It has been revealed that a $68 military gadget sold on an internet auction site was designed to collect and store personal information about U.S. service members, Afghanis who cooperated with the U.S. military, terrorists, and others.
Expert in German security, Matthias Marx, has accepted the offer. In August, Marx and his employees enrolled in the program electronically by purchasing a Secure Electronic Enrollment Kit (SEEK II) from eBay (via The New York Times).
After the American withdrawal from Afghanistan last year, the researchers discovered that biometric devices had fallen into Taliban hands. This study aimed to determine the dangers to which thousands of Afghans who served in the U.S. military throughout the country’s 20-year occupation would have been exposed.
On eBay, a group led by Marx bought the SEEK II and five additional biometric devices. According to rumors, the identities of the American servicemen and women have been uncovered. As of 2013, the gadget had been put out of use in Jordan.
Marx told the Times, “the careless management of this high-risk technology is appalling.” It’s incomprehensible that neither the original manufacturer nor the ex-military employees care that sensitive data is being traded on resold equipment.
Karl Marx gave the Times permission to use SEEK II information. Information on 2,632 people, including fingerprints, retina scans, and other biometric data, was stored without encryption. The Times reports that this weapon has not been utilized since the early 2000s in Afghanistan.
Marx was unhappy with how little precaution was taken to safeguard the information. Another way of saying “the risk didn’t matter to them” is that they ignored it.
The U.S. military was unable to confirm the biometric scanner’s results.
A representative for the Defense Department, Brigadier General Patrick S. Ryder, said, “Because we have not analyzed the material on the devices, the department cannot authenticate the veracity of the reported data or otherwise comment on it.” It is required that devices containing private information be given to the proper authorities for review.
On August 30, 2021, the United States finally withdrew its soldiers after a twenty-year involvement in Afghanistan. U.S. military and intelligence were embarrassed by the withdrawal’s violence and chaos. Hundreds of American soldiers, thousands of Afghan friends, and millions of dollars worth of military equipment were likely abandoned as the United States withdrew.
In addition, 13 American personnel were murdered in a terrorist attack on Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport when the Taliban took control of the country after the United States departed. U.S. forces in Afghanistan murdered ten people, including seven children, when they targeted a humanitarian assistance worker instead of a terrorist target.
General Frank McKenzie stated in his capacity as chief of U.S. Central Command, “This decision was made in the honest idea that it would obviate an imminent threat to soldiers at the airport.” Our research shows that it was possible to avoid colliding with that vehicle.
It has come to light that biometric scanners and other gadgets containing sensitive information on American forces and Afghan partners were left behind in Afghanistan. Thousands of Afghans who assisted American troops were left behind during the withdrawal. The Taliban could readily track and identify them using the technology.
A U.S. military contractor told The Intercept in August of 2021, “We processed hundreds of locals a day, had to I.D., screen for suicide vests, weapons, intel collection, etc.” Coalition local employees’ identities were biometrically verified using portable interagency identity detection equipment (HIIDE).