AIR WARFARE, LAND WARFARE, NETWORKS / CYBER, PENTAGON, SPACE

SpaceX beating Russian jamming attack was ‘eyewatering’: DoD official


“The way that Starlink was able to upgrade when a threat showed up, we need to 
be able to have that ability," said Dave Tremper, the Pentagon's director of 
electronic warfare.

"We have to be able to change our electromagnetic posture, to be able to change 
very dynamically what we're trying to do without losing capability along the 
way.”

By VALERIE INSINNA  on April 20, 2022  
https://breakingdefense.com/2022/04/spacex-beating-russian-jamming-attack-was-eyewatering-dod-official/


WASHINGTON: The US military’s electronic warfare enterprise needs to take a 
page from SpaceX when it comes to responding to new threats, the Pentagon’s 
director for electromagnetic warfare said today.

After SpaceX sent Starlink terminals to Ukraine in February in an apparent 
effort to help Ukraine maintain its internet connection amid war with Russia, 
SpaceX founder Elon Musk claimed that Russia had jammed Starlink terminals in 
the country for hours at a time.

After a software update, Starlink was operating normally, said Musk, who added 
on March 25 that the constellation had “resisted all hacking & jamming 
attempts” in Ukraine.

Assuming Musk — famously something of a showboater in his public comments — is 
providing an accurate picture, a private firm beating back Russian EW attempts 
with software updates is the kind of thing that makes Pentagon EW experts pay 
attention.

“From an EW technologist perspective, that is fantastic. That paradigm and how 
they did that is kind of  eyewatering to me,” said Dave Tremper, director of 
electronic warfare for the Pentagon’s acquisition office.

“The way that Starlink was able to upgrade when a threat showed up, we need to 
be able to have that ability. We have to be able to change our electromagnetic 
posture, to be able to change very dynamically what we’re trying to do without 
losing capability along the way.”

Since Russia’s takeover of the Ukrainian territory of Crimea in 2014, the 
Russian military has used electronic warfare extensively in Ukraine’s Donbas 
region — often to great effect, using electromagnetic signals to uncover the 
positions of Ukrainian forces and disrupt equipment such as drones.

However, the current conflict may be exposing the limits of Russia’s EW 
capability.

Tremper noted that Russia’ ongoing invasion deep into Ukraine is “a very 
different scenario” to earlier operations that were mostly contained on the 
border between Russia and contested regions of Ukraine.

“[When] you’re trying to get to the center of that country, I think EW 
coordination and synchronization become very challenging. To get into those 
urban scenarios becomes even more complicated,” he said.

“And I think, what we’re seeing in the Ukraine is a resistance, where the 
dependence on [the electromagnetic spectrum] isn’t there.”

Another challenge for the Russian military has been a lack of training and 
expertise — a failing that has been made painfully obvious even outside the 
realm of electronic warfare, with major embarrassments such as the sinking of 
the Russian warship Moskva, the Russian air force’s inability to achieve air 
superiority against an adversary with far fewer combat aircraft, and continued 
logistics failures that have resulted in memes featuring Ukrainian farmers 
driving away with Russian tanks.

“I think we expected a much stronger EW presence,” Tremper said. “Which isn’t 
to say that it’s not there, but I think the degree of coordination and 
synchronization of these types of operations is such that the undertrained 
operator will have a hard time pulling off those types of events successfully.”

Brig. Gen. Tad Clark, the Air Force’s director of electromagnetic spectrum 
superiority, prefaced his statements by acknowledging that he couldn’t detail 
specifics about what the United States is gleaning about the Russian electronic 
warfare threat based on its activities in Ukraine.

However, he noted that those activities do more than simply provide information 
about Russia’s technological capabilities — they also paint a picture about 
whether Russia has the capital necessary to execute that mission.

“We’re learning a lot what Russia has been investing their money in, the 
sophistication and the reliability of their equipment, and.. their ability to 
execute that mission in a synchronized fashion,” he said.

“It gives us some insight of where certain countries are, where we are, where 
we need to be, and where we want to be.”

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