by Oui
Sat Sep 30th, 2023 at 09:46:32 AM EST
While the ground war falters and mourning of mounting dead bodies emboldens anger for revenge ... in Washington DC and sunny California, in the land of opportunity. The military industrial and intelligence complex are making great strides in preserving United States National Security.
Crossing over into the Twilight Zone ..,
Israeli TV channel airs `Star Wars' spoof as Ukraine conflict footage | Arab News - 1 March 2022 |
In the clip, stormtroopers are seen surveying the crashed ship on a German autobahn while cars zoom past.
The original caption said: "Warning: Unsecured crash on the A3. Please turn right and do not overtake!"
Here is the original news footage (see time 0:08)
DOD Scouts Innovative Ideas From Industry, Allies, Partners
The Rapid Defense Experimentation Reserve, which was stood up last year, is a collaboration between the military services, combatant commands, industry and coalition partners with the aim of discovering new and innovative warfighting capabilities.
The idea behind this initiative is to get the best ideas, test prototypes in the laboratory and then in the field or even in contested environments, the undersecretary of defense for research and engineering said.
Heidi Shyu spoke on a panel yesterday at the Reagan National Defense Forum at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California.
The innovations that result don't need to be a 100% solution. They could be a 70 or 80% solution to solve a vexing warfighting problem, she said.
Small companies are and will be playing a critical role in this endeavor, she said. The Office of Strategic Capital will assist in funding companies developing technologies deemed critical to national security.
🔻🔻🔻
The field experiments
For the advancement of mankind as the planet burns ... booking flights to Mars?
Verkhovna Rada voted through a series of tax breaks for drone makers
🇺🇦Over the past few months, Ukraine has been talking up its ambitions to leverage its battlefield innovations to build a military-tech industry of its own.
Building a domestic industry would help protect the country from future Russian aggression. And Ukrainians have a better understanding of the dynamics of the battlefield than their international counterparts. "Technologies that cost a huge amount of money, made in [overseas] laboratories, are coming to the front line, and they're not working."
Full article @WiredUK Ukraine's Battlefield Data: Global companies are offering free products to get access to live combat data
A perpetuum mōbilis, a war that keeps giving.
Star tech enterprise: Emerging technologies in Russia's war on Ukraine | ECFR Europe |
Analysts have already dubbed it the first commercial space war, the first full-scale drone war, and the first AI war. Ukrainian civilians inform their armed forces of Russian advances by logging sightings of military vehicles in apps. Drones populate the skies 24 hours a day, streaming back images of troop movements and attacks. According to Fedorov, cloud services "basically helped Ukraine survive as a state."
This war is, of course, not all about "emerging or disruptive" new technologies - as NATO calls them: AI, apps, automated systems, and more. Some of Ukraine's most urgent demands have been for tanks, artillery munitions and fighter jets. Soviet-era air defences are playing crucial roles. "Dragon's teeth" anti-tank obstacles - something most Europeans associate with the second world war - are making a reappearance, protecting the rows of trenches that scar the front lines. But the way both sides have put emerging technology to use in this context is revealing.
The war in Ukraine employs, in one way or another, most of the technological advances the world has made over the last decades. If Europeans want to be serious about building up their defence capabilities, they need to pay close attention to and learn from Ukraine's and Russia's experiences so far.
Worthy sacrifice of Ukrainian lives for advance of NATO and emerging new disruptive technologies. The great laboratory of coming Space War ... the Ukraine is at the front and leading Europe. Greatness ... my goodness 😠
The field experiments
For the advancement of mankind as the planet burns ... booking flights to Mars?
Verkhovna Rada voted through a series of tax breaks for drone makers
🇺🇦Over the past few months, Ukraine has been talking up its ambitions to leverage its battlefield innovations to build a military-tech industry of its own.
Building a domestic industry would help protect the country from future Russian aggression. And Ukrainians have a better understanding of the dynamics of the battlefield than their international counterparts. "Technologies that cost a huge amount of money, made in [overseas] laboratories, are coming to the front line, and they're not working."
Full article @WiredUK Ukraine's Battlefield Data: Global companies are offering free products to get access to live combat data
A perpetuum mōbilis, a war that keeps giving.
Star tech enterprise: Emerging technologies in Russia's war on Ukraine | ECFR Europe |
Analysts have already dubbed it the first commercial space war, the first full-scale drone war, and the first AI war. Ukrainian civilians inform their armed forces of Russian advances by logging sightings of military vehicles in apps. Drones populate the skies 24 hours a day, streaming back images of troop movements and attacks. According to Fedorov, cloud services "basically helped Ukraine survive as a state."
This war is, of course, not all about "emerging or disruptive" new technologies - as NATO calls them: AI, apps, automated systems, and more. Some of Ukraine's most urgent demands have been for tanks, artillery munitions and fighter jets. Soviet-era air defences are playing crucial roles. "Dragon's teeth" anti-tank obstacles - something most Europeans associate with the second world war - are making a reappearance, protecting the rows of trenches that scar the front lines. But the way both sides have put emerging technology to use in this context is revealing.
The war in Ukraine employs, in one way or another, most of the technological advances the world has made over the last decades. If Europeans want to be serious about building up their defence capabilities, they need to pay close attention to and learn from Ukraine's and Russia's experiences so far.
Worthy sacrifice of Ukrainian lives for advance of NATO and emerging new disruptive technologies. The great laboratory of coming Space War ... the Ukraine is at the front and leading Europe. Greatness ... my goodness 😠
🔻🔻🔻
Ukraine War Advances EW Spoofing Avionics
Someone In the Middle East is Leading Aircraft Astray by Spoofing GPS Signals | Forbes |
Aircraft using Airway UMB688 in northern Iraq are experiencing complete navigation system failures due to hacking, according to a report.
OPSGROUP, a site used by airline, business and cargo pilots, is reporting that aircraft using Airway UMB688 in northern Iraq are experiencing complete navigation system failures because the hacker replaces the position data beamed by the GPS signals with false coordinates.
Flights Misled Over Position, Navigation Failure Follows | 26 Sept. 2023 |
In most reports received, the situation plays out the same. A spoofed GPS signal is directed at the aircraft, or at least, received by the aircraft. The GPS position shifts by 60nm. The onboard systems start to react. Some crews have been able to quickly disable GPS inputs, but for the majority, the spoofed signal quickly leads to a nav failure.
Worrying scenario
Of all locations that we fly through, the one place we don't want to have any navigation issues would be along UM688. This airway runs southbound through Iraq, above an active conflict zone, and extremely close to the border with Iran. Any indavertent straying into Iranian airspace without a flight plan risks action by the Iranian military.
FAA warning issued, further serious navigation failures reported
Since publishing Monday's risk warning on complex navigation failures following fake GPS signals, we have received further concerning reports from operators, mirroring the same events. The impact of the nav failures is becoming clearer, with one operator almost entering Iranian airspace without clearance, and another left requiring ATC vectors all the way to their destination in Doha.
[...]
On Wednesday evening, the FAA released a memo for aircraft operators titled "Iraq/Azerbaijan - GPS Jamming and Spoofing Poses Safety Risk".
Geopolitical background, analysis from experts
Earlier, Matthew Borie of Osprey Flight Solutions provided background context for our members: "Iran has recently deployed additional military forces to its northwest border with the Iraqi Kurdistan Region and Iraq has deployed security forces to this area as well as part of a border security pact reached between the two countries in March.
Both the Iran and Iraq have Electronic Warfare equipment capable of GPS jamming and spoofing and may have these deployed to the northern border area. The US military is present at several bases in northern Iraq (Erbil, Harir & Sulaymaniyah).
Turkey has military bases on its side of the Iraq border as well as inside Iraqi territory in several areas (Amadiya, Harkuk & Bashiqa). These deployments are enduring and not new - both the US and Turkey have electronic warfare (EW) equipment capable of GPS jamming and spoofing and they may have these deployed to Iraq.
An intelligence brief from Dyami Intelligence Services issued in response to Monday's reports, adds information about this new form of GPS spoofing affecting aircraft: "The surge in GPS jamming and spoofing incidents within the Iraqi FIR, along with their widespread occurrences, strongly indicates the involvement of an airborne platform (UAV). In the past, Iran has successfully intercepted a drone by GPS spoofing. Spoofing provides an attack vector that enables control over the target UAV (aircraft) without compromising the flight control software or the command-and-control radio link.