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Iraq Insurgents Hack U.S. Drones For Under $26

PAULINE JELINEK   12/17/09 09:38 PM ET   AP

Demand For Drones

WASHINGTON — Insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan have intercepted live video feeds from Predator drones, a key weapon in a Pentagon spy system that serves as the military's eyes in the sky for surveillance and intelligence collection.

Though militants could see the video, there is no evidence they were able to jam the electronic signals from the unmanned aerial craft or take control of the vehicles, a senior defense official said Thursday, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence issues.

Obtaining the video feeds can provide insurgents with critical information about what the military may be targeting, including buildings, roads and other facilities.

Shiite fighters in Iraq used off-the-shelf software programs such as SkyGrabber – available for as little as $25.95 on the Internet – to regularly capture drone video feeds, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. The interception, first done there at least a year ago, was possible because the remotely flown planes had unprotected communications links.

Within the last several months, the military has found evidence of at least one instance where insurgents in Afghanistan also monitored U.S. drone video, a second defense official said. He had no details on how many times it was done in Afghanistan or by which group.

The Defense Department has addressed the issue, and is working to encrypt all of its drone video feeds from Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, defense officials said. One defense official noted that upgrading the encryption in the drones is a lengthy process because there are at least 600 unmanned vehicles along with thousands of ground stations to address.

Officials said that systems in key threat areas were upgraded first.

Dale Meyerrose, former chief information officer for the U.S. intelligence community, compared the problem to street criminals listening to police scanners.

"This was just one of the signals, a broadcast signal, and there was no hacking. It is the interception of a broadcast signal," said Meyerrose, who worked to field the unmanned systems in the 1990s, when he was a senior Air Force officer.

The problem, he said, is that when the drones were first being developed they were using commercial equipment, which as time goes on could become vulnerable to intercepts.

The Predator, also currently used in the hunt for al-Qaida and other militants in Pakistan, Somalia and elsewhere, can fly for hours remotely controlled by pilots thousands of miles away. It can fly armed or unarmed, and is part of a growing arsenal of such craft that includes the Reaper and Raven as well as a new, high-tech video sensor system called the Gorgon Stare, being installed on Reapers.

The military has known about the vulnerability for more than a decade, but assumed adversaries would not be able to exploit it.

Then in December 2008, the military apprehended a Shiite militant in Iraq whose laptop contained files of intercepted drone video feeds, the Journal reported. In July 2009, they found pirated feeds on other militant laptops, leading some officials to conclude that groups trained and funded by Iran were regularly intercepting feeds and sharing them with multiple extremist groups.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates asked the Pentagon's intelligence chief, James R. Clapper, Jr., to look into the problem and coordinate the work to address it. Officials said that when the intercepts were discovered, it raised concerns, but technical adjustments were not difficult and were put in motion quickly.

The hacking is just another example of how formidable and inventive the extremists can be. The U.S. has spent billions of dollars, for instance, fighting homemade bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan, the No. 1 killer of troops and the weapon of choice by militants who have easy access to the materials needed to make them and use modern telecommunications networks to exchange information about how to improve them.

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said the military continually evaluates the technologies it uses and quickly corrects any vulnerabilities found.

___

Associated Press writers Anne Flaherty and Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan have intercepted live video feeds from Predator drones, a key weapon in a Pentagon spy system that serves as the military's eyes in the sky for su...
WASHINGTON — Insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan have intercepted live video feeds from Predator drones, a key weapon in a Pentagon spy system that serves as the military's eyes in the sky for su...
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gra8whit
It's a dog-eat-dog world
09:36 PM on 01/12/2010
Never, ever underestimate your enemy, unless he's dead.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:54 PM on 01/12/2010
Look Al-Habib Nas Camel Cash. Were on TV. BOOM!!!!!!!!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rf dude
Just an average Man of Bronze - now in Steel!
12:02 AM on 12/23/2009
'
Big deal - they're doing fine with the rocks, sharpened sticks and IEDs...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shivasquest
02:22 PM on 12/18/2009
Who does the pentagon work for?
Not our troops.
01:25 PM on 12/18/2009
shows the power of communication and marketing....

products going on the field and supposed of military grade are no better than a simple consumer grade GPS or iphone but costs 100 times more....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Albert Amato
01:24 PM on 12/18/2009
Hmmm,.... just read this morning that the new Israeli drones are encrypted and the US can get those or just the encryption software and retrofit.....problem solved.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jason Hollis
01:04 PM on 12/18/2009
lol 'Hacking'.

- Drone footage needs to be timely, reliable, and detailed. Encryption reduces image quality, datastream reliability, and introduces lag time. Until these are fixed, until the technology can catch up, leaking video will continue to happen.

- Critical datastreams, such as control data, are encrypted and secure. This is not one of them.

- For soldiers on the ground to be able to view encrypted video streams, they must have the encryption key on them. One captured device in enemy hands can enable them to break that encryption. Reference 'navajo code talkers' and note the standing kill order in case of capture.

- For drone footage to be useful in a combat situation, you need to have some context as to what you're seeing. Intercepted footage is decontextualized, and therefore only of use to the enemy as part of post-mortem analysis after the incident.

- The only time this omnidirectional broadcast is sent is when forward ground units request a video feed from the drone. Without knowing what you're looking at, the video is useless.

- Lastly, if one can intercept it, that means the drone or plane itself is in one's immediate vicinity and broadcasting. I would think that watching near-useless war-porn voyeur video would be the least of one's concerns at that point in time, given that a hellfire missile, several pounds of high velocity depleted uranium, or a squad of Marines are probably closing on one's position at that very moment.

So this is no
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
01:37 PM on 12/18/2009
Considering the level of sophistication of our current battlefield enemies, how would any of your points above be an insurmountable technical challenge to the Russians or the Chinese? How long after the outset of a conflict with a technologically advanced enemy before these weapons systems would be obsolete? Two weeks? A month?
06:11 AM on 12/18/2009
Drones are illegal. As a consequence, our previous and current administrations are acting illegally and should be held accountable. Why isn't HP calling for Obama's arrest let alone fully signing on to the ICC?
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Jason Hollis
01:01 PM on 12/18/2009
Drones are not illegal.
Your claim is absurd and non-factual.
02:34 PM on 12/18/2009
Dude, I have talked to ICTY lawyers and they don't feel that this is an absurd claim. You a lawyer?
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12:54 AM on 12/18/2009
As long as the US occupation continues, there will be a resistance movement, although US imperialism has also cleverly managed to divide Iraqis along sectarian lines in order to prevent a united front against the occupation.
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Kenneth Braxton
Southern Atheist.
11:06 PM on 12/17/2009
@ramblingjohnny, I'm an Ubuntu user also. This is just silly. Who is in charge of lack of intelligence in the US Military? ENCRYPT THE FEEDS MORONS!!!!
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07:43 AM on 12/18/2009
You know that if your cell is not an old analog set it not broadcasting in clear! This is just freaking insane!
09:21 AM on 12/18/2009
I thought the same thing, and have the same question. As much money as we pour into defense spending, and we can't do anything better than this? Where is all of the money going, because it certainly isn't going to our troops or into equipment.
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
10:49 PM on 12/17/2009
More proof that these billion dollar weapons systems would be useless against any modern enemy. Imagine what the Russians or Chinese could do against these things. For that matter, why do they bother to design stealth into a system that has to transmit real-time video images back to home base to be of any use? One more way to jack up the price tag.

Expensive toys that are only good for beating up on third-world adversaries, which is all they were ever intended for in the first place.
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Jason Hollis
01:05 PM on 12/18/2009
You, like the author, have no idea what you're talking about.
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
01:32 PM on 12/18/2009
Thank you for your insightful reply. I'll take all of your well-articulated points into consideration.
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06:58 PM on 12/17/2009
The freaking Home partition in my goddamn Ubuntu desktop is encrypted and you tell me they did not bother to encrypt the video feed from a multi-millions dollars military drone!!!
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Flying Dutchman
Don't judge what you don't yet understand
05:51 AM on 12/18/2009
lol
09:25 AM on 12/18/2009
I know. It's absolutely ridiculous. Why even bother spending so much on defense if we aren't going to use it wisely? The level of incompetence is getting to the point where it looks intentional. In other words, do so badly that we prolong the conflict unnecessarily. Oh wait, that's exactly what many would want if they profit off of the wars.
05:10 PM on 12/17/2009
So I guess it would take 3 laptops and google earth to be able to triagulate on them and know the exact location of every single drone?
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Seán O'Nilbud
Drunken Master
11:58 PM on 12/17/2009
No you'd just need someone who knew the terrain and they can extrapolate the location of the drone then a tuned stinger makes the US taxpayer pay another few million in military waste. Once the Chinese are finished reverse engineering them it should be possible to pick them out of the air at will.
05:10 PM on 12/17/2009
Does anyone else think it's kind of strange that we do not secure communications that may endanger our troops in the field, yet American citizens cannot get access to government information concerning the Kennedy assassination or the 9/11 investigations?
09:23 AM on 12/18/2009
Strange enough that the incompetence looks intentional at times.
05:02 PM on 12/17/2009
Something similar to this happened during the Iraq War - satellite dish owners in South America were watching live reconnaissance on their TV sets until the military realized it & scrambled the feeds.

I guess we just have to keep learning the same lessons over and over.
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JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
05:37 PM on 12/17/2009
It's the American Way.