Navy brass NOT ruling out cyber attacks in string of warship incidents and collisions involving 7th Fleet


Without question the U.S. Navy is the most power nautical force in the world, combining state-of-the-art technology with unrivaled firepower. But the sea service has suffered a disturbing number of incidents involving four warships since January, leading some top-ranking officers and other experts to believe they may have been intentionally tampered with.

As reported by the Washington Free Beacon, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson told reporters Monday following a collision between the USS John S. McCain, a guided-missile destroyer, and a commercial ship, that he could not rule out that the Navy vessel was targeted by a cyber attack.

“That’s is [sic] certainly something we are giving full consideration to but we have no indication that that’s the case—yet,” Richardson said. “But we’re looking at every possibility, so we’re not leaving anything to chance.”

The U.S. 7th Fleet is based in Yokosuka, Japan. Part of the Pacific Fleet, it is the largest forward-deployed naval force consisting of between 60-70 warships, 300 aircraft, and 40,000 sailors and U.S. Marines. It is primarily responsible for maritime security and operations in and around the South China Sea, Indian Ocean, and waters near North Korea; losing ships to damage endangers the mission.

Asked if the McCain collision included the possibility that the electronic navigation and defensive systems on the warship were hacked in a cyber attack, Richardson was noncommittal, saying only that the Navy would “take a look at all of that, as we did with the Fitzgerald,” a reference to the USS Fitzgerald, a guided-missile cruiser that collided with another merchant ship near Japan in June. (Related: A Russia fighter came within 20 FEET of U.S. Navy surveillance plane in a recent provocative act.)

As the Free Beacon reported further:

The McCain collided with the Liberian-flagged oil tanker Alnic MC in the Straits of Malacca and Singapore late Sunday, injuring five sailors and leaving 10 sailors missing.

The ship was on its way to Singapore where it docked after the collision. Photos show a deep gash in the ship’s hull.

The latest collision was the fourth incident involving a 7th Fleet warship since January.

As further reported by McClatchy DC, on Jan. 31 a guided missile cruiser, the USS Antietam, ran aground off Japan’s coast. Then, on May 9 another cruiser, the USS Lake Champlain, was hit by a South Korean fishing boat. And the Fitzgerald collided with a container ship on June 17.

“I don’t have proof, but you have to wonder if there were electronic issues,” Jeff Stutzman, chief intelligence officer at Wapack Labs, a New Boston, New Hampshire, cyber intelligence service, told McClatchy.

“When you are going through the Strait of Malacca, you can’t tell me that a Navy destroyer doesn’t have a full navigation team going with full lookouts on every wing and extra people on radar,” Stutzman, a former information warfare specialist in the Navy, added. “There’s something more than just human error going on because there would have been a lot of humans to be checks and balances.”

Some suspect China may be involved, though there is no evidence yet that is the case. The reason for that is because experts also suspect Russia of pulling off similar “spoofing” operations recently in the Black Sea.

The New Scientist reported that in June, some 20 commercial ships operating in the Black Sea experienced satellite navigation problems:

On 22 June, the US Maritime Administration filed a seemingly bland incident report. The master of a ship off the Russian port of Novorossiysk had discovered his GPS put him in the wrong spot – more than 32 kilometers inland, at Gelendzhik Airport.

After checking the navigation equipment was working properly, the captain contacted other nearby ships. Their AIS traces – signals from the automatic identification system used to track vessels – placed them all at the same airport.

Jamming of signals is easily detectable — and traceable. But spoofing is insidious because it cannot be detected; electronic equipment can appear to be operating normally, even though vessels are miles off-course.

And while U.S. Navy ships use encrypted satellite-fed navigational signals rather than commercial GPS, that’s not to say those signals are impervious to cyber-tampering.

“This is obviously an extremely serious incident,” Richardson said. “And is the second such incident in a very short period of time. And very similar as well.”

J.D. Heyes is a senior writer for NaturalNews.com and NewsTarget.com, as well as editor of The National Sentinel.

Sources include:

FreeBeacon.com

NewScientist.com

McClatchyDC.com

Cyberwar.news

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