Dubai Telegraph - GPS war: Israel's battle to keep drones flying and enemies baffled

EUR -
AED 4.269899
AFN 72.662339
ALL 95.405511
AMD 428.950368
ANG 2.081712
AOA 1067.330384
ARS 1621.356113
AUD 1.625758
AWG 2.095711
AZN 1.980527
BAM 1.952809
BBD 2.342712
BDT 142.77316
BGN 1.941564
BHD 0.438736
BIF 3463.255005
BMD 1.162669
BND 1.486948
BOB 8.037827
BRL 5.923818
BSD 1.163118
BTN 111.565038
BWP 16.453082
BYN 3.236898
BYR 22788.315786
BZD 2.339357
CAD 1.600001
CDF 2610.191988
CHF 0.914404
CLF 0.026737
CLP 1052.20463
CNY 7.888827
CNH 7.922689
COP 4416.608133
CRC 527.637215
CUC 1.162669
CUP 30.810733
CVE 110.096369
CZK 24.325073
DJF 207.126313
DKK 7.473236
DOP 69.494752
DZD 154.501333
EGP 61.501196
ERN 17.440038
ETB 181.618544
FJD 2.561012
FKP 0.862572
GBP 0.871508
GEL 3.115639
GGP 0.862572
GHS 13.300856
GIP 0.862572
GMD 84.292821
GNF 10199.377903
GTQ 8.873523
GYD 243.351452
HKD 9.103781
HNL 30.934151
HRK 7.533282
HTG 152.299826
HUF 360.805293
IDR 20469.953455
ILS 3.394343
IMP 0.862572
INR 111.557996
IQD 1523.792263
IRR 1528909.962123
ISK 143.577646
JEP 0.862572
JMD 183.788496
JOD 0.82435
JPY 184.449292
KES 150.525696
KGS 101.675279
KHR 4666.932073
KMF 490.646704
KPW 1046.404385
KRW 1742.538579
KWD 0.358789
KYD 0.969332
KZT 546.063004
LAK 25509.366836
LBP 104161.250939
LKR 382.099678
LRD 212.857634
LSL 19.267337
LTL 3.433059
LVL 0.703287
LYD 7.385814
MAD 10.721878
MDL 20.122525
MGA 4841.667441
MKD 61.623296
MMK 2441.186696
MNT 4161.744004
MOP 9.381492
MRU 46.688489
MUR 54.842444
MVR 17.903675
MWK 2016.945397
MXN 20.182309
MYR 4.59372
MZN 74.305846
NAD 19.267089
NGN 1594.089176
NIO 42.805173
NOK 10.825322
NPR 178.503662
NZD 1.989595
OMR 0.447045
PAB 1.163138
PEN 3.987661
PGK 5.067239
PHP 71.634949
PKR 323.968666
PLN 4.244964
PYG 7088.143293
QAR 4.240006
RON 5.210505
RSD 117.405232
RUB 84.637916
RWF 1701.523095
SAR 4.380063
SBD 9.320115
SCR 15.845149
SDG 698.171038
SEK 10.967087
SGD 1.488321
SHP 0.86805
SLE 28.659693
SLL 24380.593665
SOS 664.793191
SRD 43.259365
STD 24064.904456
STN 24.462531
SVC 10.177412
SYP 128.512671
SZL 19.270732
THB 37.944894
TJS 10.852364
TMT 4.069342
TND 3.404286
TOP 2.799428
TRY 52.953804
TTD 7.895586
TWD 36.672333
TZS 3022.939585
UAH 51.358635
UGX 4367.310715
USD 1.162669
UYU 46.588642
UZS 13928.905095
VES 593.134301
VND 30642.146048
VUV 137.102475
WST 3.145716
XAF 654.965075
XAG 0.015168
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.142171
XCG 2.096325
XDR 0.813791
XOF 654.953826
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.471017
ZAR 19.394775
ZMK 10465.424388
ZMW 21.896838
ZWL 374.378999
  • RBGPF

    0.8900

    61.68

    +1.44%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    23.05

    -0.39%

  • CMSD

    -0.0828

    23.15

    -0.36%

  • VOD

    -0.7400

    14.74

    -5.02%

  • RIO

    -6.4150

    103.175

    -6.22%

  • BCE

    -0.1050

    24.085

    -0.44%

  • RELX

    0.8750

    32.335

    +2.71%

  • BCC

    -2.6200

    66.78

    -3.92%

  • NGG

    -7.5250

    79.905

    -9.42%

  • JRI

    -0.2815

    12.725

    -2.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    15.9

    -0.82%

  • GSK

    -0.9139

    49.585

    -1.84%

  • AZN

    -3.2000

    181.76

    -1.76%

  • BTI

    -1.8100

    64.89

    -2.79%

  • BP

    0.4392

    44.06

    +1%

GPS war: Israel's battle to keep drones flying and enemies baffled
GPS war: Israel's battle to keep drones flying and enemies baffled / Photo: Said KHATIB - AFP

GPS war: Israel's battle to keep drones flying and enemies baffled

Omer Sharar had just received the first delivery of his new GPS anti-jamming technology when Hamas militants attacked Israel on October 7.

Text size:

Since then he and his team at InfiniDome, a start-up based in Caesarea, north of Tel Aviv, have been working around the clock to prevent the Israeli army's mini-drones from being intercepted by cheap and simple jamming in Gaza.

Israel -- one of the world's main exporters of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) -- has for years waged a drone war along its borders, allowing it to monitor or target its enemies remotely with large, sophisticated airborne platforms.

During the war in Gaza, however, much smaller and cheaper drones, operated in far higher numbers, have come to the fore.

In recent years Hamas has developed its own arsenal of low-cost mini-drones equipped with explosive charges.

On October 7, the militants put these devices to use, evading detection and interception to drop bomblets on military observation posts along the security barrier around the Gaza Strip as part of its unprecedented attack that triggered the war with Israel.

While Israel continues to use larger UAVs to observe the besieged Palestinian territory -- with artificial intelligence suggesting targets to soldiers on the ground -- its troops have also been supplied with mini surveillance drones.

These fly at very low altitude and are capable of entering buildings and tunnels to determine whether they are safe for soldiers.

- Jamming and spoofing -

Devices that use satellite navigation systems, such as the US-government owned Global Positioning System (GPS), function by receiving signals from multiple satellites orbiting the Earth and using them to calculate a precise location.

But the signal is weaker the closer it is to the ground, making it easy and cheap to jam with more powerful signals, leaving any GPS-reliant drones helpless.

Hamas fighters have been doing just that, prompting Israeli soldier to secure their mini-UAVs with InfiniDome's GPSdome2 technology, which first came out in March 2023.

"We started delivering it to a couple of customers but actually our first real production batch came more or less in September," Sharar told AFP.

In one sense, it was "perfect timing", with employees deployed as part of Israel's response to the October 7 attack, he said.

"A third of us got drafted immediately to reserve forces because we have UAV operators here. We have officers working in the company," he said.

Chief executive Sharar and the company's chief technical officer were not among them but set themselves to work as part of the war effort.

"Both of us got into the company on Saturday (October 7) and we started doing final testing and packing up GPSdome2 and we started distributing them," he added.

As well as defending its own GPS use, Israel has taken measures to disrupt the GPS of Hamas and other opponents.

The specialist site gpsjam.org, which compiles geolocation signal disruption data based on aircraft data reports, reported a low level of disruption around Gaza on October 7.

But the next day, disturbances increased around the Palestinian territory and also along the border between Israel and Lebanon in the north.

The Israeli army said in the following days that it disrupted GPS "in a proactive manner for various operational needs". It warned of "various and temporary effects on location-based applications".

One AFP journalist on Abraham Lincoln Street in Jerusalem, for example, appeared as being in Nasr City, Cairo, on Google Maps.

Another in the West Bank city of Jenin was listed as being at Beirut airport on the navigation app Waze.

- Hamas to Hezbollah -

Todd E Humphreys and his team at the University of Texas at Austin track GPS signals in the Middle East and discovered an odd trend after October 7: the brief disappearance on screens of planes approaching Israel.

That was attributed to spoofing, whereby GPS data is manipulated to deliberately mislead a GPS receiver about its actual location.

"Our data are taken from satellites in low Earth orbit. Israel appears to be engaging in GPS spoofing as a defensive measure," Humphreys told AFP.

"The false GPS signals fool receivers in the area around northern Israel into thinking that they are at the Beirut–Rafic Hariri International Airport."

The war in Gaza has reignited tensions along Israel's border with Lebanon. There have been near-daily cross-border exchanges of fire between the army and Hezbollah militants backed by Israel's number one enemy, Iran.

Hezbollah has superior military capabilities to Hamas, including more sophisticated drones and precision missiles that can reach as far as the southern tip of Israel, its leader Hassan Nasrallah has said.

Sharar and his team have been learning every day from the war in Gaza but they have their eyes firmly fixed on Lebanon, which, he said, "potentially might be a lot more explosive".

O.Mehta--DT