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IRAN AND
CUBA ZAP U.S. SATELLITES
By J. Michael
Waller
Insight Magazine
Washington
USA
La Nueva Cuba
Agosto 20, 2003
State sponsors
of terrorism not only threaten U.S. interests on land, at sea and
in the air, but now they have teamed up to attack U.S. assets in
space. By successfully jamming a U.S. communications satellite over
the Atlantic Ocean, the regimes of Cuba and Iran challenged U.S.
dominance of space and the assumptions of free access to satellite
communication that makes undisputed U.S. military power possible.
The Bush administration,
meanwhile, appears paralyzed about how to cope with this latest
threat, which one U.S. official likens to an "act of war."
The target of these terrorist states: Telestar-12, a commercial
communications satellite orbiting at 15 degrees west, 22,000 miles
above the Atlantic.
At press time,
nearly a month has passed since the Cuban government began jamming
U.S. government and private Persian-language TV and radio broadcasts
into Iran. At a time when international political change and military
action can be decided within a matter of days, the U.S. government
assumes unfettered access to communications satellites to be a crucial
tool of statecraft. Americans use satellites to broadcast and relay
radio and TV programming into denied areas such as North Korea,
Cuba, Iran, the People's Republic of China and even friendly countries.
A hostile attack
on a U.S. communications satellite, even if that attack only jams
a signal for a few days or weeks, could be decisive in the current
environment of geopolitical instability. The Pentagon sees communications
satellites as vital tools to promote "regime change" where
hostile or terrorist-sponsoring governments can be undermined from
within simply by broadcasting honest and accurate news and information
to truth-starved populations. The Bush administration belatedly
has recognized the power of news in places such as Iran, where popular
demonstrations against the theocracy of mullahs have been building
for several years.
The jamming
of Telestar-12 began on July 6, coinciding with the startup of a
new Persian-language TV news broadcast to Iran sponsored by the
Voice of America (VOA). The VOA started the half-hour evening program,
News and Views, just as a new wave of pro-democracy protests was
about to challenge a regime the White House considered part of the
"Axis of Evil" along with North Korea and the regime of
Saddam Hussein in Iraq. Iranian television is censored to redact
news about the increasing unrest against the government.
"The program
had been designed to give Iranian audiences more truthful, objective
news than is available through state-controlled media," says
Steven Johnson, a former State Department official and public-diplomacy
expert now at the Heritage Foundation. Iranian journalists working
inside their country provide the VOA with news stories and video
footage. The program augments impressive 24-hour TV-broadcasting
efforts by Iranian expatriates in California and praised by President
George W. Bush in a July 29 press conference [see "Expatriate
Television Excites Iran"].
Satellite television
has grown in popularity in Iran as a way of receiving quality entertainment
and news - a far cry from the rerun fare and regime propaganda broadcast
on Iran's six major channels. Though the regime banned satellite
dishes in 1995, Iranians now own more than 1 million of them, many
of which are small and easily concealed. About six Persian-language
TV channels, run by Iranian expatriates, also are beamed into Iran.
Those broadcasts are uplinked to the Telestar-5 satellite orbiting
above the territorial United States, downlinked to the Washington
International Teleport in Northern Virginia and then uplinked again
to Telestar-12 above the Atlantic, where they are beamed down to
Iran. Satellite-broadcasting experts say that Tehran is not able
to jam Telestar-12 directly because its stationary orbit is out
of the range of that country's antenna-based jammers. But, while
the mullahs can't touch Telestar-12, their ally in Havana can and
does.
When Telestar-12's
owner, Loral Skynet, learned of the jamming it hired Chantilly,
Va.-based Transmitter Location Systems LLC (TLS) to use its orbiting
geolocation system to vector in on the source of the interference
with the satellite's transponders. Within three days, TLS had the
location: 22 degrees, 55 minutes, 43 seconds north by 82 degrees,
23 minutes, 19 seconds east - Bejucal, a Russian-built electronic-intelligence
facility about 20 miles southwest of Havana.
A June 2001
study examined the Bejucal base's offensive capabilities apart from
espionage. Authored by Manuel Cereijo, a professor of electrical
and computer engineering at Florida International University, the
study found that Bejucal, with 10 antenna arrays, was equipped to
launch electronic attacks on U.S. computer systems. Specifically,
it warned that Cuba could wage denial-of-service attacks that "prevent
or inhibit the normal use or management of communications facilities."
In a follow-on
study released last February, Cereijo wrote, "Bejucal is an
electronic-espionage base used by the Cuban military intelligence
to intercept and process international communications passing via
communications satellites." Desmond Ball, a professor with
the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at Australia National University,
says that the People's Republic of China has operated from Bejucal
since early 1999, following a February 1998 cooperation agreement.
Ball says that Bejucal's main functions are interception of telephone
communications and conducting "cyberwarfare."
If the Bush
administration already had been floundering at political action
and political warfare against enemies abroad, it was caught with
its pants down by the time VOA started its low-budget news show
for Iran. Intelligence analysts are not sure about the extent of
Chinese technical involvement, but the Cubans were able to stop
a new U.S. hearts-and-minds campaign with the flip of a switch.
As soon as the
jamming was identified and related facts were in, Kenneth Y. Tomlinson,
chairman of the independent Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG)
that oversees VOA, went on the attack, saying the jamming was "illegal
and interferes with the free and open flow of international transmissions."
But the rest of the Bush administration went into default mode,
filing diplomatic protests and trying to persuade international
satellite-service providers to deny service to Cuba. "We raised
the jamming with the government of Cuba. The interference with Loral
Skynet commercial satellite transmissions appears to emanate from
the vicinity of Cuba and does appear to be intentional," State
Department spokesman Richard Boucher told reporters on July 18.
Nearly a month later, the transmissions to Telestar-12 still were
being jammed, according to Zia Atabay, president of National Iranian
Television (NITV), a private and independent channel that broadcasts
from its studios in Woodland Hills, Calif.
At least NITV's
24/7 broadcasting still was under constant jamming attack. Interviews
with several U.S. officials produce conflicting information about
what happened with the VOA transmissions to Iran. Some flatly say
that the jamming continues. Others claim the jamming has stopped.
One published account states that the jamming ended on July 14,
while another says that VOA rerouted its Persian-language programs
through other satellites. Still other officials say they aren't
sure.
Atabay thinks
the State Department cut a deal with Cuba or Iran, persuading the
jammers to let VOA's half-hour of news get through to Iran but leaving
the full-time private broadcasters to fend for themselves. "These
days I'm going nuts because I can't believe that our government
doesn't take it seriously," says Atabay. "They are still
jamming our signal. NITV is on the same satellite, Telestar-12,
as VOA, on different platforms, but both are jammed. Last month,
[Secretary of State Colin] Powell was talking softly about Iran,
but Iranians are upset because they think there's a deal to [cut
us off]. This is a violation of international law. If they [the
Iranian and Cuban governments] can block my broadcasts and bankrupt
me, tomorrow they will go after another one. Tomorrow they can go
after CNN or CBS." Fox News has covered the fate of NITV, Atabay
reports, but "CNN didn't say a word."
The Cuban government,
through its daily Communist Party broadsheet, denies all allegations.
It accused BBG Chairman Tomlinson of making a "string of anti-Cuba
lies" by calling the jamming "a serious threat to satellite
communications." The Cuban foreign ministry assailed the United
States for what it called "radio-electronic aggression against
Cuba" in the form of Washington's broadcasts to the island.
But the Castro regime praised the U.S. State Department: "Instead
of publicly lying as Mr. Tomlinson did, [U.S. authorities] handed
over two diplomatic notes asking for the cooperation of the Cuban
government and presenting technical information on supposed Cuban
interference with U.S. communications."
Broadcasting
is a major instrument of warfare on both sides of the war on terror,
just as it was during the Cold War, when decades of balanced truth-telling
by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) helped to roll back
the thick fog of communist censorship and hastening the collapse
of the Soviet empire.
Havana openly
acknowledges jamming U.S. TV and radio broadcasts into Cuba, including
TV Marti. "With every right, Cuba has interfered, is interfering
and will continue to interfere solely with the illegal radio and
television transmissions that the U.S. government is sending to
our country," the Cuban foreign ministry said in a July 18
communiqué. "In that we are aided by the sovereign right
to defend our radio-electronic space from the subversive radio and
television aggression directed at our country since the early years
of the revolution." Havana is working in the United Nations
to codify into international law the legality of state ownership
of the news media and jamming of unauthorized broadcasts.
U.S. broadcasting
into Cuba via Radio Marti and TV Marti has been met with a wall
of jamming from Havana for two generations. "For nearly four
decades Cuba has maintained sophisticated, electronic intelligence-gathering
and offensive capabilities, which range from tapping U.S. phone
conversations to jamming radio-communications signals and launching
computer viruses. To date, U.S. decisionmakers have done little
more than work around them, since they were never considered serious
threats," says the Heritage Foundation's Johnson. Jamming Telestar-12
for Iran, he asserts, should prompt U.S. officials to take Cuba's
information-warfare capabilities seriously. And it should be met
with a tough response, administration supporters say. "Interfering
with outside transmissions intended for a third country borders
on hostile action," says Johnson. "A weak response may
invite further mischief." But a "ham-handed" response,
Johnson adds, might give Cuban dictator Fidel Castro a martyr image
he craves.
The Center for
Security Policy sees the issue differently. "Bejucal is now
a terrorist asset," it says in a statement. "It gives
Castro enormous abilities to conduct information warfare against
U.S. assets in space and presents a major threat to U.S. space dominance.
It is difficult to overstate the gravity of this development. President
Bush should order the destruction of the Bejucal facility - now
- before the threat worsens." Yet the Bush administration acts
as though it's helpless, according to NITV's Atabay: "I don't
believe it can happen, that America cannot deal with a terrorist
government."
Iran is playing
tough not only at home but against U.S. forces in Afghanistan and
Iraq, mainly using political warfare. "The Iranians are interfering
through the Ministry of Intelligence and the IRGC [Iranian Revolutionary
Guard Corps]," a top U.S. official tells Insight. "They
are quite active along the border and particularly in the south."
From the Persian
Gulf emirate of Qatar in the south, the state of Qatar and members
of Qatar's ruling Wahhabi family play both sides of the terrorism
war. While hosting the theater headquarters of the U.S. Central
Command, the Qatari regime and members of the ruling family co-own
the pan-Arab satellite channel Al-Jazeera, filling Arab TV viewers
with anti-American invective [see "Live From Qatar: It's Jihad
Television," March 4, 2002]. "Al-Jazeera's role is extremely
unhelpful" to U.S. antiterrorism efforts and to pacification
of Iraq, a senior U.S. official tells Insight. The State Department,
he says, already has issued démarches to the government of
Qatar, without meaningful results.
Meanwhile, Iranian
broadcasts into Iraq are intended to incite, organize and reinforce
opposition among Iraqi Shiites to the United States and its allied
occupation coalition, according to a Pentagon analyst. The United
States is acting equally helpless in Iraq, according to a senior
administration official. Commenting on foreign hostile TV broadcasting
of anti-American messages into Iraq, the official says, "I
can't stop Iranian TV. I wish I could. I can't stop Al-Jazeera.
I wish I could."
With that defeatist
approach, the United States risks losing the peace in Iraq and handing
the country over to the Iranian mullahs and the Wahhabis, critics
say. BBG Chairman Tomlinson sees an even larger dimension: a threat
to U.S. space dominance. The Telestar-12 incident, he says, "has
ominous implications for the future of international satellite broadcasting."
J. Michael Waller
is senior writer for Insight.
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