Russian Submarines are 'Prowling Around' Undersea Internet Cables (thehill.com) 175
An anonymous reader quotes The Hill:
Russian submarine activity around undersea cables that provide internet and other communications connections to North America and Europe has raised concerns among NATO officials, according to The Washington Post. NATO officials say an unprecedented amount of Russian deep-sea activity, especially around undersea internet lines, constitutes a newfound "vulnerability" for NATO nations. "We are now seeing Russian underwater activity in the vicinity of undersea cables that I don't believe we have ever seen," said NATO submarine forces commander and U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Andrew Lennon. "Russia is clearly taking an interest in NATO and NATO nations' undersea infrastructure."
"The Russian Defense Ministry did not respond to a request for comment about the cables," reports the Washington Post, adding that "prowling around" the cables "could give the Kremlin the power to sever or tap into vital data lines, officials said."
They cite the commander of NATO's submarine forces, who says "We know that these auxiliary submarines are designed to work on the ocean floor, and they're transported by the mother ship, and we believe they may be equipped to manipulate objects on the ocean floor."
"The Russian Defense Ministry did not respond to a request for comment about the cables," reports the Washington Post, adding that "prowling around" the cables "could give the Kremlin the power to sever or tap into vital data lines, officials said."
They cite the commander of NATO's submarine forces, who says "We know that these auxiliary submarines are designed to work on the ocean floor, and they're transported by the mother ship, and we believe they may be equipped to manipulate objects on the ocean floor."
Why is Russia suddenly so much cooler than us? (Score:3, Funny)
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It's very likely heading that way.
Making sure you can cut ground comms is a big step in attaining that. Keep the people confused and break the interwebs. Half of the people today addicted to facebook aren't going to know what to do with themselves and will probably start crying.
I could totally see something stupid, unhelpful and altogether wasteful kicking off between russia, china and the us.
Re: Why is Russia suddenly so much cooler than us (Score:1)
I love how the liberals all think Trump is Putin's stooge. Putin is the enemy, but he really doesn't give a fuck about Donald Trump. Putin's real game is to divide the USA between left and right, white and black. He is doing it very effectively. If the liberals really wanted to give a finger to Putin they would support Donald Trump and join forces with the conservatives and unite behind the flag of the United States.
The conservatives should do the same thing and unite with the liberals. Support black
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Mexico? Surely not. After all, Mexicans share a common language and culture with 40% of the population of California and Texas. There are wide swaths of the LA basin where you'll be hard put to find a sign in English.
Re: Why is Russia suddenly so much cooler than u (Score:2)
Re: Why is Russia suddenly so much cooler than us (Score:2)
The California National Guard alone can project more global military power than Russia.
Had to quit reading when I got to the above.
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thought the exact same thing, and stopped reading at the same point. Not sure what "projecting military power" means but i dont think a few coast guard cuters trying to rescue stranded fishermen does that?
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Hmmm. Our memory doesn't go back to Vietnam much less the American Revolution does it? The message of history is pretty clear. Occupying forces from a dominant military control the ground they stand on completely. ... And if they are so motivated, the guys in black pajamas or homespun clothes control everything else.
Re: Why is Russia suddenly so much cooler than us (Score:1)
Re: Why is Russia suddenly so much cooler than us (Score:4, Funny)
Golf war
Trump is out there fighting it every day.
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Umm. No.
Russia can never become a 3rd-world country. They're 2nd-world and always will be, so long as they exist. That's literally the definition of 1st, 2nd, and 3rd world countries:
1st world: The US, UK, and their allies.
2nd world: Russia and its satellite states
3rd world: Everyone else.
The only way Russia can cease to be 2nd world and enter the 3rd world is for it to collapse entirely and cease to exist as Russia.
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You're being silly, comrade. If they wanted to cut the cables they'd do that instantly. A depth charge could accomplish that without even needing a diver.
The threat is if they can install splices and listening devices. Any idiot with an anchor can take out a fiber cable as happens periodically.
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Specially design submarines have underwater diving bell type airlock compartments that can be positioned above a cable, the cable hauled up and the splicing work is performed with the airlock.
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Well, aren't condoms designed to protect our dicks from the crushing pressure of vaginas?
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Re: Why is Russia suddenly so much cooler than us? (Score:1)
There's not much cool about being a repressive regime with a struggling economy and rampant corruption.
Re: Why is Russia suddenly so much cooler than us (Score:5, Funny)
That was the point he was making. Russia does seem much cooler.
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Really? Look at their mortality rate. They aren't cool.
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The USA is doing regime change, supporting color revolutions globally.
So the USA has to create, support and supply "freedom fighters" all around the world.
That gets difficult to spin as been good news.
Faith based groups funded and supported by the USA trying to take over normal governments who do not want to fall to US backed faith based insurgents.
Russia has on
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The concern is what? The Russians might interfere with NSA monitoring gear installed on the cables?
Why the folks in Washington, London, Brussels, and Bonn are determined to make enemies out of Russia, Iran, and -- if possible -- China eludes me. (North Korea is perhaps a somewhat different case as Kim Jong-un may actually be crazier than Trump -- assuming that to be possible). As Rodney King once said, "Can't we all just get along?"
Anyway, IMO the chances of worldwide digital communications remaining up
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Read the wording of these stories. They don't know jack shit. They assume, because that's what they have been doing for a long time.
Read up on Jimmy Carter.
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Well, if it's going to work why wouldn't they do it?
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I'll be very surprised if there is much about Russian military capability that is not known to the US. And vice versa. It's really hard to keep secrets these days.
US used to (still does?) tap Russian cables.. (Score:5, Informative)
The US used to (still does, I bet) tap Russian cables. Turnabout is fair play?
Read "Blind Man's Bluff" for stories of us playing all sorts of crazy sub games against the Russians.
Kinda feels like we've got a new Cold War, don't it? Only now it's an Information / Data / Commerce thing, not a Nukes thing.
Re:US used to (still does?) tap Russian cables.. (Score:5, Funny)
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Turnabout is fair play?
There is no "fair." Grow up please.
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And still NATO behave like children apparently.
Now THAT'S scary!
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I'll take that bet. How much money are you willing to gift me on the bet of "Russian invasions of NATO"?
More concerning (Score:5, Interesting)
The US used to (still does, I bet) tap Russian cables. Turnabout is fair play?
Read "Blind Man's Bluff" for stories of us playing all sorts of crazy sub games against the Russians.
Kinda feels like we've got a new Cold War, don't it? Only now it's an Information / Data / Commerce thing, not a Nukes thing.
A more concerning question is: Have they installed cable severing devices that can be remotely triggered? I suppose a remotely-triggered bomb would be easy enough, but it might be something more sophisticated, such as a method to turn off a repeater and then turn it back on again later.
If we ever get into a war with a country that has submarines (or Disney, for that matter), expect intercontinental internet and phone service to be gone for the duration.
This would be a crippling economic tactic, so long as the US would suffer more than the country at war. For most countries it would be a net win for them.
I can't think of any realistic way to protect this asset, either.
Maybe satellite internet (per previous Slashdot article) isn't such a bad idea?
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A more concerning question is: Have they installed cable severing devices that can be remotely triggered? I suppose a remotely-triggered bomb would be easy enough, but it might be something more sophisticated,
Well..... we should help our carriers inspect our cables, and if anyone's installed such a device, then that in itself is an act of war and must be met with sanctions against the country responsible.
In fact.... we really should NOT tolerate foreign nations poking about with ANY craft on the ocea
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Maybe satellite internet (per previous Slashdot article) isn't such a bad idea?
It is, right up until they start shooting down each others satellites. On the bright side though, whoever finds an economic way to clean up massive amounts of orbital debris stands to make a killing once the shooting stops.
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The US used to (still does, I bet) tap Russian cables.
No, former US President Jimmy Carter is NOT tapping undersea cables . . . he is building new houses for poor folks.
Well, he does plant a few bugs in the homes . . . might as well do that while the studs are still bare.
Oh, and I guess Carter does a wee bit of cable tapping: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
But we're the good guys, so tapping is OK for us to do.
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The US used to (still does, I bet) tap Russian cables. Turnabout is fair play?
Read "Blind Man's Bluff" for stories of us playing all sorts of crazy sub games against the Russians.
Kinda feels like we've got a new Cold War, don't it? Only now it's an Information / Data / Commerce thing, not a Nukes thing.
Besides, this activity has been vetted and approved by the Republican party. It's part of th eparty platfoem now.
Re:US used to (still does?) tap Russian cables.. (Score:5, Informative)
That was within territorial waters and off limits to foreign vessels.
Operation Ivy Bells https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re:US used to (still does?) tap Russian cables.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: US used to (still does?) tap Russian cables.. (Score:2)
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Nope, this is geopolitics, not a game.
Yup, and just like any war, I want my side to win. (Also, not commit war crimes. But short of that, all is supposed to be fair.)
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Geopolitics by definition is a game.
Just because stakes are high doesn't make it any less of one.
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Just because it has multiple competing actors doesn't make it a game. There is no universal set of rules (with the exception of the war crimes mentioned earlier) that govern how nation-states act, and certainly no referee to appeal to. It's a competition, but not agame because a game is better organized, has clear win conditions, etc.
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So any game that doesn't have clear win conditions, or isn't well organised isn't actually a game?
When you have to redefine meanings of words to suit your narrative, you concede.
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I'm not redefining words. Please give me your definition of game.
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Common definition.
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Umm... short of new tech hat needs to be addressed, yes? I'm not sure what not-covered thing you think is unjust...
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The US used to (still does, I bet) tap Russian cables. Turnabout is fair play?
Read "Blind Man's Bluff" for stories of us playing all sorts of crazy sub games against the Russians.
Kinda feels like we've got a new Cold War, don't it? Only now it's an Information / Data / Commerce thing, not a Nukes thing.
And the Russians spied on the US, got a hold of US naval cipher machines, decoded US naval signals traffic into the 1980s, stole all kids of other military information and industrial trade secrets, compromised and blackmailed politicians, the list goes on. It's not as if the Russians were somehow unfairly victimised and that we should let them tap our signals traffic wholesale to make up for our past unfair transgressions against poor mother Russia because there weren't any. I say chase these subs off, if t
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Thanks to Mr. Snowden, the US programs that do this are Tempora, Oakstar, Stormbrew, Blarney, and Fairview.
"Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye." Matthew 7:5
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The Soviets screwed up by assuming that cables at the bottom of the ocean couldn't be tapped. It's now public knowledge that they can be tapped. So tapping data lines does them no good unless they can break encryption that is routinely used these days.
So looking at exploit scenarios, there's two that stand out. The first is that Russia discovers (or plants) a weakness in some commonly used crypto software, and then quietly uses that with their taps. The second is that they simply disrupt communications
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And preparing ICBMs to attack US, since MAD is in effect.
How is this news? (Score:1, Insightful)
I'm astonished: either the news-makers are amazingly stupid (the US has more or less openly discussed their task-specific subs capable of tapping such cables for twenty years...which means they've been able to do it for at least thirty), or this is another mendacious effort to paint the Russians as some sort of special bogeyman (they're still our primary strategic competitor, as they have been more or less for decades even after the cold war...an idea the previous president openly mocked, I'll remind everyo
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Wow!!! You must be getting all the memos. Could you please publish your sources so we can all believe the same thing?
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Today its about submarines.
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I don't believe for one minute that the NSA doesn't have every major undersea cable tapped.
Just another chapter or banter in this game (Score:4, Interesting)
towards well, your guess as good as mine..
Fact is that nervousness is increasing with all the little acts some "not so smart" people are undertaking.
How did wars start? Some event, be it a shot or some other rocket started, when the exciting level is pushed up and the spark ignites.
Are people learning from the past, looking at the current actors, definitely no. All feeding their own insanity and the millions either seduced by emotional excitement or staying remote in disgust are suffering from those the games those jerks play.
Truly amazing that this nonsense still happens.
System failure, reset & reboot, but on what hardware???
Instant Internet kill switch... (Score:5, Interesting)
You can bet that there will be explosives placed in various locations under the main internet communication links. Should it be required, a remote detonation signal could be sent and then say goodby to the internet. I suppose if they were going to go that far then they would also disable / destroy any satellites. Europe and the US would have almost all communications cut - good luck responding to a Russian threat in a timely manner.
This is all theoretical but if I were Russia, I would do it. Much easier then tapping into cables and there would be no way to find said explosives.
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Not sure if you knew but the Internet is designed to route around damage. There are plenty of lines running between the US and Russian-controlled waters, what would blowing one up accomplish?
Even if they managed to take out everything in the Atlantic, there would still be capacity via satellite, radio and Pacific links. The only "use" of this exercise would be to tap traffic, but then what idiot throws about valuable data unencrypted on the Internet. Additionally, if they managed to tap a line, then they wo
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All Internet connection would not have to be severed - all it would take is the majority of underwater cables being severed at the same time. Such an event would cause sufficient gridlock to make the Internet useless. The "self healing" nature of the Internet can barely correct for accidents - let alone deliberate sabotage. That is why I described a scenario involving explosives triggered by a remote signal. Sending underwater transmissions is difficult. There are severe bandwidth limitations with hug
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Such an event would cause sufficient gridlock to make the Internet useless.
No.... the internet would continue to function in the US, but it could create many network partitions, and communications between the US and other countries would be harder and slower.
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Our internet still works, but we can't see the pictures of Russian tanks invading Germany.
If Russian tanks invade germany, then there are channels of communication such as HF Radio stations and Satellite which do not rely on the internet.
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Do the links from Germany to France & Britain go through Russia? Sounds pretty unlikely to me.
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No, communication would be slower and it would be "useless" only to consumers that want instant load times but we used to have network links that were much, much slower, more fragile and had more packet loss.
I can communicate with Japan at gigabit rates these days, anyone remember Sourceforge Japan, that site had an effective bandwidth of a 56k modem here in the US, it still worked though for the rare occasion you needed something from it.
Re:Instant Internet kill switch... (Score:4, Funny)
How would they troll Facebook if they cut the cables?
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If you were Russia, the reason your subs are 'sniffing around' is just to make sure all those charges are still good after their 10th or 20th year maintenance check.
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I wonder how you remote detonate explosives underwater. There some special radio for that? Does it work from more then 1 mile away?
Extremely low frequency radio [wikipedia.org]
Can it be triggered accidentally? Would a lightning strike on the water above the bomb cause any trouble?
Coded control messages. The probability of an accidental trigger drops significantly.
Are they wired into the internet so you can detonate them from anywhere on the net? What if some hacker figures out how to trigger them?
No. Why would you do that?
How long do the explosives last while sitting in saltwater? Will they still go boom after 1 year of immersion?
A solved problem [wikipedia.org]: Parts of some World War II naval minefields still exist because they are too extensive and expensive to clear. It is possible for some of these 1940s-era mines to remain dangerous for many years to come. Even circa 1870's mines lasted "several years" submerged.
Lots of issues with the old "put a bomb on it and wait decades for war" plan.
Solvable issues that were tackled centuries to decades ago.
Imagine a future Bitcoin Economy (Score:1)
Imagine the disruption to a future Bitcoin Economy if international communication links could not be maintained. Ha!
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That's why you should invest in Dogecoin instead of Bitcoin.
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Imagine the disruption to the current economy if international communication links could not be maintained.
FTFY
drop some depth charges on them (Score:2)
Hello? (Score:1)
Russia have already been 'the enemy' within living memory. You're supposed to choose a new one to keep people guessing. Doh!
Warning came against a background of proposed cut (Score:2)
https://www.theguardian.com/wo... [theguardian.com]
Peach’s warning came against a background of proposed cutbacks to the UK’s armed forces, including a reduction in the number of marines from 7,000 to 6,000 and the scrapping of two amphibious landing ships as part of a Cabinet Office security review scheduled to be announced early next year.
So funny (Score:2)
You Millennials are so cute thinking you are the first to think of an idea and act on it.
pow (Score:1)
Old is New Again... (Score:1)
I hate to disappoint "The Hill" but this kind of thing was stock and trade for cold war era antics.
And the way the article was written; you would think it was edited by a 2nd grader that can't find the term DSRV anywhere or look up the evolution of deep diving vessels that manipulate things on the ocean floor.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep-submergence_rescue_vehicle
Gad, you can rent one for repairing underwater oil pipelines from offshore rigs.
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/5b/7c/15/5b7c158be3ce5919e5
The US has been doing the same for years (Score:1)
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Sure, you just need to Putin the right pluggin.
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