First off, this was a nation-state supply chain attack. It was pretty obviously carried off by Israel, and demonstrated that they have a person inside Hezbollah’s organization. They either saw the order for replacing all the pagers being put together, or possibly did a persuasion campaign and caused the order for the pagers to come together. Then at some point in the manufacturing/delivery chain the order was intercepted and all the devices were modified.
The company that sold them is just a branding company in Taipei. They were made in Hungary, the home of Viktor Orban, friend to and also deep in the pockets of Uncle Vlad in Moscow. The company that made them may well be a shell company as the “corporate HQ” address is a residential house with pieces of paper in the window and the person who answered the house said it’s just a mail drop for a number of companies, much like a certain address in Delaware. The president or CEO of the company, when reached, said ‘We didn’t make them’.
The pagers were modified with a small amount of a plastique explosive compound and a detonator, rigged to trigger on the receipt of a coded signal. And yesterday afternoon, the signal was sent, killing a dozen people and maiming quite a number more. It isn’t clear if it was a group page or a broadcast signal from another transmitter. At least three children among the dead. Several Hezbollah members who had been issued the pagers noticed they were getting hot, took them off and threw them away.
The pagers themselves were ruggedized with a rechargeable battery designed to last a few weeks between charges. There are advantages to pagers, believe it or not. They’re still heavily used in hospitals because the transmitters will get a signal through the heavy radiation-shielded walls reliably. They’re also normally receive-only devices, so you can’t trace a person’s movement with them, convenient for people who don’t want to be traced. So they’re still in use around the world, but not nearly in the numbers that they were in the pre-smart phone era. In an area like the Middle East that may have shaky telecoms, a pager might be a reliable communications device.
That was Tuesday. Today is Wednesday, and another surge of mass device bombings has taken place.
It's been reported that thousands of walkie talkies used by Hezbollah in Lebanon have blown up, resulting in more deaths, lots more injuries, and massive property damage. And the deaths were not confined to Lebanon, there were also reports of deaths and injuries in Syria. It was also reported that some solar panels exploded.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/bc-ml-lebanon-israel-exploding-pagers-hungary-firm_n_66eab9b2e4b00648275b59ef
https://today.lorientlejour.com/article/1427496/recap-14-killed-almost-3000-injured-in-latest-toll-from-pager-blasts.html
The company that sold them is just a branding company in Taipei. They were made in Hungary, the home of Viktor Orban, friend to and also deep in the pockets of Uncle Vlad in Moscow. The company that made them may well be a shell company as the “corporate HQ” address is a residential house with pieces of paper in the window and the person who answered the house said it’s just a mail drop for a number of companies, much like a certain address in Delaware. The president or CEO of the company, when reached, said ‘We didn’t make them’.
The pagers were modified with a small amount of a plastique explosive compound and a detonator, rigged to trigger on the receipt of a coded signal. And yesterday afternoon, the signal was sent, killing a dozen people and maiming quite a number more. It isn’t clear if it was a group page or a broadcast signal from another transmitter. At least three children among the dead. Several Hezbollah members who had been issued the pagers noticed they were getting hot, took them off and threw them away.
The pagers themselves were ruggedized with a rechargeable battery designed to last a few weeks between charges. There are advantages to pagers, believe it or not. They’re still heavily used in hospitals because the transmitters will get a signal through the heavy radiation-shielded walls reliably. They’re also normally receive-only devices, so you can’t trace a person’s movement with them, convenient for people who don’t want to be traced. So they’re still in use around the world, but not nearly in the numbers that they were in the pre-smart phone era. In an area like the Middle East that may have shaky telecoms, a pager might be a reliable communications device.
That was Tuesday. Today is Wednesday, and another surge of mass device bombings has taken place.
It's been reported that thousands of walkie talkies used by Hezbollah in Lebanon have blown up, resulting in more deaths, lots more injuries, and massive property damage. And the deaths were not confined to Lebanon, there were also reports of deaths and injuries in Syria. It was also reported that some solar panels exploded.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/bc-ml-lebanon-israel-exploding-pagers-hungary-firm_n_66eab9b2e4b00648275b59ef
https://today.lorientlejour.com/article/1427496/recap-14-killed-almost-3000-injured-in-latest-toll-from-pager-blasts.html