This month most
international suppliers of space satellite communications are blocking
Iran from receiving or sending material (especially TV) via satellite.
This is in compliance with more severe sanctions placed on Iran last
year. The satellite providers are being pressured to ignore this
shutdown because the sanctions do not cover media. But the satellite
provider lawyers advised a shutdown because the United States appears
ready to punish any firm that tries to keep transmissions going for Iran
on “media” grounds.
Iran protests this denial of service, which is ironic as for
years Iran has been actively trying to block satellite signals it does
not like. Iran is not alone in this. Communications satellites operating
in 36,000 kilometer high stationary (geosynchronous) orbits are
increasingly victims of jamming and other forms of interference. There
is a solution for military users, who can use existing anti-jamming
technologies like frequency hopping and DSSS (Direct Sequence Spread
Spectrum) on the sending and receiving end. But all users of civilian
satellites cannot be equipped with these anti-jamming devices. The
satellite operators can use this stuff for the control signals (going to
and coming from the satellite) and that is increasingly becoming
necessary. Another problem with this approach is that jamming protection
reduces the amount of data that can be sent, which is a serious, and
expensive, cost for commercial communications satellites.
Meanwhile, the jamming of civilian users grows, usually as
part of a state censorship program. For example, late last year Syria
and Iran were accused of jamming news service sent to Iran and Syria by
BBC, France 24, Deutsche Welle, and the Voice of America, via radio and
satellite. This jamming was apparently in retaliation for European
communications satellite operators refusing to continue carrying 19
Iranian TV and radio channels (as part of the growing embargo on Iran)
to audiences outside Iran. Syria and Iran denied they were jamming but
there is ample evidence that the jamming is coming from those two
countries. Over the last decade the U.S. has developed equipment and
techniques for locating the source of jamming with considerable accuracy
and that effort has most frequently caught Iran doing what it always
denies.
Then there are the increasing number of incidents of space
satellites being "hacked". It turned out that this was actually just an
increase in the number of satellites up there and the number of ground
stations broadcasting information up into the sky. Most of these "hacks"
are just satellite signals interfering with one another. Same with
cases where people believe their GPS or satellite communications signals
are being jammed. On further investigation the real reasons tend to be
less interesting and a lot more technical. All this usually has a large
element of human error mixed in. But the recent problems with satellite
reception problems in Iran and Syria appear to be jamming.
But all this accidental jamming only demonstrates how easy it
is to do it on purpose, and there have been several examples of that. In
response the U.S. Air Force, which has taken the lead in developing
electronic tools for attacking and defending satellite communications,
and the satellites themselves and has been training people to use these
techniques. This effort involves figuring out new, or improved, ways to
jam satellites. Then you keep that stuff secret, in case potential
enemies have not figured this out themselves. Next, you work on ways to
defeat the weapons developed. Most of this is playing around with the
signals themselves. You can un-jam a jamming signal with another signal.
However, a lot of trial and error is required and you want to get that
done way in advance of any actual war. When you do have to use this
stuff for real, you have to expect that the enemy may well have come up
with some angle you missed. Thus, there will be some rapid
improvisation, and you will have more time and resources for this if you
have worked out ahead of time the details of disasters you have already
anticipated. No one is releasing much information about this, for
obvious reasons. There won't be much discussion from any government,
unless there is a terrorist attack using these techniques. That's yet
another thing to worry about. There have already been such attacks in
China, by a banned religious group, and elsewhere. It can be done, it
just isn't easy and it's not getting easier.
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