Dayton Daily News

What is an electromag­netic attack?

- CATHY BUSSEWITZ, ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — When much of Venezuela was plunged into darkness after a massive blackout this past week, President Nicolás Maduro blamed the power outage on an “electromag­netic attack” carried out by the U.S. The claim was met with skepticism. Blackouts are a regrettabl­y frequent part of life in Venezuela, where the electric grid has fallen into serious disrepair. And Maduro’s administra­tion provided no evidence of an electromag­netic attack. “In Venezuela, it’s a lot easier for him to say we did something to him than he did it to himself,” said Sharon Burke, senior adviser at New America, a nonpartisa­n think tank, and former assistant secretary of defense for operationa­l energy at the Department of Defense. “Their grid, it’s decrepit. It’s been in very poor shape. They’ve been starving their infrastruc­ture for years.” Neverthele­ss, Maduro’s claim has raised questions over what exactly is an electromag­netic attack, how likely is it to occur and what impact could it have.

What is an electromag­netic attack?

The phrase “electromag­netic attack” can refer to different things, but in this context most likely refers to a high-altitude electromag­netic pulse generated when a nuclear weapon is detonated in space, about 30 kilometers above the Earth’s surface. Once the weapon is detonated, an electromag­netic pulse can travel to the Earth’s surface and disrupt a wide variety of technology systems from appliances to a nation’s electric grid. Some characteri­stics of an electromag­netic pulse are similar to disturbanc­es caused by solar flares.

There are also smaller electromag­netic pulse weapons that are being developed, but they would be unlikely to cause a power outage as large as the one Venezuela experience­d, experts said.

The term electromag­netic attack also can refer cryptograp­hy, or an attack where the perpetrato­r is seeking secret keys or passwords, but that’s more likely to be directed at portable electronic devices, not electric grids, said Shucheng Yu, an associate professor of electrical & computer engineerin­g at Stevens Institute of Technology.

Has electromag­netic pulse technology ever been used?

In the 1962, during the Cold War, the U.S. detonated a nuclear weapon above the atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean, and the experiment — known as Starfish Prime — knocked out power to traffic lights and telecommun­ications in parts of Honolulu, illuminati­ng the sky and even leading hotels to host viewing parties, according to news reports.

Russia conducted a series of “high-altitude nuclear bursts” in 1961 and 1962 to test electromag­netic pulse impacts over Kazakhstan and destroyed that country’s electrical grid, according to testimony to Congress from the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromag­netic Pulse Attack.

Could Venezuela have suffered from an electromag­netic attack?

While several countries have capabiliti­es to detonate a nuclear weapon and cause an electromag­netic pulse, it’s unlikely that such a maneuver would escape the world’s attention.

“If he’s suggesting that the U.S. detonated a nuclear weapon above the atmosphere, you think that would happen without anyone noticing? I don’t think so,” Burke said of Maduro’s claim. “You can’t secretly detonate a nuclear weapon.”

A senior U.S. administra­tion official said Maduro is to blame for the latest blackout because his government has mismanaged the economy and is responsibl­e for the destructio­n of his country’s infrastruc­ture. The official was not authorized to respond to questions about the blackout and spoke only on condition of anonymity.

Unlike a cyberattac­k, which can be carried out by a hacker in a basement, generating an electromag­netic pulse requires a state-sponsored weapon.

“It’s hard to imagine that actor being incentiviz­ed to pull off and conduct such an attack. It would be pretty aggressive to do that,” said David Weinstein, chief security officer at Claroty, a security company that specialize­s in protecting infrastruc­ture. “Also, the power fails easily in Venezuela anyway, so it’s almost like a waste of the capability.”

How much of a threat does an electromag­netic pulse attack pose?

It depends on who you ask. While the

technology to launch an electromag­netic attack exists, and the impacts could cause widespread damage to electronic­s, some security experts believe the likelihood of such an attack is low and the threat is overstated.

“If they want to knock out the grid, I was trying to think of 12 ways to do it, this wouldn’t be high on the list,” said Bill Hogan, professor of global energy policy at Harvard University. “The (U.S.) system is run very conservati­vely, there’s a lot of redundancy, and you’d have to be pretty sophistica­ted to knock out a lot of it.”

Others are convinced that an electromag­netic attack could wipe out vast swaths of the U.S. power grid for prolonged periods, potentiall­y killing most Americans.

The Electric Power Research Institute, a think tank funded primarily by utilities, found in an April study that an electromag­netic pulse could trigger regional service interrupti­ons but would not likely trigger a nationwide grid failure in the U.S.

But the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromag­netic Pulse Attack, which has been sounding the alarm on the possibilit­y of this type of attack for years, said in 2017 Congressio­nal testimony that a nuclear electromag­netic pulse attack would inflict massive widespread damage to the electric grid. An attack on the U.S., it warned, would lead to a widespread protracted blackout and thousands of electronic systems could be destroyed, risking millions of lives.

President Donald Trump called on the Secretary of Defense to conduct research to understand the effects of EMPs in an executive order in March.

“I think it’s a good thing that awareness has grown, and the potential risks and consequenc­es have captured people’s attention, but at the same time, the much more practical and frankly the threat that we’re facing on a day-to-day basis is the cyber threat,” Weinstein said.

 ?? ARIANA CUBILLOS / AP ?? People walk on a street during a blackout in Caracas, Venezuela, on Monday. The nation’s president blamed an “electromag­netic attack” by the U.S.
ARIANA CUBILLOS / AP People walk on a street during a blackout in Caracas, Venezuela, on Monday. The nation’s president blamed an “electromag­netic attack” by the U.S.

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