HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesSpy fiction has been warning us about Pegasus for years

Spy fiction has been warning us about Pegasus for years

For some time now, espionage novels and other thrillers have featured phone hacking and other digital dirty tricks.

July 24, 2021 / 07:23 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Consider, to begin with, the following scenario.

Saudi Arabia needs cyber-surveillance technology to monitor suspected terrorists. It sets up a data centre that employs mobile phone-hacking software from an Israeli company. Soon, the crown prince starts using this to keep tabs on his opponents as well as prominent journalists, fearing that he may be toppled by an Internet-based “hashtag uprising”.

Story continues below Advertisement

A senior Israeli intelligence officer, anticipating that this would happen, had opposed the sale of spyware from the start. However, such concerns were overruled by the prime minister.

That is an episode from American author Daniel Silva’s 2019 thriller, The New Girl. The intelligence officer referred to is Gabriel Allon, protagonist of Silva’s series of novels, many of which have real-life resonance. As Silva writes in the novel’s foreword, “Elements of The New Girl are quite obviously inspired by events surrounding (Jamal) Khashoggi’s death. The rest occur only in the imaginary world inhabited by Gabriel Allon, his associates, and his enemies.”