Other NSO-connected figures also have close Trump ties: Bryan Lanza, a partner at Mercury Public Affairs, which consulted for the company from 2020 to 2021, is a veteran Trump ally; Michael Flynn, Trumpâs former national security adviser, was paid nearly $100,000 by NSO Groupâs parent firms, according to the The Washington Post, and was recently appointed by Trump to a West Point advisory board; Jeff Miller, who raised millions for Trump, received $170,000 from an NSO-linked company and was spotted at Trumpâs 2024 election night event at Mar-a-Lago; and Rod Rosenstein, Trumpâs former deputy attorney general, represented NSO Group in a lawsuit and previously helped justify Trumpâs firing of FBI director James Comey.
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP, Chartwell Strategy Group, Paul Hastings LLP, and Steptoe LLP did not reply to WIREDâs request for comment. Nor did Flynn, Miller, or Rosenstein. Tamasi did not respond in time for publication.
What Counts as a Win
As of early Marchâbefore Vogel Groupâs registration as a lobbyist for NSO Groupâthere had been no indication that the Trump administration intended to remove the company from the Entity List, according to a source familiar with the administrationâs moves regarding spyware, who asked not to be named in order to discuss confidential matters. However, recent comments by NSO Groupâs Lavie soft-peddled the impact of the Entity List on the companyâs ability to operate in the US.
â[The Americans], when they say âblacklist,â it sounds much more dramatic to me than it actually is,â Lavie claimed during an interview in Hebrew on an Israeli podcast following Trumpâs election. He added: âYou can still do business in the United States; it is definitely not a barrier for us to sell in the US.â
âIn practice, we are on the list of Commerce, and what this does for us from a regulatory perspective, it simply forces American companiesâif we want to buy technology from themâto ask for permission to sell us the technology. That’s all,â Lavie said.
ââLobbying efforts can target different parts of the US government. By lobbying the executive branch (the president and agencies), lobbyists can influence how laws are enforced rather than what the laws say. In contrast, when lobbying Congress, the focus is on passing, blocking, or amending laws by influencing legislators.
For example, for a company to be removed from the Entity List, it must go through a lengthy administrative process that includes a review by an interagency committee composed of representatives from the departments of Commerce, State, and Defense, among others. Although Congress could theoretically influence this process, it is not directly involved.
During the presidential transition period, NSO Group mainly focused on Congress and reached out to at least 10 Republican senators, representatives, and their staff, before beginning its outreach with the incoming administration. On February 2, the company shared its annual transparency report with Trumpâs new deputy national security adviser, Alex Wong.
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