Welcome
to Ukraine's Electronic War
Ukrainian troops are blind and deaf
on the battlefield. Kiev’s members of parliament suddenly discover their cell phones don’t
work. International observers watching
the war lose contact with their drones and can’t do their job.
Welcome to Ukraine’s electronic war.
Throughout the conflict, the
pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine have disrupted Kiev’s communications.
It’s a problem that Ukraine—lacking secure communications systems and jamming
equipment of its own—can’t counter.
And as with other forms of overt and
covert support provided to Ukraine’s separatists, all eyes are on Russia as the
source of the interference. The rebels’ equipment is just too fancy.
“Russian electronic
counter-measures, jamming, and cyber are all frequently deployed not only
tactically against Ukrainian units in the field, but against larger strategic
command and control systems right back to Kiev,” James Stavridis—NATO’s former
Supreme Allied Commander in Europe and current dean of the Fletcher School—told
War Is Boring in an email.
“Unquestionably these systems are
all being operated directly by highly trained Russian troops.”
Stavridis coauthored a recent report for the Brookings Institution urging
the U.S. to support Ukrainian forces with arms exports. He noted that the
sophistication of electronic warfare systems are an indicator that Russian
personnel—and not local separatists—are responsible for the jamming.
“The ‘insurgents’ lack the training,
education, equipment, and general wherewithal to operate such systems—they are
absolutely not ‘out of the box’ systems,” he wrote.
Russia is a pioneer of electronic
warfare. In 1905, a Russian naval commander jammed the communications of a nearby Japanese ship using his radio during the
Russo-Japanese war.
Moscow continues to lead the pack in
electronic warfare, and witnesses in Ukraine have long reported seeing its
jamming equipment in the country—everything from R-330Zh Zhitels to the new Tigr-M fitted with Leer-2 systems.
New York Times reporter C.J. Chivers snapped pictures of the vehicles during the invasion of
Crimea. Pro-Ukrainian activists uploaded a video in March 2014 showing troops
offloading both systems from a ferry across the Kerch Strait from Russia.
In November, the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe—an international conflict monitoring group—complained that
the GPS systems on their drones had been jammed while flying over rebel-held territory
in Mariupol.
In January, Ukrainian Facebook
users reported seeing a Krasukha-4 electronic warfare system among rebel
forces in Donetsk. The military grade jamming device can disrupt the
communications of drones and aircraft.
To understand why these systems are
so important, it’s helpful to understand how Ukraine and Russia fight. The two
countries share a common military heritage and it influences the way both fight
today.
“The U.S. and the West put primacy
on the infantry, and the Soviets put the emphasis on artillery,” explained
Charles Bartles—a Russia analyst at the Foreign Military Studies Office, part
of the Army’s Training and Doctrine Command’s Intelligence Staff.
“They still require tanks and
infantry to capture and hold ground, but the vast majority of damage is
doctrinally planned to be done by the artillery,” Bartles said.
Artillery units placed beyond the
line of sight of their targets are dependent on forward observers. Jamming
their communications interferes with observers’ ability to relay target
positions and adjust fire for greater accuracy.
Much of Ukraine’s armed forces and
volunteer units use simple, commercial communications equipment for
reconnaissance. That kind of equipment doesn’t stand a chance against the
separatists’ sophisticated jamming tech.
“It’s very difficult for Ukrainian
forces to operate on radios, telephones, and other non-secure means of
communications because their opponents haveexceptional jamming
capabilities,” Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, commander of
U.S. Army Forces in Europe, told reporters in January.
Ukraine had been home to companies
producing some electronic warfare equipment, including the Topaz company in
Donetsk. But reports from the city indicate that Russian aid convoys looted much of the machinery at the plant for transport back
to Russia.
Last summer, VK users said that
Russian-backed separatists stole a number of Topaz MANDAT-B1E jamming stations,
and backed up the claim with photographs of a convoy in Donetsk.
Stavridis argued that the United States should provide the Ukrainians
with electronic counter-measures, so they can disrupt separatists’ use of
Russian-provided UAVs, which have helped the rebels direct punishing
artillery fire.
But Ukraine is relatively calm at
the moment. Another ceasefire accord has calmed the fighting, and Obama
administration officials are reportedly on the fence about sending arms to Ukrainian forces. That’s despite
calls from Congress to arm Kiev’s troops.
Still, ceasefires in Ukraine are
fragile. If the peace doesn’t last, the airwaves over Ukraine will once again
be a battlefield.
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