FOX News/Warrior Maven: Air Force to launch new 'hardened' war satellite by 2022
GPS is a virtual backbone for military operations
What if Air Force fighters and bombers were successfully attacking an enemy with absolute precision and exact targeting data when all of a sudden their GPS signals disappeared or got hacked? What if that threw off the guided missiles and ground-coordinates being assembled on the ground by friendly Joint Tactical Air Controllers?
In a matter of minutes, attacks could be sent off-target, interrupted or simply made no longer accurate. Army-Air Force multi-domain collaboration might collapse. Even further, communications, digital moving maps showing navigational detail and intelligence data sharing could be disrupted or destroyed by the enemy.
The Global Positioning System is a virtual backbone for military operations that is considered essential to coordinated warfare operations. While there are many ongoing efforts to “harden” or better secure GPS, what if it were hacked? Just how hackable is it?
Well, the U.S. military wants to worry about this less by engineering a multiplicity of emerging technologies intended to preserve what’s called Positioning, Navigation and Timing (PNT) in a GPS-denied environment. This is now increasingly becoming possible, in part due to the Air Force’s emerging Navigational Technology Satellite-3 set to launch in 2022.
NTS-3 is an emerging, high-tech space communications system engineered to both provide secure alternatives to GPS and also better secure GPS itself, according to Air Force Research Laboratory developers.
Read more ....
WNU Editor: In a major war these are high priority targets. It makes sense to better "harden" them. The above video gives a brief description on why Navigational Technology Satellite-3 is important.
3 comments:
Let us hope the chinese haven't hacked this tech yet, a chinese immigrant hasn't been placed in a critical position at any company involved with this development, and the project doesn't have anything to do with Seattle.
No, an Indian immigrant has been involved in development and he discriminated against all Chinese and white applicants. He only hires other Indians programmers and engineers. So short answer is that the Chinese have not stolen the tech.
Not at AWRL. Highest security in the AF, used to be known as AFWL.
Post a Comment