GOOGLE MAPS HELP MUJAHIDEEN BAG POODLE MINIONS 

Terrorists 'use Google maps to hit UK troops'
By Thomas Harding in Basra
Telegraph (UK)
13/01/2007
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/01/13/wgoogle13.xml

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photo:
Royal Green Jackets provide `top cover' from their Bulldog armoured
vehicle outside Basra Palace
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/graphics/2007/01/13/wgoogle13.jpg
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Terrorists attacking British bases in Basra are using aerial footage
displayed by the Google Earth internet tool to pinpoint their attacks,
say Army intelligence sources.

Documents seized during raids on the homes of insurgents last week
uncovered print-outs from photographs taken from Google.

The satellite photographs show in detail the buildings inside the
bases and vulnerable areas such as tented accommodation, lavatory
blocks and where lightly armoured Land Rovers are parked.

Written on the back of one set of photographs taken of the Shatt al
Arab Hotel, headquarters for the 1,000 men of the Staffordshire
Regiment battle group, officers found the camp's precise longitude and
latitude.
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"This is evidence as far as we are concerned for planning terrorist
attacks," said an intelligence officer with the Royal Green Jackets
battle group. "Who would otherwise have Google Earth imagery of one of
our bases?

"We are concerned that they use them to plan attacks. We have never
had proof that they have deliberately targeted any area of the camp
using these images but presumably they are of great use to them.

"We believe they use Google Earth to identify the most vulnerable
areas such as tents."

One soldier has been killed in the past six months following a mortar
attack and there have been several injuries.

Since the maps were found intelligence chiefs have been keeping track
of where rounds land to see if the insurgents are using them to
pinpoint weakly protected areas.

The British camps experience mortar and rocket attacks on a daily basis.

Salvos are fired from up to four miles away and are increasingly accurate.

Yesterday three rounds were fired into Basra Palace at a block close
to where The Daily Telegraph was staying. No one was injured.

Intelligence sources also believe that the insurgents are receiving
more training and weaponry from Iran to improve their fighting skills.
But the British are gathering more intelligence on mortar crews and
launching several "strike operations" to detain the operators.

Anyone with the internet can sign up to Google Earth and by simply
typing in the name of a location they can receive very detailed
imagery down to identifying types of vehicles.

The company is one of several internet outlets that buy aerial
imagery, usually taken by aircraft but sometimes by satellite, from
governments or mapping companies.

It is unclear how old the maps are but it is believed the Basra images
were made within the past two years.

Major Charlie Burbridge, the British military spokesman in Iraq, said:
"We take the security of our bases very seriously and we constantly
review the means to provide secure accommodation for our soldiers.

"There is a constant threat of reconnaissance missions to access our
bases and using these internet images is just another method of how
this is conducted."

A Google spokesman said the information could be used for "good and
bad" and was available to the public in many forms. "Of course we are
always ready to listen to governments' requests," he said.

"We have opened channels with the military in Iraq but we are not
prepared to discuss what we have discussed with them. But we do listen
and we are sensitive to requests."

There have also been reports that the images are being sold to rogue
militias in the market place in Basra.

The British security services are concerned that terrorists will be
able to examine in detail sensitive infrastructure such as electricity
stations, military basis, and their own headquarters in London.

Soldiers from the Royal Green Jackets based at the Basra Palace base
said they had considered suing Google Earth if they were injured by
mortar rounds that had been directed on the camp by the aerial footage.

"Even if they did blank out the areas where we are based it is a bit
after the horse has bolted as the terrorist now have the maps and know
exactly where we eat, sleep and go to the toilet," one soldier said.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/01/13/wgoogle13.xml

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