Perhaps Because the Invaders Need It

Why Is Ukraine’s Internet Still Up? Perhaps Because the Invaders Need It

By Tara Copp,  Senior Pentagon Reporter,  Defense One  MARCH 8, 2022  09:10 AM

https://www.nextgov.com/cybersecurity/2022/03/why-ukraines-internet-still-perhaps-because-invaders-need-it/362870/

As well, eight years of effort to harden IT infrastructure may be paying off.

In the days before Russia invaded Ukraine, many observers thought the oncoming 
tanks would be preceded by cyber attacks and a media blackout as Russian 
hackers took down the country’s communications.

Instead, Ukraine’s IT infrastructure has held up, allowing officials and 
citizens alike to dominate the global narrative with images of confused Russian 
soldiers and downed fighter jets.

“We have seen some internet outages, we have seen them try to impact the 
information and communication environment, not the least of which is striking, 
you know, television towers and that kind of thing,” a senior defense official 
told reporters last week.

But overall, the infrastructure remains operational.

Why? Only the Russian leadership knows.

“They perhaps have found some value to keeping some public communications open 
for their own purposes, for their own decision-making processes, but that's 
just speculation,” the official said.

One prevailing theory among defense experts is that Russia is relying on the 
network to conduct its attack.

“Putting a communications network together, other than radios, is actually 
really hard,” said John Ferrari, a retired Army two-star 
general-turned-non-resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

Ferrari noted the U.S. Army’s own struggles to develop WIN-T, a joint 
expeditionary communications network.

https://sgp.fas.org/crs/weapons/IN10799.pdf

He said Russian forces are likely navigating and communicating via cell phones 
and local internet connections.

“So I think they felt that they were going to go in there and ride that 
communication network. And you see it, right? You see the reports coming out of 
them using cell phones and local internet connections,” he said.

That’s likely why the cell towers are still standing, Ferrari said: “You can't 
take down the cell phone towers, because then you blind yourself.”

Even if any of the convoys had satellite dishes to communicate independently of 
the towers, the nature of an invasion would make them almost impossible to use, 
said Mark Montgomery, a retired Navy rear admiral who is now an analyst at the 
Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

“You know how hard those are [to operate] once they move?” Montgomery said.

“When you sit there fixed, it works perfectly okay. This works great. And then 
the minute you move it, you know, now you're like, ‘Holy crap, I can't get a 
synchronization.’ If there's crypto riding on it, it gets ten times harder.”

David Maxwell, a retired Army special forces colonel, said Russia may also be 
preserving the networks to eavesdrop on the Ukrainian military and civilian 
resistance.

Last week, SpaceX founder Elon Musk moved 47 Starlink telecommunications 
satellites and sent a truckload of ground terminals to Ukraine.

But those terminals were immediately targeted and jammed, leading Musk to shift 
SpaceX priorities to “cyber defense & overcoming signal jamming,” he tweeted 
over the weekend.

Another reason the Ukrainian communications net may still be up: the country 
has been working to harden it against attack, with U.S. and European help, 
Ferrari and Montgomery said.

These efforts began after Russia annexed Crimea, and accelerated after Russia 
targeted Ukraine’s power grid in 2016 and 2017.

Since then, Montgomery said, “Ukrainians have done a much better job in their 
cyber protection efforts.”

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