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Israel's Mossad Sets Up Fund to Acquire New Spy Techniques


A sprinkler, tie and coffee cup with hidden cameras are featured at an expo of Israeli intelligence-gathering technology in Tel Aviv, June 30, 2015. Two dozen Israeli companies exhibited their products used by Israeli and international militaries, police units and intelligence organizations.
A sprinkler, tie and coffee cup with hidden cameras are featured at an expo of Israeli intelligence-gathering technology in Tel Aviv, June 30, 2015. Two dozen Israeli companies exhibited their products used by Israeli and international militaries, police units and intelligence organizations.

Israel's Mossad intelligence agency has set up an investment fund to help development of new cloak-and-dagger know-how and is offering grants of up to 2 million shekels (about $570,000) per project to bring in new ideas.

A government statement on Tuesday said Mossad was seeking technologies in various fields, including robotics, miniaturization and encryption, as well as new automated methods of gleaning information from documents and new ways of carrying out operations more stealthily.

A statement by the new fund, called Libertad, said it would be willing to give grants of up to 2 million shekels per project in exchange for nonexclusive rights to the technology. Developers would retain the sales rights to their product, it said.

"The Mossad wants to encourage innovation and creation of groundbreaking technology ... the technology developed will be implemented by us, in cooperation between the parties," Libertad said in a document.

It advised potential applicants to "closely observe" areas of interest on its website and said that calls for proposals would be posted publicly.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu posted a short video clip on Twitter showing possible futuristic technology and wrote: "Mossad will continue to be sophisticated, daring and groundbreaking in its paramount task of ensuring Israel's security."

Mossad's undertaking is not new. In 1999, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency established IQT, a nonprofit investment fund aimed at accelerating the development and delivery of new technologies to U.S. government intelligence bodies.

Libertad's document said "anyone" could apply, suggesting that the offer was open, too, to foreign companies, though it did not give details. It added that an approved program could be made only with an incorporated company.

Israel has over 450 cybersecurity firms. In 2016, 78 startups raised more than $660 million from investors, according to the Israel Venture Capital Research Center.

Its advanced defense industry, led by Elbit, Israel Aerospace Industries, Israel Military Industries and Rafael, accounts for about 14 percent of the country's exports.

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