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NOW SHOWING ON SATELLITE TV: SECRET AMERICAN SPY PHOTOS
The Guardian ^ | June 12, 2002 | Matt Drudge

Posted on 06/12/2002 7:30:38 PM PDT by jern

European satellite TV viewers can watch live broadcasts of anti-terrorist operations being conducted by US spy planes over the Balkans...


TOPICS: Breaking News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: antiterrorist; communications; mattdrudge; operations; satellite
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1 posted on 06/12/2002 7:30:38 PM PDT by jern
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To: jern
I hope my cable system adds that channel!
2 posted on 06/12/2002 7:33:40 PM PDT by StriperSniper
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To: StriperSniper
No doubt.
3 posted on 06/12/2002 7:34:24 PM PDT by callisto
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To: callisto
Is this a violation of the DMCA?
4 posted on 06/12/2002 7:36:48 PM PDT by eno_
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5 posted on 06/12/2002 7:37:27 PM PDT by Mo1
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To: StriperSniper
What's the frequency Dan.
6 posted on 06/12/2002 7:37:56 PM PDT by cajunman
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To: jern
Hacker watches Nato spy pictures...BBC/Newsnight...

Nato pledges to tighten up satellite security.../ananova...

7 posted on 06/12/2002 7:39:25 PM PDT by Geronimo
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To: jern
Now showing on satellite TV: secret American spy photos

Security lapse allows viewers to see sensitive operations

Duncan Campbell
Thursday June 13, 2002
The Guardian


European satellite TV viewers can watch live broadcasts of peacekeeping and anti-terrorist operations being conducted by US spyplanes over the Balkans.

Normally secret video links from the American spies-in-the-sky have a serious security problem - a problem that make it easier for terrorists to tune in to live video of US intelligence activity than to get Disney cartoons or new-release movies.

For more than six months live pictures from manned spy aircraft and drones have been broadcast through a satellite over Brazil. The satellite, Telstar 11, is a commercial TV relay. The US spyplane broadcasts are not encrypted, meaning that anyone in the region with a normal satellite TV receiver can watch surveillance operations as they happen.

The satellite feeds have also been connected to the internet, potentially allowing the missions to be watched from around the globe.

Viewers who tuned in to the unintended attraction on Tuesday could watch a sudden security alert around the US army's Kosovan headquarters, Camp Bondsteel in Urosevac. The camp was visited last summer by President Bush and his defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld.

A week earlier the spyplane had provided airborne cover for a heavily protected patrol of the Macedonian-Kosovan border, near Skopje. A group of apparently high-ranking visitors were accompanied by six armoured personnel carriers and a helicopter gunship.

Nato officials, whose forces in former Yugoslavia depend on the US missions for intelligence, at first expressed disbelief at the reports. After inquiring, a Nato spokesman confirmed: "We're aware that this imagery is put on a communications satellite. The distribution of this material is handled by the United States and we're content that they're following appropriate levels of security."

This lapse in US security was discovered last year by a British engineer and satellite enthusiast, John Locker, who specialises in tracking commercial satellite services. Early in November 2001 he routinely logged the new channels.

"I thought that the US had made a deadly error," he said. "My first thought was that they were sending their spyplane pictures through the wrong satellite by mistake, and broadcasting secret information across Europe."

He tried repeatedly to warn British, Nato and US officials about the leak. But his warnings were set aside. One officer wrote back to tell him that the problem was a "known hardware limitation".

The flights, conducted by US army and navy units and AirScan Inc, a Florida-based private military company, are used to monitor terrorists and smugglers trying to cross borders, to track down arms caches, and to keep watch on suspect premises. The aircraft are equipped to watch at night, using infrared.

"We seem to be transmitting this information potentially straight to our enemies," said one US military intelligence official who was alerted to the leak, adding: "I would be worried that using this information, the people we are tracking will see what we are looking at and, much more worryingly, what we are not looking at.

"This could let people see where our forces are and what they're doing. That's putting our boys at risk."

Former SAS officer Adrian Weale, who served in Northern Ireland, told BBC Newsnight last night: "I think I'd be extremely irritated to find that the planning and hard work that had gone into mounting an operation against, for instance, a war crime suspect or gun runner was being compromised by the release of this information in the form that it's going out in."

· Duncan Campbell is a freelance investigative journalist and a member of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, and not the Guardian correspondent of the same name

8 posted on 06/12/2002 7:40:13 PM PDT by RCW2001
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To: RCW2001;All
The US spyplane broadcasts are not encrypted, meaning that anyone in the region with a normal satellite TV receiver can watch surveillance operations as they happen.

Therein lies the problem.

The satellite feeds have also been connected to the internet, potentially allowing the missions to be watched from around the globe.

Anyone got a link? (chuckle)

9 posted on 06/12/2002 7:44:11 PM PDT by callisto
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To: RCW2001
"We seem to be transmitting this information potentially straight to our enemies," said one US military intelligence official who was alerted to the leak.."

"Can you pretty please tie my shoes?" He added.

10 posted on 06/12/2002 7:44:35 PM PDT by Jhoffa_
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To: RCW2001
"The US spyplane broadcasts are not encrypted..."

Why not???

One officer wrote back to tell him that the problem was a "known hardware limitation".

whatever.

11 posted on 06/12/2002 7:49:27 PM PDT by grimalkin
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To: callisto
"Anyone got a link?"

Try ClintonDNCCHINA.com

12 posted on 06/12/2002 7:52:14 PM PDT by F16Fighter
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To: jern
Dumb, dumb, dumb. Encryption is really not that difficult. But at least it's Kosovo and not Afghanistan. If it helps a few Serbs dodge being abducted to the International Court at the Hague, no great harm has been done.
13 posted on 06/12/2002 8:00:49 PM PDT by Cicero
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To: grimalkin
You get better tech support from Two Guys in Taiwan That Make Routers: "Igonrant round eyes! You prugga network here, not there! You no get crypto!"
14 posted on 06/12/2002 8:27:13 PM PDT by eno_
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To: Cicero
The story I hear is that all the encrypted bandwidth is being sopped up by Afghani operations... simply no room left on the secure links for this data.
15 posted on 06/12/2002 9:20:43 PM PDT by posterkid
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To: posterkid
Telstar 11 is a dual C/Ku band satellite. What particular band is being used I couldn't say (I've been out of the sat biz for a couple years.), it will have 24 transponders (channels) on the C band side and 32+ on the Ku band side. Ku, having a higher bandwidth, is where digitally compressed signals are transmitted. Given that the capability of attaining dozens of channels with compression on a single transponder, I find it unlikely that it's a Ku feed. C band is a low-bandwidth, analog transmission, very likely to be unencrypted (especially if it's a Brazilian feed). Anyone with a old 7' dish can pick up those feeds. What I don't understand, is why they can't encrypt these signals. Hardware limitations my a$$.
16 posted on 06/12/2002 9:45:27 PM PDT by thescourged1
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To: RCW2001
"I would be worried that using this information, the people we are tracking will see what we are looking at and, much more worryingly, what we are not looking at."

Uhhhh.... the real life analogy to the military doing such a thing would be, say..... a guy putting naked pictures of his wife or his tax returns out to the world over an unencrypted website. The reasonable asumption would be that he wanted the world to see his beautiful wife and his exorbitant income. The alternative explanations would be it's not really his wife and/or they're not really his tax returns. Can anyone spell D-I-S-I-N-F-O-R-M-A-T-I-O-N?

17 posted on 06/12/2002 9:48:46 PM PDT by Harrison Bergeron
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To: RCW2001
I knew that you could.
18 posted on 06/12/2002 9:50:15 PM PDT by Harrison Bergeron
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To: Harrison Bergeron
A very real possibility, but a bit extravagant isn't it?
19 posted on 06/12/2002 10:12:52 PM PDT by thescourged1
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To: thescourged1
"A very real possibility, but a bit extravagant isn't it?"

Not at all. The transponder time may have already belonged to the Army, and the information cannot, I repeat not be classified if it is moving through an open channel. This is either disinformation or a feed of clips for the daily Pentagon news briefings. Given the nature of the medium, I suspect the latter.

20 posted on 06/12/2002 10:19:36 PM PDT by Harrison Bergeron
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