Intellexa Founder's Testimony Directly Implicates Greek Government in Spyware Scandal
The founder of the notorious spyware consortium Intellexa has made his most direct public suggestion yet: that the Greek government under Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis authorized the hacking of dozens of phones. This allegation, coming from a convicted figure at the heart of the surveillance industry, transforms the scandal from a series of isolated incidents into a potential state-level operation. It directly points the finger at the highest levels of the Mitsotakis administration for orchestrating a widespread campaign of digital espionage against its own political and media landscape.
The targets, as alleged, form a comprehensive list of the country's power centers. They reportedly included senior government ministers, opposition leaders, high-ranking military officials, and prominent journalists. The scale and nature of the targets suggest an operation aimed not at criminal investigation, but at political intelligence and control. This testimony from inside Intellexa provides a crucial, if controversial, link between the deployment of the powerful Predator spyware and the government that has repeatedly denied any involvement.
The implications are profound for Greek democracy and its institutions. It places intense pressure on the Mitsotakis government to provide a full accounting and raises serious questions about the rule of law and the abuse of state power. The scandal now threatens to erode public trust in national security institutions and could trigger deeper parliamentary and judicial scrutiny into the opaque world of government-sanctioned surveillance.