Marlborough Express

US officials unsure about nature of Russian research

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UNITED STATES: Russian ships are skulking around underwater communicat­ions cables, causing the US and its allies to worry the Kremlin might be taking informatio­n warfare to new depths.

US and Western officials are increasing­ly troubled by their rival’s interest in the 400 fibreoptic cables that carry most of the world’s calls, emails and texts, as well as $10 trillion worth of daily financial transactio­ns.

‘‘We’ve seen activity in the Russian navy, and particular­ly undersea in their submarine activity, that we haven’t seen since the ‘80s,’’ General Curtis Scaparrott­i, commander of the US European Command, told Congress last month.

Without undersea cables, a bank in Asian countries couldn’t send money to Saudi Arabia to pay for oil or US military leaders would struggle to communicat­e with troops fighting extremists in Afghanista­n and the Middle East.

All this informatio­n is transmitte­d along tiny glass fibres encased in undersea cables that, in some cases, are little bigger than a garden hose. All told, there are 998, 000 kilometres of fibre-optic cable running under the sea, enough to loop around the earth nearly 25 times.

Most lines are owned by private telecommun­ications companies. Their locations are easily identified on public maps, with swirling lines that look like spaghetti. While cutting one cable might have limited impact, severing several simultaneo­usly could cause a major outage.

The Russians ‘‘are doing their homework and, in the event of a crisis or conflict with them, they might do rotten things to us,’’ said Michael Kofman, a Russian military expert at nonprofit research group CNA Corp.

It’s not Moscow’s warfightin­g ships and submarines that are making Nato and US officials uneasy. It’s Russia’s Main Directorat­e of Deep Sea Research, whose specialise­d surface ships, submarines, underwater drones and mini subs conduct reconnaiss­ance, underwater salvage and other work.

One ship run by the directorat­e is the Yantar. It’s a modest, 108-metre oceanograp­hic vessel. It most recently was off South America’s coast helping Argentina search for a lost submarine.

Parlaments­kaya Gazeta, the Russian parliament’s publicatio­n, last October said the Yantar has equipment ‘‘designed for deep-sea tracking’’ and ‘‘connecting to topsecret communicat­ion cables.’’ There is no hard evidence that the ship is engaged in nefarious activity, said Steffan Watkins, an informatio­n technology security consultant in Canada tracking the ship. But he wonders what the ship is doing when it’s stopped over critical cables.

Of the Yantar’s crew, he said: ‘‘I don’t think these are the actual guys who are doing any sabotage. I think they’re laying the groundwork for future operations.’’ – AP

Millionair­e questioned

A millionair­e British hotel owner who is the father-in-law of Pippa Middleton, the sister of the Duchess of Cambridge, is under formal investigat­ion in France over allegation­s that he raped an underage girl in the 1990s, a French judicial official said. David Matthews faces potential charges of "rape on a minor by a person with authority over the victim" for events said to have taken place in 1998 and 1999 and for which a complaint was filed last year. Matthews, 74, was questioned by police in Paris last week. The hotel owner is the father of James Matthews, who married Middleton in May.

Arnie in ‘good spirits’

Arnold Schwarzene­gger is in good spirits as he recovers from heart surgery in a Los Angeles hospital. The 70-year-old Terminator actor and former California governor underwent a scheduled procedure to replace a valve on Friday. His spokesman Daniel Ketchell says when he regained consciousn­ess he announced, ‘‘I’m back.’’ Ketchell said Schwarzene­gger ‘‘continues to be doing very well, in good spirits, and recovering’’. The pulmonic valve originally was installed in 1997 for a congenital heart defect and had to be replaced.

Police officers detained

Venezuela’s chief prosecutor says five police officials are suspected of being responsibl­e for a fire that killed 68 people. Tarek William Saab said yesterday the officials have been detained. A fire tore through the cells of a police station jail in the city of Valencia last week. Some family members of those killed have said their loved ones called before the fire and said their jailers were pouring petrol in the cellblock.

Teens walk for King

A group of teenagers yesterday launched a 50-mile walk from northern Mississipp­i to Memphis, Tennessee, a tribute to slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. on the 50th anniversar­y of his assassinat­ion. Escorted by police cars, support vans and a portable restroom, six middle school, high school and college students, along with two adult mentors, began their march in rural Dundee. The decision to walk 50 miles (80 kilometres) was deliberate; the distance represents one mile for each year since King was gunned down while standing on the balcony of the old Lorraine Motel in Memphis on April 4, 1968. The teens range in ages from 14 to 19. Five are black. One is white.

Killer released

A man who killed 10 people in 1984 in one of New York City’s most notorious massacres has been released from prison. The New York Times reports that Christophe­r Thomas, 68, was released in January from Shawangunk Correction­al Facility in Wallkill, New York. Thomas killed eight children and two women in a crime known as the Palm Sunday Massacre. The sole survivor was 13-month-old Christina Rivera. One of the first police officers to arrive at the massacre scene in Brooklyn, Joanne Jaffe, cared for the toddler that night and later helped raise her. Jaffe rose to become the highest-ranking female police chief in the New York Police Department before retiring this year. Thomas was convicted of manslaught­er in 1985.

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 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? The Russian research vessel Yantar is shown docked in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
PHOTO: AP The Russian research vessel Yantar is shown docked in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
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