Wall Street Journal

Laser equipped shark

Reports that a fifth undersea communications cable in the Middle East has been damaged in less than a week — further compromising Internet access in countries there, and knocking Iran off the grid entirely – are triggering wild conspiracy theories about who’s at fault, from Islamic extremists to the CIA.

But BizTech readers can proceed with global business as planned: the reports aren’t true. So says Stephan Beckert, research director at TeleGeography, who studies these cables for a living. Beckert tells the Business Technology Blog that he hasn’t heard anything about a fifth cable from his sources in the industry and that the newspaper that reported the outage, the Khaleej Times in the United Arab Emirates, seems to have double counted two of the cables and missed a fourth one entirely.

Beckert also tells us that one of the cut cables wasn’t cut at all – it’s down because of a power outage. And while Iran is experiencing Internet slowdowns just like the rest of the Middle East, it isn’t off line. Beckert says that the most likely explanation is that a fishing boat damaged the cables by catching them in its net or that a ship accidentally cut them with its anchor – these are responsible for 65% and 18% of cable problems respectively. The first two cables were only 400 yards apart, suggesting that they were damaged in the same incident. “It might have been sharks with laser beams on their heads but I’m guessing it’s not,” says Beckert. Viewed this way, it’s two incidents in a week, which is higher than average but not unusual – last year their were 50 damaged cables in the Atlantic alone.

I don’t know much about undersea cable, but I do know a little about commercial fishing. Even if the nets are fishing the bottom for shrimp or lobster etc., I find it unlikely they could snag and break these lines. Dragging an anchor could definitely cause this, but it’s already been reported there were no ships in the area of at least two of the breaks. And yet I could be wrong. So I would like to apply the Dvorak BS Meter to this article, in the appropriate range.




  1. Uncle Dave says:

    Dr. Evil: You know, I have one simple request. And that is to have sharks with frickin’ laser beams attached to their heads! Now evidently my cycloptic colleague informs me that that cannot be done. Ah, would you remind me what I pay you people for, honestly? Throw me a bone here! What do we have?

    Number Two: Sea Bass.

    Dr. Evil: [pause] Right.

    Number Two: They’re mutated sea bass.

    Dr. Evil: Are they ill tempered?

    Number Two: Absolutely.

    Dr. Evil: Oh well, that’s a start.

  2. moss says:

    I could hardly disagree – much – with a McCullough; but, the sort of benthic [or bottom] trawling I grew up with screwed over sea bottoms enough that there are political organizations dedicated to sorting out the problems caused by this technique.

    That’s in the North Atlantic and I have no idea if the methods are the same in the Middle East.

    Either road – 2 of 3 cables are expected back up by Saturday, the 3rd on Sunday.

    http://tinyurl.com/3bnm5b

  3. Example of cables damaged by trawling nets from the (relatively)recent past to lessen the BS value:

    The Shanghai Daily reported on 21 Mar
    2001 that fishing equipment had snagged underwater cables off the coast of Shanghai three times in the past two months, causing havoc for millions of Net surfers. ….
    The problem centers on a type of fishing net developed in South Korea that uses anchors sunk into the seabed.”

  4. Greg Allen says:

    I used to live in that region when the sole cable (at the time) was severed.

    It slowed down the Internet but did not completely shut it down. As it was explained in the paper, the countries can still use satellites but they aren’t enough for the capacity.

  5. kanjy says:

    Of course this article is fishy. Look at the last quoted sentence. It contains “last year their were 50 damaged cables”–anyone who uses “their” instead of “there” is stupid.

  6. TIHZ_HO says:

    #1 Uncle Dave

    I obviously got too much time on my hands latley…

    http://tinyurl.com/3bym7v

    You will never want to swim again…! AHHHHHHHH!

    Cheers

  7. TIHZ_HO says:

    # 5 kanjy

    anyone who uses “their” instead of “there” is stupid

    Well to be fair spell checker is quite often the blame for many screw ups lick that.

    Cheers

  8. brian t says:

    No, please don’t blame the spelling checker for being a spelling checker, and not a grammar and vocabulary checker. When you mix up homophones like that, it shows that you are picking words based on how they sound, and not on what they mean. There’s no confusion if you actually read books, and learn how they are used in practice.

  9. amodedoma says:

    I bet the Navy Seals could’ve done this one. Nada, short dive, little explosives, no problemo.
    In fact if ‘we’ did it, you know it had to be a seal team.

  10. TIHZ_HO says:

    Brian – Yes, I agree. I do still have to watch what the auto correct has done especially when I’m in a hurry.

    Sure, people do make mistakes with “there” and “here” and you are correct, however many times it was just a mistake. Happens to the best of us, typing one thing and thinking another. 🙂

    Cheers

  11. Stefan says:

    Expert on undersea cables says: “a fishing boat damaged the cables by catching them in its net or that a ship accidentally cut them with its anchor – these are responsible for 65% and 18% of cable problems respectively.”

    Blogger says: “Nah, I don’t think so.”

    Hmm.. who should I believe now?

  12. ECA says:

    Map of the area..

  13. Dave says:

    Have standards dropped in cable laying? I helped lay the SE-ME-WE-3 cable in India & Pakistan as well as several cables in Philippines & Singapore about 10 years ago. We used to bury the cables 2m into the seabed using an underwater plough anywhere that vessels could get to, in case they accidentally dragged an anchor over the cable. They figured 2m was deep enough to survive any anchor drag. Will be interesting to get the final story on why these cables failed.

  14. TIHZ_HO says:

    #13 Dave

    From the image from #12 ECA’s post looks like a Earthquake could have done it.

    It was an Earthquake near Taiwan which severed a major line a few years ago.

    Cheers

  15. Angus says:

    Here’s a bone to the conspiracy theorists.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uss_Jimmy_Carter

    This sub was modified early on in its construction to do this sort of stuff.

    But, truthfully, I think the internet is one of the great weapons the west has to combat radical Islamic fundamentalism. The more information that gets into this region, the better. We’d be fools to do anything to disrupt it.

  16. JPV says:

    http://antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=12329

    The Cable-Cutter Mystery
    Spies, lies, and “conspiracy theories” – what’s behind the Middle East internet outage
    by Justin Raimondo

    I was skeptical, at first, of speculation over the cutting of two cables linking the Middle East with the Internet, which had it as part of some Vast Neocon Conspiracy to isolate the region prior to a US military assault. However, when two more cables – this time, in the Persian Gulf – were mysteriously cut, I began to wonder ….

    In a piece headlined “Cable cutter nutters chase conspiracy theories,” The Register goes out of its way to laugh off the prospect that what we are witnessing is a military operation, or the prelude to one, sniffing “there’s little more than suspicions to work with” since we’ve yet to reach the damaged cables. Yet, given the sort of government we are dealing with – a regime that lied us into one war, and is not-so-subtly trying to finagle us into yet another one – why shouldn’t we be suspicious? We’d have to be crazy not to be.

    The Economist follows suit, sneering at “internet conspiracy theories” and denouncing the whole brouhaha as an “online frenzy” that is “way out of line.” Yet one has to wonder: four cable cuts in the past week? I’m with Steven Bellovin, a computer science professor at Columbia University, who avers:

    “As a security guy, I’m paranoid, but I don’t understand the threat model here. On the other hand, four accidental failures in a week is a bit hard to swallow, too. Let’s hope there will be close, open examination of the failed parts of the cables.”

    First it was supposed to be a ship’s anchor that caused the damage, and yet the Egyptians have said there were no ships in the vicinity, which they regularly monitor: besides which, that entire area near Alexandria is off-limits to all shipping. Another reason to suspect a deliberate act: this politically-sensitive region is an Internet choke-point, as ABC News points out. “The route connecting Europe to Egypt, and from there to the Middle East” is tenuous:

    “Today, just three major data cables stretch from Italy to Egypt and run down the Suez Canal, and from there to much of the Middle East. (A separate line connects Italy with Israel.) A serious cut here is immediately obvious across the region, and a double cut can be crippling.”

    Yet theories that this incident prefigures a US attack on Iran don’t comport with the facts: Iran, far from being isolated by the cuts, may have enjoyed better connectivity as a result of the events. The areas hardest hit were Kuwait, Egypt, and especially Pakistan – this last being a likelier target for isolation than Iran, and certainly more current

    Another, and far more plausible, theory is that the seemingly coordinated cuts resulted from efforts to tap into the cables – a spying operation. Go here for an exhaustive and very convincing case for viewing this as “special warfare.”

    The Register cites Prof. Bellovin, but fails to note the real gist of his remarks. While he’s skeptical of the above-cited link, which posits a scenario whereby the USS Jimmy Carter, present whereabouts unknown, uses its specially designed facilities to tap directly into the cables, Bellovin poses an alternative scenario:

    “If if wasn’t a direct attempt at eavesdropping, perhaps it was indirect. Several years ago, a colleague and I wrote about link-cutting attacks. In these, you cut some cables, to force traffic past a link you’re monitoring. Link-cutting for such purposes isn’t new; at the start of World War I, the British cut Germany’s overseas telegraph cable to force them to use easily-monitored links. One of the messages they intercepted — and cryptanalyzed — was the Zimmerman telegram, which asked Mexico to join Germany in attacking the US, in exchange for financial support and recovery of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Instead, public outrage in the US contributed to the decision to enter the war against Germany.”

    “The problem with this scenario,” he adds, “is that the benefit is short-lived: the cables will be repaired in a few weeks.” Yes, but long enough to have accomplished – what? We can’t know, of course, but Prof. Bellovin certainly raises some interesting possibilities, none of which can be discounted by clueless journalists who sniff at “conspiracy theories” – as if we have no reason whatsoever to suspect covert action, by the US or whomever, in that area of the world. As Prof. Bellovin and a co-author point out in this paper on the subject: “Attacks on the routing system, with the goal of diverting traffic past an enemy-controlled point for purposes of eavesdropping or connection-hijacking, have long been known.”

    Given the context in which these cable cuts are occurring – heightened tensions in the region, and not only with Iran – I think it is probable that they are deliberate, and that the diversion of internet traffic for purposes of eavesdropping is clearly the intent. After all, ask yourself this question: which is more plausible, an “accidental” cutting of four cables in one week in an area of the world which is the current focus of US military and diplomatic efforts, or the scenario outlined by Prof. Bellovin?

    None of this is at all surprising. The US government currently claims the right to spy on Americans, in their own country, as well as when they’re in communication with overseas individuals. They don’t hide this, but proclaim it from the rooftops: does anyone doubt they are capable of commandeering the world’s internet cable network in order to utilize it for their own purposes? You don’t have to quaff the “conspiracy theorist” Kool-Aid to find this credible: a dose of realism will do.

  17. Tech_1 says:

    It was robotic mini subs.

  18. The Monster's Lawyer says:

    #8 Brain T — You’re a homophone. Your over analising it. 🙂

  19. the answer says:

    Do they really need to be online? I mean come on. Isn’t against their religion to use anything that can bring them pr0n or anything related to Disney or some BS like that? “you watch that LEvi’s advertisement? INFADEL INFADEL!!!.” Blah blah blah.

  20. Li says:

    The possibility of this being some sort of economic hit cannot be discounted either; sometime in the next few weeks, Iran was supposed to have opened up their new Euro based oil market, which is going to be bad for the value of the dollar, but that has now been delayed according to some of the economists that I listen to. Also, this move plays into the attempts that have been made over the last few weeks to shore up the dollar by gaming the commodities markets, as it has slowed the acquisition of precious metals by the people of India in particular, decreasing demand, and thus preventing gold from breaking the important psychological barrier of $1k/oz.

    I’m sure something is going on, I just don’t know what. I like this explanation better, because it doesn’t suggest that we are about to commit the disastrous strategic mistake of opening up a third front in east asia. Not that that isn’t possible, given the caliber (.45) of our current leadership.

  21. San says:

    Love the BS meter 😛 😛 😛

  22. Victor says:

    Dvorak, this cable cutting conspiracy theory is complete NONSENSE.

    The majority of these cables are down due to MAINTENANCE issues, not cuts. I’m told this by friends at Flag Telecom.

    Yes, two cables were cut by either anchor drops or fishing nets. This is fairly common in the Med given the shallow water depths. But, the rest are maintenance issues.

    Also, remember, when Flag repairs these cables, they send a ship out to where they think the cable sits. They then throw a hook off the back of the ship and drag it until they find the cable. Not exactly high tech.

    During the last major cut in Korean, it took Flag one week to find the cable, not to mention several days of delay for their ship to set sail – – due to maintenance issues. The cable was ultimately found resting nearly one mile from where they were looking (due, supposedly, to an underwater mud slide.)

    If you want a conspiracy: Flag slashed its maintenance budget after being acquired by Reliance, an Indian company, after emerging from Chapter 11. This has caused most of these problems, if not due to simple coincidence. Also, it might be partly due to the aging of these cables.

    This is not rocket science. Look for more of these types of issues in the future.

    If you want to disable the internet, simply select the right six man holes in Manhattan. (See WSJ 1998). Drop explosives into them, and down goes the internet (and with it, the global communications infrastructure).

  23. marty0577 says:

    This cable cutting business is getting a little out of hand now, isn’t it?


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