Secret app alerts civilians to airstrikes in Syria
Warning system provides crucial minutes needed to seek out shelter
BEIRUT— When a Syrian warplane gathers speed along the runway, seconds from takeoff and minutes from action, a covert race to save civilian life begins.
It starts in nearby Syrian hills with a single flight spotter and his cellphone. Moments later, details of the flight are beamed to a server abroad, analyzed to identify targets and then converted into warnings that are blasted back into the country via social media. Across rebel strongholds, rescue workers pull on their boots as surrounding hospitals brace for casualties.
As rebels battling Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad’s government have fought on the ground, Syrian and Russian jets have pounded opposition territory from above, shattering neighbourhoods and killing or maiming many of the hundreds of thousands of people who live there.
That carnage has forced innovation. Civilians, at first, used walkie-talkies to warn of warplanes. Fledgling rescue teams developed ever more sophisticated ways to liberate families from the rubble. In hospitals, doctors developed workarounds for when lights go out and drugs run dry.
And then in 2016, a team of computer developers found a way to link all those efforts. The result is Hala Systems — known to many Syrians as the Sentry system — an organization that can win crucial minutes for residents to find safety when warplanes are thundering toward them.
“We set out to disrupt the nature of warfare, even in a very small way,” said American entrepreneur Dave Levin. “It was a crazy idea, but we decided it would be unconscionable not to try.”
Levin founded the operation with former U.S. diplomat John Jaeger, a Mideast hand, and a Syrian computer coder who asked that his name be withheld for fear of Syrian government reprisal. The undertaking is financed by Western governments and the donations of friends and family.
First, the team needed a human network, and month by month they developed one. Reaching out through trusted contacts, they recruited teach- ers, engineers and even farmers as potential plane spotters, some living near Russian or Syrian airbases, others in the heart of opposition-held territory. Equipped with a simple smartphone app, these volunteers watch the skies on eighthour shifts and, when an aircraft appears, share information about its location, direction and, if possible, type. That information is refined with complementary data from remote sensors.
Seconds later, Hala’s software compares the new information with that from previous episodes, calculates the chances of an airstrike and arrives at predictions for the aircraft’s likely targets, as well as when an attack might occur. The projections are immediately broadcast over social media channels, and a network of alerts is triggered.
A preliminary analysis commissioned by Hala suggests the technology has helped save hundreds of lives.