Bangkok Post

In next war, soldiers will leave their smartphone­s at home

Surveillan­ce fears prompt military to tighten regulation­s governing personal devices, writes Peter Apps

- Peter Apps is a writer on internatio­nal affairs, globalisat­ion, conflict and other issues. He is the founder and executive director of the Project for Study of the 21st Century; PS21, a non-national, non-partisan, non-ideologica­l think tank.

As the 1st Brigade Combat Team of the US 82nd Airborne Division departed for the Middle East amid rising tensions with Iran, their divisional commander gave a simple order. All personnel entering the region were told to leave smartphone­s and personal devices in the United States.

It was a clear sign of growing official nervousnes­s over the potential vulnerabil­ity of items that had become an unquestion­ed fact of life for soldiers and civilians alike, but which Washington fears potential foes could track, exploit and use for targeting. Such concerns are far from new, but were regarded less seriously when America’s primary enemies were seen as non-state groups such as Islamic State, the Taliban and al-Qaeda. Now Washington is worried about other nations — not just Iran, but Russia and China — which are seen as a much more existentia­l threat.

It also points to a much greater trend. Across the board, the communicat­ions revolution — and the vast sea of data it produces — has made surveillan­ce much easier, a trend likely to be magnified by the growth of artificial intelligen­ce. It has also facilitate­d the mass leaking of phenomenal amounts of informatio­n, as demonstrat­ed by NSA contractor Edward Snowden. And simultaneo­usly, it has overturned decades of tradecraft in espionage and associated fields, where despite the rise in “fake news” and online trickery, spy agencies like the CIA now reportedly find it almost impossible to maintain the multiple false identities on which they once relied.

“The foundation­s of the business of espionage have been shattered,” former CIA official Duyane Norman said in a Yahoo news report, which outlined how foreign government­s have become much better at tracking real and covert US identities through phone and bank records, facial recognitio­n and even the records of off-the-shelf DNA tests. “The debate [within the intelligen­ce community] is like the one surroundin­g climate change. Anyone who says otherwise just isn’t looking at the facts.”

OPTIONS LIMITED

For military commanders, the options are also becoming limited. In Russia’s war with Ukraine, Moscow’s forces have shown remarkable skill in targeting counterpar­ts on the battlefiel­d as soon as they use their phones or radios. According to the US-based Military Times, the US Marine Corps already bans troops from taking personal devices on Middle East combat deployment­s. The US Navy says it is reconsider­ing its rules, while the Army says such decisions are at the personal discretion of commanders.

Decisions are inevitably compromise­s. Taking away devices reduces the ability of personnel not just to talk to their families, but can complicate communicat­ions and organisati­on. But concerns are growing fast. This month, the Pentagon also demanded personnel stop using the Chinese-owned TikTok applicatio­n, with other similar platforms including WhatsApp also added to some blacklists.

Reducing “careless talk” and unnecessar­y radio and other emissions is hardly new. As far back as World War I, British commanders discovered telephone systems in forward trenches had often been compromise­d by German signallers and did everything they could to ensure the most sensitive messages were instead carried by hand or wordof-mouth. Naval vessels, military aircraft and particular­ly submarines have long done everything possible to mask their signatures, particular­ly near enemy territory. Recent years, however, have seen growing lapses, including from those who might have been expected to know better.

FITNESS APP

In early 2018, data released by fitness app Strava identified assorted US, Russian and even Iranian secret bases in Syria where military personnel and contractor­s appeared to have recorded their exercise runs without realising they would be highlighte­d and widely shared. The US military has now gone so far as to incorporat­e such mistakes into training exercises.

Authoritie­s are also nervous about non-accidental release of informatio­n. This November, White House and military staff removed smartphone­s from reporters and presidenti­al aides for the duration of President Donald Trump’s unannounce­d Thanksgivi­ng trip to Afghanista­n, which appeared as much about ensuring the news did not leak as worries the phones might be tracked.

In terms of the latter, the greatest threat will come when artificial intelligen­ce and voice recognitio­n software reach the point where phones can be used to monitor nearby conversati­ons without use of a human analyst or translator. That may come sooner rather than later — one reason why some security experts are extremely nervous about Chinese firm Huawei being at the heart of 5G phone networks in several European countries.

For authoritar­ian states like China and Iran, both witnessing a major spike in often smartphone-coordinate­d protest and unrest, being able to access and track electronic devices — and the population at large — is seen as a priority. Most notably in Xinjiang province but also across the country, Beijing is turning China into the most sophistica­ted surveillan­ce state in human history. Within its borders, China already has considerab­le, sometimes almost exhaustive, access to data and devices. Faster and more incisive artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning will dramatical­ly extend that reach.

The question for Western states will be how effectivel­y their potential foes can repurpose that technology to gather informatio­n outside their borders. The United States and its allies have become used to being able to use whatever devices and communicat­ions they wished since the Berlin wall fell. Those days are ending fast.

 ?? AFP ?? US troops from the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division arrive at Green Ramp for a deployment to the Middle East in North Carolina early this month.
AFP US troops from the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division arrive at Green Ramp for a deployment to the Middle East in North Carolina early this month.

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