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Serious Anog Moh crying 1B1R Russian Chinese hacked US Navy causing collisions, KPKB!

AhLeePaPa

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2017/08/21/did_china_hack_the_seventh_fleet_112102.html



Did China Hack the Seventh Fleet?
By Omaid Faizyar
August 21, 2017

Today the USS McCain collided a merchant vessel, marking the 4th incident in the past year at the Navy. The timeline is as follows:

8/19/2016 — USS Louisiana

5/09/2017 — USS Lake Champlain

6/17/2017 — USS Fitzgerald

8/21/2017 — USS McCain

These ships share similarities, they are all based in Yokosuka Naval Base, and the USS McCain & USS Fitzgerald are both part of Destroyer Squadron 15 and the Seventh Fleet.

While accidents and mistakes do happen, the number of collisions in the past year is extremely rare, and it is now within the realm of possibility that these accidents were not accidents. Both China and Russia have tested their cyber-warfare capabilities at sea with success.

China Jamming US Forces' GPS
The Spratly Islands are of economic and strategic importance. All of the countries in the region - including China…rntfnd.org
RNTF

Ships fooled in GPS spoofing attack suggest Russian cyberweapon
Reports of satellite navigation problems in the Black Sea suggest that Russia may be testing a new system for spoofing…www.newscientist.com
plainpicture/Tilby Vattard

Is China testing their capabilities in case of an escalation on the Korean Peninsula? Was this a dry-run? Only time will tell, in the meantime we should pray for our missing sailors.
Omaid Faizyar
Medium member since May 2017

InfoSec & Devops & Bitcoin

This article appeared originally at Medium.
Related Topics: Cybersecurity, Cyberwarfare, Cyber, Hacking, GPS, U.S. Navy, USS John S. McCain (DDG 56), China




http://www.snopes.com/russia-hack-gps-uss-john-mccain/




Fact Check Military
Did Russia Hack the GPS System of the USS John McCain to Cause a Collision?
While it's true that Russia is developing the ability to hack GPS systems, experts doubt that GPS hacking caused the USS John McCain to crash.
Shutterstock
478
CLAIM

Russia used "GPS spoofing" to cause the USS John McCain to collide with a merchant vessel.
RATING
UNPROVEN
ORIGIN

On 21 August 2017, the guided-missile destroyer USS John S. McCain collided with a large merchant vessel near the heavily trafficked Strait of Malacca, leaving five U.S. sailors injured and ten missing. The incident was the fourth collision of a U.S. vessel in a year, with the most recent — that of the USS Fitzgerald — occurring just two months before, on 17 June. These recurring incidents have led some to speculate about a connection, as suggested in a 21 August piece on the military news web site RealClearDefense:

While accidents and mistakes do happen, the number of collisions in the past year is extremely rare, and it is now within the realm of possibility that these accidents were not accidents. Both China and Russia have tested their cyber-warfare capabilities at sea with success.

The fear, according to these arguments, is that a person or government has used a hacking technique known as “GPS spoofing” to encourage maritime collisions. Unlike GPS jamming, which merely blocks access to the satellites a receiver uses to locate itself, GPS spoofing can covertly alter a GPS receiver to report that it is somewhere other than its actual location.

University of Texas professor Todd Humphreys, an expert in GPS hacking, demonstrated this in 2013 when he successfully overtook a yacht in the Mediterranean by injecting its navigation systems with false GPS signals via an overhead drone:

By feeding counterfeit radio signals to the yacht, the UT team was able to drive the ship far off course, steer it left and right, potentially take it into treacherous waters, even put it on a collision course with another ship. All the time, the ship’s GPS system reported the vessel was calmly moving in a straight line, along its intended course. No alarms, no indication that anything was amiss.

The idea this technology would be used to disrupt maritime operations is not an absurd contention. In fact, there is sketchy evidence suggesting a GPS spoofing test in June 2017 in the Black Sea, which some have attributed to Russian interference. On 22 June, the United States Maritime Administration issued an unconfirmed warning that ships in the Black Sea off the coast of Russia were misreporting their GPS-derived locations:

A maritime incident has been reported in the Black Sea in the vicinity of position 44-15.7N, 037-32.9E on June 22, 2017 at 0710 GMT. This incident has not been confirmed. The nature of the incident is reported as GPS interference. Exercise caution when transiting this area. Further updates may follow. This alert will automatically expire on July 4, 2017.

Dana Goward, President of the Resilient Navigation and Timing Foundation, an NGO “that helps protect critical infrastructure by promoting resilient navigation and timing worldwide” wrote an editorial that detailed the backstory to this alert. First a ship reported to the Coast Guard that its GPS signal was intermittently not working or giving an inaccurate location. Later, the same ship told the Coast Guard:

I confirm all ships in the area (more than 20 ships) have the same problem. I personally contacted three of them via VHF, they confirmed the same. Sometimes, position is correct, sometimes is not.

That Russia, specifically, would be interested in testing such technology is, also not an unreasonable assertion. Russia has, at the very least, invested heavily in electronic warfare technology that “jams” GPS signals in such a way as to render them useless. A 2016 intelligence summary by the U.S. Army’s Foreign Military Studies Office noted that Russia had integrated a massive network of GPS jammers into their civilian cell phone network, which could be switched on to impede smart missiles or other threats that rely on GPS navigation.

A 2014 report by the same office said that Russian media has been trying — at the very least — to convince the world it is capable of disabling American maritime navigation systems. After a much publicized 2014 confrontation in the Black Sea between the US Navy destroyer the Donald Cook and a Russian SU-24 fighter plane that made a number of provocative and close approaches, Kremlin-backed media claimed that it had successfully achieved this goal (and terrified the Americans to boot):

In place of bombs or missiles, the SU-24s approaching Donald Cook carried a container with a Khibina radio-electronic warfare system. After approaching the ship, the Khibina systems turned off [the destroyer’s] smart radar, combat control links, and data transfer systems – in a word, the entire Aegis, like we turn off a television with the push of a button on a remote. Afterwards, the fighter-bombers conducted a simulated missile attack on the blind and deaf destroyer […]. Donald Cook never approached Russian waters again. Nor did NATO ships that relieved it in the Black Sea.

The United States military denies this account of the event, but does allow that Russia has been at the forefront of developing electronic warfare:

Russia does indeed possess a growing [electronic warfare] capability, and the political and military leadership understand the importance of technical advances in this type of warfare. Their growing ability to blind or disrupt digital communications might help level the playing field when fighting against a superior conventional foe, but to continue to publicize a story which is patently false illustrates an equally robust ability within the realm of information operations.

Outside of reports that the USS McCain’s steering system failed prior to the collision, however, there is no evidence that an external actor caused these recent Naval collisions through electronic manipulation of GPS systems. Academics and analysts familiar with GPS hacking techniques argue that electronic warfare is not the most likely explanation for their occurrence. Goward told us that “it’s a good question to ask” but that it would be much more challenging to do this kind of thing to a military vessel rather than a commercial or private one:

US adversaries have the ability to easily jam and spoof GPS. At a minimum this would cause some initial confusion on the bridge of a ship before the crew figured out what was going on. During that time they would be more vulnerable to collisions and other mishaps. At its worst, GPS spoofing can misdirect a vessel and cause it to sail into danger.

Spoofing a US Navy vessel should be quite difficult because of the expensive and sophisticated equipment they carry, and the large number of people on watch at all times. Commercial vessels often have fairly unsophisticated electronics and only one person on watch. It would be much easier to spoof a commercial vessel and direct it into a Navy ship.

Humphreys echoed this point, telling us via email that while hacking military navigation systems is possible, it is much more challenging because they use an encrypted radio frequency for their geolocation, which is separate from the civilian system:

It’s possible that spoofing was involved in the USS McCain collision. But I still think that crew negligence is the most likely explanation. Military vessels use the encrypted GPS signals, which are harder to spoof (though not impossible).

Humphreys suggested that, rather than hacking, the collision might be attributable to the US Navy’s policy to operate in the South China Sea without an automatic identification system (AIS) beacon, which automatically transmits information between ships and to other monitoring organizations. The Navy doesn’t use such a system in the South China sea for security reasons, Humphreys told us. “They train as they fight, and broadcasting one’s position during wartime is unwise,” he said.

Unfortunately, almost any conclusion drawn at this point about the cause of the USS McCain incident or any of the other recent Naval accidents is speculative. The Daily Beast reported on concerns from military experts that these accidents were evidence that the Navy was overstretched:

The accidents are symptoms of an overworked fleet with tired and under-trained sailors and poorly maintained equipment, experts said.

Automatic “sequestration” budget cuts have sliced billions of dollars from Navy accounts in recent years, while at the same time the fleet has gotten busier bombing Islamic State and the Taliban and deterring North Korea and China.

“The force is fraying,” Bryan McGrath, a naval consultant with the Maryland-based Ferry Bridge Group, told The Daily Beast.

In the wake of the USS McCain collision, the chief of Naval Operations “ordered a worldwide operational pause as fleet commanders assess practices.”

Got a tip or a rumor? Contact us here.
 

AhLeePaPa

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech...hackers-behind-u-s-navy-collisions/594107001/


Could hackers be behind the U.S. Navy collisions?
Elizabeth Weise, USATODAY Published 5:50 p.m. ET Aug. 23, 2017 | Updated 12:27 a.m. ET Aug. 24, 2017

The Navy said it had lost confidence in Vice Adm. Joseph Aucoin's "ability to command" the U.S. 7th Fleet. Video provided by Newsy Newslook
AP SINGAPORE US NAVY SHIP COLLISION I SGP

(Photo: Wong Maye-E, AP)
317 CONNECTTWEET 39 LINKEDIN 60 COMMENTEMAILMORE

SAN FRANCISCO — Was a hack attack behind two separate instances of Navy ships colliding with commercial vessels in the past two months? Experts say it’s highly unlikely, but not impossible — and the Navy is investigating.

Rumors on Twitter and in computer security circles have been swirling about the possibility that cyber attacks or jamming were involved in the collisions. Speculation has been fueled by four accidents involving a U.S. warship this year, two of which were fatal, the highly-computerized nature of modern maritime navigation, and heightened concern over global cyberattacks — especially attacks against U.S. government entities.

Chief of naval operations Admiral John Richardson said in a tweet on Monday there was no indication of the possibility of cyber intrusion or sabotage but the "review will consider all possibilities." It had been retweeted over 830 times by Wednesday.

2 clarify Re: possibility of cyber intrusion or sabotage, no indications right now...but review will consider all possibilities
— Adm. John Richardson (@CNORichardson) August 21, 2017

Experts in the technology say there are certainly scenarios they can imagine in which GPS hacks could have been used to foil ships' navigations systems, but emphasize there's no evidence such attacks took place in the case of the Navy collisions.

"The balance of the evidence still leads me to believe that it was crew negligence as the most likely explanation — and I hate to say that because I hate to think that the Navy fleet was negligent,” said University of Texas at Austin aerospace professor Todd Humphreys, who studies GPS security issues.
Navy investigates

On Monday, the USS John S. McCain collided with an oil tanker off Malaysia, which left ten sailors missing and five injured. On June 17 seven sailors died when the USS Fitzgerald was hit by a cargo ship 60 miles off the coast of Japan.

The incidents have clearly rattled the Navy. On Wednesday Vice Adm. Joseph Aucoin was dismissed as commander of the 7th Fleet. And on Monday the Navy ordered a global pause in operations to allow commanders to take immediate action to keep sailors and ships safe as well as a Navy-wide review to get at the root causes of the problems.

The technology to jam or misdirect navigational software is readily available, though the Navy uses a much more robust encrypted version of GPS that would be very difficult to disrupt, said Humphreys.
The damaged USS Fitzgerald is pictured off Shimoda,

The damaged USS Fitzgerald is pictured off Shimoda, Shizuoka prefecture, Japan, after the Navy destroyer collided with a merchant ship. (Photo: Iori Sagisawa, AP Images)

The only way to spoof such a system would be to use what’s known as a “record and replay attack,” he said. That's where a recording is made of the encrypted location data being sent down from satellites to the Naval ship and then replaying the recording at a slightly later time and directing it towards the ship.

“That way you could fool a ship into thinking it is someplace it’s not,” Humphries said.

That would be a very sophisticated and difficult hack, requiring recording the navigation data stream from multiple angles to mimic the multiple antennas on the Navy ship, and then sending the recorded signal from two or more locations. To ensure that nearby ships didn’t also get the false data, it would have to be transmitted from close to the Navy ship being targeted, perhaps using multiple drones.
Yacht GPS hacked

None of this seems likely, but it's not impossible, said Humphreys. In 2013 he and a group of graduate students were able to successfully spoof an $80 million yacht’s GPS system, sending it hundreds of yards off course without the ship's navigation system showing the change to the crew.

The Navy's Richardson said the second "extremely serious incident" in little more than two months "gives great cause for concern that there is something out there that we're not getting at." The Navy has blamed the Fitzgerald collision on a loss of situation awareness by sailors on the bridge.

Dana Goward, former head the Marine Transportation Systems for the U.S. Coast Guard, the navigation authority for all U.S. waters and vessels, also doesn’t believe hacking was involved in the Navy collisions.

As a former Coast Guard captain, he said that years of navigating at sea tell him that especially in high-traffic areas where the collisions occurred, it’s easy for mistakes to happen. “It’s a difficult environment to be in and human error is always present,” he said.
Russian hacks

The notion of a cyber attack causing the collision has gained currency in part because it's possible — and other military powers are known to have tried it.

For instance, said Goward, a malicious party could focus on the unencrypted navigation feed of the commercial vessel while at the same time mounting a jamming effort against the Navy ship for a brief period of time. Or, hackers could just try commandeering the GPS of the cargo ship to get it to veer slightly off course.

“It takes two to tango,” said Professor David Last, former president of the Royal Institute for Navigation in the United Kingdom. “I think you just have to attack the weaker of the pair, which is the commercial vessel. I’m not saying it happened, I’m just saying that’s what I would do if I were trying to be a troublemaker in that way.”

More: U.S. Navy dismisses 7th Fleet commander after deadly USS John S. McCain crash

More: Navy: 10 sailors missing after destroyer USS John S. McCain collides with tanker

More: Navy finds bodies of some missing sailors on ship; flooding on USS Fitzgerald stabilized

GPS jamming and spoofing isn’t new and it's known to be happening now. North Korea, Chinese and Russian military have all been known to jam GPS, according to Goward.

In June, at least 20 vessels that were on the water in the Black Sea reported that their GPS systems told them they were all actually 19 miles inland, at Gelendzhik airport in Russia.

It was as if "they were all parked at their airport," said Last.

Humphries said the bizarre event was as close to a fully verified GPS attack as he knows of, and according to some of his sources "it's still going on."


317 CONNECTTWEET 39 LINKEDIN 60 COMMENTEMAIL




https://thenextweb.com/insider/2017...sibility-of-cyber-attack-in-latest-collision/



Fourth US Navy collision this year raises suspicion of cyber-attacks

by Tristan Greene — in Insider
Fourth US Navy collision this year raises suspicion of cyber-attacks
Credit: US Navy

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Early Monday morning a US Navy Destroyer collided with a merchant vessel off the coast of Singapore. The US Navy initially reported that 10 sailors were missing, and today found “some of the remains” in flooded compartments. While Americans mourn the loss of our brave warriors, top brass is looking for answers.

Monday’s crash involving the USS John McCain is the fourth in the area, and possibly the most difficult to understand. So far this year 17 US sailors have died in the Pacific southeast due to seemingly accidental collisions with civilian vessels.

There are only a few reasonable explanations for the increase in US Navy-involved collisions that appear to be isolated to this one particular region of the map. The crashes could be due to a lack of proper training, an act of war, terrorism, or coincidence.

The first US Navy collision this year occurred in January, when the USS Antietam ran aground near Yosuka, Japan.

The USS Champlain was the next ship to crash, colliding with a South Korean fishing vessel in May. According to reports Navy personnel spotted the fishing craft and tried to contact it, but it lacked a radio and GPS. It’s pretty strange to think that a South Korean fishing boat wouldn’t have GPS — almost beyond belief.

When the USS Fitzgerald — operating near Yokuska — collided with a container ship from Philippines on June 17th seven US sailors died. They weren’t found until the following day when damage control personnel gained access to flooded compartments. The commanding officer, executive officer, and command masterchief were relieved of command on August 17th, after 7th Fleet Admiral Joseph P. Aucoin determined that “the bridge team lost situational awareness.”

Navy leadership has issued new training directives in response to the crashes, but that’s standard procedure for any military event. The US Navy works on a “lessons learned” methodology; leadership treats every failure as a teaching tool and immediately implements new training procedures.

It’s still possible that the 7th Fleet dropped the ball and consistently placed untrained sailors in positions and situations that were bound to result in an eventual loss of life. We may also consider no matter how well-trained a person is, sometimes mistakes are made — we’re only human.

Should four collisions in the same geographical area be chalked up to coincidence?

Let’s also consider that the current generation of sailors have been at war for their entire careers. The longest war in US history may be affecting the entire fleet’s readiness.

But if we don’t believe that the fault lies with the sailors who were standing the watch during each collision, we’re left with the suspicion of some form of attack. TNW recently reported on the ease with which hackers were able to breach civilian ships.

Could a military vessel be hacked? In essence, what if GPS spoofing or administrative lockout caused personnel to be unaware of any imminent danger or unable to respond?

The Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) says there’s no reason to think it was a cyber-attack, but they’re looking into it:

2 clarify Re: possibility of cyber intrusion or sabotage, no indications right now…but review will consider all possibilities

— Adm. John Richardson (@CNORichardson) August 21, 2017

The obvious suspects — if a sovereign nation is behind any alleged attacks — would be Russia, China, and North Korea, all of whom have reasonable access to the location of all four incidents. It may be chilling to imagine such a bold risk, but it’s not outlandish to think a government might be testing cyber-attack capabilities in the field.

If that isn’t bothersome enough there’s a third hypothesis. This may very well be the next wave of terrorist attacks against US military personnel. Terrorists have attacked US Naval vessels and killed sailors before. In 2000 the USS Cole was attacked by terrorists who drove a small boat loaded with explosives into its hull while the ship was docking. That attack left 17 sailors dead and nearly 40 injured.

Terrorists typically take responsibility for attacks though, and we weren’t able to find any reports of this being the case in 2017. Al Qaeda claimed the attack on the USS Cole and investigations were able to confirm that to be the case — this preceded the 9/11 attacks.

While it remains within the realm of possibility that these are isolated incidents that have no connection, the frequency with which the collisions are occurring might suggest something other than human error at fault.
 

yellowarse

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
US Navy can not swim blamed swimming trunk for being to large?

A bad workman blames his tools.

The US Navy destroyers aren't even equipped with AIS – de rigueur in today's crowded sea lanes – for crying out loud. In Singapore, even small powered pleasure craft are required to be equipped with AIS if navigating within port limits. The International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea may not include military vessels, but common sense tells you if you're going to ensure freedom of navigation in the world's most busy waters, you'd better not just rely on radar alone.

Idiots. If this doesn't signal the decline of a superpower, I don't know what does.
 

cunt_opener

Alfrescian
Loyal
American citizens have no more confidence nor courage for self-existence, everything in their eyes were ghosts and everything in their minds also became devils.

Their ships crashed they said Russian / Chinese. They even said that their own president was rigged into power by Russia. This is easy to understand knowing that they are very near doomed.


红毛鬼一直疑神疑鬼无端端说自己看到鬼,杯弓蛇影,草木皆兵,四面楚歌,当然是自己快要进入鬼门关了,时辰快要到了!终日惶恐不安!☠☠⚰⚰⚰
 
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3_M

Alfrescian
Loyal
More likely a case of usn not practising the basic navigational and safety rules. They thought they got the right of the way regardless the circumstances simply because the world's oceans belong to them.
 
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