Denne boken har jeg reklamert for tidligere. Den handler om tapping- og sabotasje av undervannskabler ved hjelp av ubåter. Dette er sanne historier. (Red.)
Undersea Cable Connecting Norway With Arctic Satellite Station Has Been Mysteriously Severed
The cables run through a highly strategic stretch of water near where the Barents and Norwegian Sea meet.
THOMAS NEWDICK View Thomas Newdick's Articles
An undersea fiberoptic
cable located between mainland Norway and the Svalbard archipelago in the
Arctic Ocean has been put out of action in a still-mysterious incident. The
outage on the subsea communications cable — the furthest north of its kind
anywhere in the world — follows an incident last year in which different cables
linking an undersea surveillance network off the Norwegian coast were severed,
a story that we covered in detail at the time.
The latest disruption
involves one of two fiberoptic cables that
enable communications between the Norwegian mainland and Norwegian-administered
Svalbard that lies between the mainland and the North Pole. The outage occurred
on the morning of January 7, but was first widely reported yesterday. The
extent of the damage is not clear from the official press release from
Space Norway, the country's space agency, which maintains the cables primarily
in support of the Svalbard Satellite Station (SvalSat), but it is significant
enough that it is expected to require the services of an ocean-going
cable-laying vessel.
BJOERTVEDT/WIKIMEDIA
COMMONS
The Svalbard Satellite Station atop the mountain
of Platåberget on the island of Spitsbergen in Svalbard, Norway.
In addition to the SvalSat facilities, the
fiber-optic cables provide broadband internet to Svalbard. The SvalSat site
consists of more than 100 satellite antennas on a mountain plateau and is the
largest commercial ground station of its kind.
Being located between mainland Norway and the
North Pole means that SvalSat is in much demand with operators of
polar-orbiting satellites, being one of only two ground stations from which
data can be downloaded from these types of satellites on each of the Earth’s
rotations.
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Space Norway, which operates the undersea cables,
confirms that the second is still functioning normally, but the loss of the
first means there is now no redundancy available until repairs can be made.
The location of the disruption is in the Greenland
Sea, between 80 and 140 miles from the town of Longyearbyen on Svalbard, the
largest inhabited area on the archipelago. According to Space
Norway, the affected cable is on part of the seabed that slopes down from 980
to 8,800 feet. This is why a cable-laying vessel will be needed to conduct the
repairs, the difficulty of which will also be dependent on the depth of the
damage section and the potential for poor weather.
GOOGLE
EARTH
A map showing the respective locations of
Longyearbyen on Svalbard and Andøya in northern Norway.
Known as the Svalbard Undersea Cable
System, the dual communication cable runs between Longyearbyen and Andøya in
northern Norway, each stretching more than 800 miles.
NSANDEL/WIKIMEDIA
COMMONS
The Cable
Innovator was
one of the cable-laying vessels involved in laying the Svalbard Undersea Cable
System.
Beyond that it is damaged,
what happened to the cable is otherwise unclear at present. When cables that
were part of the Lofoten-Vesterålen (LoVe)
Ocean Observatory were severed last year, suspicion in some quarters fell upon
the Russian government, which certainly has the means to do so.
“Something or someone has
torn out cables in outlying areas,” Geir Pedersen, the LoVe project
leader, said in a press statement last November. It was
reported at the time that more than 2.5 miles of fiber optic and electrical
cables had been severed and then removed. In total, LoVe uses more than 40
miles of cables in the Norwegian Sea.
LOVE OCEAN OBSERVATORY
Cables for the LoVe ocean observatory are prepared
for deployment in May 2020.
Large parts of the missing
cable in the LoVe incident were subsequently located “a good distance
away from where it was originally located,” according to Norway’s
state-operated Institute of Marine Research, or IMR.
The reason for the severed cables in the LoVe
Ocean Observatory is still unclear, but the IMR is pursuing the matter with the
Norwegian police.
Now, Space Norway says it
will examine what was responsible for the outage on the Svalbard Undersea Cable
System. At the same time, Norway’s Ministry of Justice and Public Security says
it’s also following the situation closely.
As for the likelihood of deliberate sabotage on
the Svalbard Undersea Cable System, this remains a possibility, as in the case
of the LoVe Ocean Observatory cables.
The military value of the
cables, and moreover of the SvalSat facility, is another potential reason for
an espionage or sabotage mission. Although Svalbard itself is a designated
demilitarized zone, there have been persistent suggestions — including from Russia — that SvalSat
facilities on the archipelago are used to download data from military as well
as commercial satellites. This is despite the fact that this would constitute a
violation of the treaty that governs the
demilitarized zone.
The investigation will likely include an effort to
identify any ships or submarines that were active in the area in question
around the time that the disruption was first reported. However, if a vessel
was involved in deliberately tampering with the cable, it may have been
operating without its transponder activated, meaning it would not have been
broadcasting its positions to the Coast Guard or other agencies. That does not
mean the vessel would have been invisible by any means, but it could have gone
about its mission with less chance of scrutiny.
The inner workings of the Svalbard cables
themselves could yield useful technical details, for anyone wanting to develop
a similar system, for example. There is also the possibility that a rival power
may wish to understand exactly what if any military-related data passes from
satellites to the SvalSat facility, for onward transmission. This opens up the
possibility that the damage could have been the result of failed undersea
espionage operation to tap the cables or otherwise extract valuable data.
Beyond all this, the
cables simply lie in an area that is of strategic significance to both Norway
and Russia. It is a particularly vital passageway for
Russian naval vessels, including surface ships and submarines, which use it to
proceed from their bases in the northwestern part of the country out into the
Atlantic. Determining whether or not any undersea network in this region has
the ability to monitor those movements would be of great interest to the
Russian Navy and the country's intelligence agencies.
Just as was the case with the LoVe Ocean
Observatory cables, there could be a more innocuous explanation as to the
damage to the Svalbard cable, perhaps an accidental entanglement with a vessel
or as the result of deep-sea dredging during natural resources exploration.
BJOERTVEDT/WIKIMEDIA
COMMONS
Sign warning vessels to avoid snagging a
fiber-optic cable on the coast of Svalbard.
However, the location of
the incident, in the approaches to the increasingly strategic Arctic region may
again lead to the suspicion that Russia may have played a role in the outage.
As well as a spike in underwater activity by Russia in this area, the country
is also busily establishing or reactivating military garrisons and airbases,
including a growing number of forward-located airfields in the
High North. The Russian Navy has also been involved in establishing underwater sensor networks and other infrastructure, including nuclear reactors on the seafloor.
After all, Norway has
previously accused Russia of interfering with and otherwise aggressive actions
toward its sensor and communications networks. In 2018, the Norwegian
Intelligence Service (NIS) disclosed three separate instances in which Russian
aircraft flew mock attack profiles against a secretive radar station in the
north of the country. In 2017, the same agency blamed Russian jamming for disrupting cell
phone and GPS services, due to electronic emissions during a military exercise.
MICHAEL NARTEN/PICTURE-ALLIANCE/DPA VIA AP
The Vardø radar installation and its Globus II array, which Raytheon
originally built for the U.S. Air Force, were reportedly subject to mock
Russian air attacks in the past.
The Russian Navy does have
the capability to investigate and disrupt undersea cables. Last year, for
example, the survey ship Yantar was
operating off the Atlantic coast of Ireland. This vessel
is known to carry deep-sea submersibles and sonar systems and has been
suspected of covert operations involving undersea cables. It is often spotted
operating in waters
where cable lines are known to run down below.
Russia also operates a
range of special mission submarines, as well as unmanned underwater vehicles of
various types, which could potentially be equipped to both cut and tap cables.
Among the most capable of these is the nuclear-powered midget submarine Losharik, which is also understood
to be particularly tricky to detect and monitor, and that you can read more
about here.
Howevr, Losharik has been laid up since suffering extensive damage in a
fatal fire in 2019. Russia does still have
other similar special-mission boats available, as well
as large mothership submarines that can
are suitable for bringing them covertly to and from a
mission area.
Once again, we have no evidence that this latest
incident was related to Russian activity, but it does provide another reminder
of the vulnerability of undersea cables and other infrastructure, whether to
interference by hostile powers or not. Ultimately, a single submarine could
pose a significant asymmetric naval threat, with the loss of a single cable
having a disproportionate impact on a country’s information warfare
capabilities.
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