are calling for a parliamentary commission of inquiry.
This is a country whose neutrality has allowed it to represent US interests in Iran for 30 years, and Tehran’s interests in Washington. Switzerland negotiated hard behind the scenes with the US to allow deliveries of humanitarian aid to Iran to ease the worst effects of sanctions.
It is also a country that sold flawed encryption machines, bearing that Made in Switzerland label, to Iran, so that Washington could eavesdrop.
Swiss neutrality is revered as if it were in the country’s DNA, part of a unique national identity, and not the pragmatic policy of a small country that hired mercenaries to the rest of Europe until its leaders decided not fighting at all might be safer.
“We survived two world wars,” is a phrase you often hear in Switzerland. It can be irritating to citizens of other European countries who also survived those wars, in rather more harrowing fashion.
But it’s true, Switzerland’s neutrality kept it out of those wars, and in 1945 Switzerland’s economy and infrastructure emerged, phoenix-like and unscathed, while its neighbours swept up the ash and the rubble.
How the Swiss made themselves useful
Neutrality, however, is not some force field which keeps enemies out. Not a magic word which you can chant and the bad guys will leave you alone.
In World War Two, Switzerland did all sorts of things to make sure its neighbours stayed away. Mass mobilisation, sending every man between 18 and 60 to defend the borders, mining the tunnels and alpine passes, that was one thing: and until recently that took pride of place in Swiss history books.
But there was something else, equally important: Switzerland made itself useful, to all sides. Nazi Germany found a safe place for its looted art and gold in Swiss banks. It sent trains full of weapons across Switzerland to support Italian dictator Benito Mussolini.
At the same time, Switzerland’s head of the armed forces, General Henri Guisan, was having secret chats with the French about fighting together should both countries be invaded. There’s a street named after Guisan in every Swiss town.
Meanwhile the US intelligence-gathering body, the Office of Strategic Services, sent Allen Dulles to Europe. Dulles set up his office in the Swiss capital, Bern, and stayed there for the rest of war, spying on the Germans. He later became head of the CIA.
Who knew what?
In the 1990s the Swiss did a lot of soul searching about World War Two. The history books were rewritten to include the shameful policy of turning Jewish refugees back at the borders. Commissions of inquiry were set up, memorials held, and a Swiss government minister, Kaspar Villiger, formally apologised.
That’s the same Kaspar Villiger who now stands accused, while serving as defence minister in the 1990s, of knowing that the CIA controlled Crypto AG, and was selling flawed encryption machines around the world in order to spy on foreign governments.
Mr Villiger, it must be stressed, denies this. But many questions about Crypto were raised in Switzerland in the 1990s, so it’s curious that the defence minister didn’t hear them, or didn’t follow them up.
Asked about Mr Villiger on Swiss TV, rotating federal president Simonetta Sommaruga, said the speculation made no sense. “We will discuss it when we have the facts,” she said.
Can Switzerland have it both ways?
How on earth can those two concepts – neutrality and cooperation – exist together? Perhaps in the same way that Switzerland proudly does not fight wars, but sells plenty of weapons.
Or the way in which its bankers used to say “money doesn’t smell”. In other words, they were happy to look after it whatever bloody conflict, brutal dictator, drug baron, or tax scam it had come from.
Or, more charitably, Switzerland wanted to survive the Cold War. Its values were Western, why not turn a blind eye to a few covert operations by Europe’s protector in chief, the US, at one of Switzerland’s world-class precision engineering companies?
To be fair, there are millions of Swiss who think deeply about these things, and who have campaigned hard for a less self-interested policy, certainly when it comes to banking and arms trading, both of which are now subject to much stricter regulation.
But still, every few years it seems the Swiss get a wake-up call about their neutrality.
They have to learn all over again that it’s not a shining beacon of hope at the heart of Europe. Rather it is a pragmatic and often grubby survival tactic in a continent with a very bloody history.
And sometimes, as with Crypto AG, that pragmatism, together with a desire to see the myth of neutrality rather than the reality, lead to some very questionable decisions.