The Prague Post - GPS war: Israel's battle to keep drones flying and enemies baffled

EUR -
AED 4.229702
AFN 76.819807
ALL 96.750177
AMD 440.59084
ANG 2.061562
AOA 1056.129059
ARS 1679.794185
AUD 1.763672
AWG 2.0731
AZN 1.955547
BAM 1.955795
BBD 2.319304
BDT 140.549648
BGN 1.956897
BHD 0.434274
BIF 3394.791489
BMD 1.151722
BND 1.501296
BOB 7.986015
BRL 6.161156
BSD 1.151497
BTN 102.160526
BWP 15.461028
BYN 3.92569
BYR 22573.753405
BZD 2.315994
CAD 1.619391
CDF 2579.857505
CHF 0.930275
CLF 0.027625
CLP 1083.65364
CNY 8.197267
CNH 8.208709
COP 4442.157636
CRC 577.798551
CUC 1.151722
CUP 30.520636
CVE 110.264724
CZK 24.331684
DJF 205.060376
DKK 7.466683
DOP 74.170136
DZD 150.566779
EGP 54.425206
ERN 17.275832
ETB 175.771322
FJD 2.621837
FKP 0.875721
GBP 0.877376
GEL 3.126977
GGP 0.875721
GHS 12.551969
GIP 0.875721
GMD 83.516217
GNF 9998.974931
GTQ 8.825016
GYD 240.919396
HKD 8.952855
HNL 30.289056
HRK 7.537675
HTG 150.769622
HUF 387.406498
IDR 19239.517889
ILS 3.747422
IMP 0.875721
INR 102.215165
IQD 1508.502767
IRR 48458.70823
ISK 145.566509
JEP 0.875721
JMD 184.839537
JOD 0.81658
JPY 177.427352
KES 148.745447
KGS 100.71696
KHR 4634.0085
KMF 490.6331
KPW 1036.549778
KRW 1648.816902
KWD 0.353855
KYD 0.959598
KZT 604.945352
LAK 24996.93733
LBP 103121.489145
LKR 350.579121
LRD 211.310388
LSL 19.933837
LTL 3.400736
LVL 0.696665
LYD 6.288984
MAD 10.726773
MDL 19.599036
MGA 5194.986976
MKD 61.531257
MMK 2418.400137
MNT 4130.289158
MOP 9.219777
MRU 45.796885
MUR 52.921745
MVR 17.625611
MWK 1996.803663
MXN 21.293177
MYR 4.836657
MZN 73.594638
NAD 19.933837
NGN 1664.42269
NIO 42.379894
NOK 11.674362
NPR 163.46059
NZD 2.019452
OMR 0.442921
PAB 1.151697
PEN 3.87669
PGK 4.855988
PHP 67.706269
PKR 325.657584
PLN 4.25445
PYG 8171.979512
QAR 4.209089
RON 5.085087
RSD 117.193464
RUB 93.127727
RWF 1673.159487
SAR 4.319458
SBD 9.487164
SCR 15.773822
SDG 692.762312
SEK 10.924718
SGD 1.502099
SHP 0.86409
SLE 26.685676
SLL 24151.036296
SOS 658.09835
SRD 44.352241
STD 23838.322411
STN 24.499939
SVC 10.075975
SYP 12734.311109
SZL 19.92795
THB 37.385084
TJS 10.628543
TMT 4.031027
TND 3.403906
TOP 2.697453
TRY 48.425745
TTD 7.79898
TWD 35.573819
TZS 2832.793012
UAH 48.426179
UGX 4007.00735
USD 1.151722
UYU 45.899885
UZS 13786.965434
VES 255.070572
VND 30304.112224
VUV 140.082323
WST 3.224334
XAF 655.958203
XAG 0.023587
XAU 0.000286
XCD 3.112587
XCG 2.075395
XDR 0.816283
XOF 655.955355
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.686503
ZAR 19.96607
ZMK 10366.888179
ZMW 25.651047
ZWL 370.85405
  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.69

    -0.25%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.95

    -0.17%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    16.02

    +0.37%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    74.98

    -0.36%

  • GSK

    -0.6050

    46.255

    -1.31%

  • BP

    -0.0750

    35.055

    -0.21%

  • RIO

    -1.1100

    70.63

    -1.57%

  • BTI

    1.2700

    52.46

    +2.42%

  • JRI

    -0.1200

    13.78

    -0.87%

  • RBGPF

    -3.0000

    76

    -3.95%

  • RYCEF

    0.1900

    15.34

    +1.24%

  • BCC

    -2.0900

    68.4

    -3.06%

  • BCE

    -0.4200

    22.44

    -1.87%

  • RELX

    -0.2100

    44.03

    -0.48%

  • AZN

    -1.3100

    81.09

    -1.62%

  • VOD

    -0.6040

    11.446

    -5.28%

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".

P.Svatek--TPP