
Exclusive: Iran
hijacked US drone, says Iranian engineer
In an exclusive interview, an
engineer working to unlock the secrets of the captured RQ-170 Sentinel
says they exploited a known vulnerability and tricked the US drone into
landing in Iran.
By Scott Peterson, Staff writer, Payam Faramarzi*, Correspondent
posted December 15, 2011 at 11:41 am EST
ISTANBUL, TURKEY
Iran guided the CIA's "lost" stealth drone to an intact landing inside
hostile territory by exploiting a navigational weakness long-known to
the US military, according to an Iranian engineer now working on the
captured drone's systems inside Iran.
Iranian electronic warfare specialists were able to cut off
communications links of the American bat-wing RQ-170 Sentinel, says the
engineer, who works for one of many Iranian military and civilian teams
currently trying to unravel the drone’s stealth and intelligence
secrets, and who could not be named for his safety.
Using knowledge gleaned from previous downed American drones and a
technique proudly claimed by Iranian commanders in September, the
Iranian specialists then reconfigured the drone's GPS coordinates to
make it land in Iran at what the drone thought was its actual home base
in Afghanistan.
"The GPS navigation is the weakest point," the Iranian engineer told
the Monitor, giving the most detailed description yet published of
Iran's "electronic ambush" of the highly classified US drone. "By
putting noise [jamming] on the communications, you force the bird into
autopilot. This is where the bird loses its brain."
The “spoofing” technique that the Iranians used – which took into
account
precise landing altitudes, as well as latitudinal and longitudinal data
– made the drone “land on its own where we wanted it to, without having
to crack the remote-control signals and communications” from the US
control center, says the engineer.
The revelations about Iran's apparent electronic prowess come as the
US, Israel, and some European nations appear to be engaged in an
ever-widening covert war with Iran, which has seen assassinations of
Iranian nuclear scientists, explosions at Iran's missile and industrial
facilities, and the Stuxnet computer virus that set back Iran’s nuclear
program.
Now this engineer’s account of how Iran took over one of America’s most
sophisticated drones suggests Tehran has found a way to hit back. The
techniques were developed from reverse-engineering several less
sophisticated American drones captured or shot down in recent years,
the engineer says, and by taking advantage of weak, easily manipulated
GPS signals, which calculate location and speed from multiple
satellites.
Western military experts and a number of published papers on GPS
spoofing indicate that the scenario described by the Iranian engineer
is plausible.
"Even modern combat-grade GPS [is] very susceptible” to manipulation,
says former US Navy electronic warfare specialist Robert Densmore,
adding that it is “certainly possible” to recalibrate the GPS on a
drone so that it flies on a different course. “I wouldn't say it's
easy, but the technology is there.”
In 2009, Iran-backed Shiite militants in Iraq were found to have
downloaded live, unencrypted video streams from American Predator
drones with inexpensive, off-the-shelf software. But Iran’s apparent
ability now to actually take control of a drone is far more significant.
Iran asserted its ability to do this in September, as pressure mounted
over its nuclear program.
Gen. Moharam Gholizadeh, the deputy for electronic warfare at the air
defense headquarters of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC),
described to Fars News how Iran could alter the path of a GPS-guided
missile – a tactic more easily applied to a slower-moving drone.
“We have a project on hand that is one step ahead of jamming, meaning
‘deception’ of the aggressive systems,” said Gholizadeh, such that “we
can define our own desired information for it so the path of the
missile would change to our desired destination.”
Gholizadeh said that “all the movements of these [enemy drones]” were
being watched, and “obstructing” their work was “always on our agenda.”
That interview has since been pulled from Fars’ Persian-language
website. And last month, the relatively young Gholizadeh died of a
heart attack, which some Iranian news sites called suspicious –
suggesting the electronic warfare expert may have been a casualty in
the covert war against Iran.
Iran's growing electronic
capabilities
Iranian lawmakers say the drone capture is a "great epic" and claim to
be "in the final steps of breaking into the aircraft's secret code."
Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta told Fox News on Dec. 13 that the US
will "absolutely" continue the drone campaign over Iran, looking for
evidence of any nuclear weapons work. But the stakes are higher for
such surveillance, now that Iran can apparently disrupt the work of US
drones.
US officials skeptical of Iran’s capabilities blame a malfunction, but
so far can't explain how Iran acquired the drone intact. One American
analyst ridiculed Iran’s capability, telling Defense News that the loss
was “like dropping a Ferrari into an ox-cart technology culture.”
Yet Iran’s claims to the contrary resonate more in light of new details
about how it brought down the drone – and other markers that signal
growing electronic expertise.
A former senior Iranian official who asked not to be named said: "There
are a lot of human resources in Iran.... Iran is not like Pakistan."
“Technologically, our distance from the Americans, the Zionists, and
other advanced countries is not so far to make the downing of this
plane seem like a dream for us … but it could be amazing for others,”
deputy IRGC commander Gen. Hossein Salami said this week.
According to a European intelligence source, Iran shocked Western
intelligence agencies in a previously unreported incident that took
place sometime in the past two years, when it managed to “blind” a CIA
spy satellite by “aiming a laser burst quite accurately.”
More recently, Iran was able to hack Google security certificates, says
the engineer. In September, the Google accounts of 300,000 Iranians
were made accessible by hackers. The targeted company said
"circumstantial evidence" pointed to a "state-driven attack" coming
from Iran, meant to snoop on users.
Cracking the protected GPS coordinates on the Sentinel drone was no
more difficult, asserts the engineer.
US knew of GPS systems'
vulnerability
Use of drones has become more risky as adversaries like Iran hone
countermeasures. The US military has reportedly been aware of
vulnerabilities with pirating unencrypted drone data streams since the
Bosnia campaign in the mid-1990s.
Top US officials said in 2009 that they were working to encrypt all
drone data streams in Iraq, Pakistan, and Afghanistan – after finding
militant laptops loaded with days' worth of data in Iraq – and
acknowledged that they were "subject to listening and exploitation."
Perhaps as easily exploited are the GPS navigational systems upon which
so much of the modern military depends.
"GPS signals are weak and can be easily outpunched [overridden] by
poorly controlled signals from television towers, devices such as
laptops and MP3 players, or even mobile satellite services," Andrew
Dempster, a professor from the University of New South Wales School of
Surveying and Spatial Information Systems, told a March conference on
GPS vulnerability in Australia.
"This is not only a significant hazard for military, industrial, and
civilian transport and communication systems, but criminals have worked
out how they can jam GPS," he says.
The US military has sought for years to fortify or find alternatives to
the GPS system of satellites, which are used for both military and
civilian purposes. In 2003, a “Vulnerability Assessment Team” at Los
Alamos National Laboratory published research explaining how weak GPS
signals were easily overwhelmed with a stronger local signal.
“A more pernicious attack involves feeding the GPS receiver fake GPS
signals so that it believes it is located somewhere in space and time
that it is not,” reads the Los Alamos report. “In a sophisticated
spoofing attack, the adversary would send a false signal reporting the
moving target’s true position and then gradually walk the target to a
false position.”
The vulnerability remains unresolved, and a paper presented at a
Chicago communications security conference in October laid out
parameters for successful spoofing of both civilian and military GPS
units to allow a "seamless takeover" of drones or other targets.
To “better cope with hostile electronic attacks,” the US Air Force in
late September awarded two $47 million contracts to develop a
"navigation warfare" system to replace GPS on aircraft and missiles,
according to the Defense Update website.
Official US data on GPS describes "the ongoing GPS modernization
program" for the Air Force, which "will enhance the jam resistance of
the military GPS service, making it more robust."
Why the drone's underbelly was
damaged
Iran's drone-watching project began in 2007, says the Iranian engineer,
and then was stepped up and became public in 2009 – the same year that
the RQ-170 was first deployed in Afghanistan with what were then
state-of-the-art surveillance systems.
In January, Iran said it had shot down two conventional (nonstealth)
drones, and in July, Iran showed Russian experts several US drones –
including one that had been watching over the underground uranium
enrichment facility at Fordo, near the holy city of Qom.
In capturing the stealth drone this month at Kashmar, 140 miles inside
northeast Iran, the Islamic Republic appears to have learned from two
years of close observation.
Iran displayed the drone on state-run TV last week, with a dent in the
left wing and the undercarriage and landing gear hidden by
anti-American banners.
The Iranian engineer explains why: "If you look at the location where
we made it land and the bird's home base, they both have [almost] the
same altitude," says the Iranian engineer. "There was a problem [of a
few meters] with the exact altitude so the bird's underbelly was
damaged in landing; that's why it was covered in the broadcast footage."
Prior to the disappearance of the stealth drone earlier this month,
Iran’s electronic warfare capabilities were largely unknown – and often
dismissed.
"We all feel drunk [with happiness] now," says the Iranian engineer.
"Have you ever had a new laptop? Imagine that excitement multiplied
many-fold." When the Revolutionary Guard first recovered the drone,
they were aware it might be rigged to self-destruct, but they "were so
excited they could not stay away."
* Scott Peterson, the Monitor's
Middle East correspondent, wrote this story with an Iranian journalist
who publishes under the pen name Payam Faramarzi and cannot be further
identified for security reasons.