The Boston Globe

US lags protecting services provided by satellites

Signals vital to economy seen as vulnerable

- By Selam Gebrekidan, John Liu, and Chris Buckley

The United states and China are locked in a new race, in space and on earth, over a fundamenta­l resource: time itself.

And the United states is losing.

Global positionin­g satellites serve as clocks in the sky, and their signals have become fundamenta­l to the global economy — as essential for telecommun­ications, 911 services, and financial exchanges as they are for drivers and lost pedestrian­s.

But those services are increasing­ly vulnerable as space is rapidly militarize­d and satellite signals are attacked on earth.

Yet, unlike China, the United States does not have a plan b for civilians should those signals get knocked out in space or on land.

The risks may seem as remote as science fiction. but just last month, the United states said Russia may deploy a nuclear weapon into space, refocusing attention on satellites’ vulnerabil­ity. And John Hyten, an Air Force general who also served as vice chair of the Joint Chiefs of staff and who is now retired, once called some satellites “big, fat, juicy targets.”

Tangible threats have been growing for years.

Russia, China, India, and the United states have tested antisatell­ite missiles, and several major world powers have developed technology meant to disrupt signals in space. one Chinese satellite has a robotic arm that could destroy or move other satellites.

Other attacks are occurring on earth. Russian hackers targeted a satellite system’s ground infrastruc­ture in Ukraine, cutting off internet at the start of the war there. Attacks such as jamming, which drowns out satellite signals, and spoofing, which sends misleading data, are increasing, diverting flights and confoundin­g pilots far from battlefiel­ds.

If the world were to lose its connection to those satellites, the economic losses would amount to billions of dollars a day.

Despite recognizin­g the risks, the United states is years from having a reliable alternativ­e source for time and navigation for civilian use if gps signals are out or interrupte­d, documents show and experts say. the transporta­tion Department, which leads civilian projects for timing and navigation, disputed this but did not provide answers to follow-up questions.

A 2010 plan by the obama administra­tion, which experts had hoped would create a backup to satellites, never took off. A decade later, then president Donald trump issued an executive order that said that the disruption or manipulati­on of satellite signals posed a threat to national security. but he did not suggest an alternativ­e or propose funding to protect infrastruc­ture.

The biden administra­tion is soliciting bids from private companies, hoping they will offer technical solutions. but it could take years for those technologi­es to be widely adopted.

 ?? LYNSEY ADDARIO/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ukrainians gathered around a Starlink satellite antenna for internet connection in Kherson, Ukraine, in November.
LYNSEY ADDARIO/NEW YORK TIMES Ukrainians gathered around a Starlink satellite antenna for internet connection in Kherson, Ukraine, in November.

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