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THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE ACCOUNTABILITY OF AMERICAN BASES (CAAB) |
US forces to target enemy mobiles with P2P
WLANs
By Tony Smith
Posted: 15/08/2003 at 11:22 GMT
The US military is developing a weapon based on peer-to-peer technology to
take out mobile phone communications, the US Department of Defence has
revealed.
The system also has the capability to covertly monitor cellular traffic.
Codenamed 'WolfPack', the device is intended to prevent an enemy from using
its communications technologies, including cellular, without hindering US
forces' own communications systems.
WolfPack is a 6 x 4in cylinder weighing 6lbs, capable of being dropped by
parachute or fired into the target area as a missile payload. Each device zaps
mobile phone communications within a radius of half a kilometre.
"The idea is to litter the battlefield with these small objects,"
WolfPack programme manager Preston Marshall in a statement.
The battery-powered device contains an inflatable antenna. Fins mounted inside
the cylinder extend from the device on touchdown to lift it into a vertical
position. Once in place and with the aerial up, each WolfPack until begins
communicating with any others it can detect.
Together, they quickly establish a network. Other networks in range can tie in
too, creating, if you will, an 'Internet' of WolfPack nodes, which ultimately
allows data from any single device to be routed across the network of networks
to the command centre.
Each cylinder can generate radio signal to disrupt cellular traffic, said
Marshall. "Each WolfPack is very small, but collectively they gang up on
the signal," he added.
Equally, the units can used to monitor enemy communications signals. Think of
it as a Napster for military intelligence - each device can share the signals
it picks up with all the others.
Units can stay powered for up to two months in the field, and can be later
collected and re-used. Each node costs around $10,000. Together, they are
cheaper, less obtrusive and a much less obvious target for enemy intervention
than the aircraft-based systems used to jam or monitor communications at the
moment.
WolfPack prototypes will be put to the test with in the next 18 months, the
DoD said.