Technology

China creates a cybercribe to capture other people's satellites in the event of war - Financial Times

The US military is afraid that China will relieve their benefits in the space sphere and make satellites not useful. China creates a complex cybercribe to influence enemy satellites during the war. Financial Times writes about it, citing US intelligence secret report. The CIA believes that China seeks to suppress, capture or use other people's satellites, because it considers them the main means of controlling information.

To do this, they will need a cyber -weapon that exceeds all the means of radio electronic wrestling, deployed by Russia during the war with Ukraine. According to the documents allegedly "fused" by the US Air Force, Jack Teshaira, Russian troops are trying to silence the signals between the low-orbital satellites of SpaceX and their terrestrial terminals with the help of Tirad-2 complexes that prevent the signals from making signals.

China, unlike the Russian Federation, develops its own technology to simulate the signals of the satellites themselves, intercepting them over them or causing critical failures when the opponent does not expect it. According to the report, such cyber -weapons in the hands of the Chinese military will make space equipment ineffective for maintaining communication systems, self -controlled missiles, observation and intelligence.

Satellites simply will not be able to contact each other, transmit images and valuable intelligence, help manage weapons. According to FT, the US Army never revealed whether it had the same space in space. Instead, Taiwan, the closest opponent of China, drew attention to the high efficiency of satellite communications in the war in Ukraine, and began to build its own network protected from fractures by the Chinese military.

One of the Taiwanese companies attracts investors to create their own satellite provider, simultaneously experimenting with non -station satellite receivers in 700 places across the country. US military officially stated that China has achieved significant success in the development of military space technologies, including satellite communications.

Thus, in March, US Space Commander, General Chansman Saltzman, during a speech in Congress, reported that Beijing was aggressively using anticossmic capabilities, trying to fulfill his "space dream": to become a leading state in space until 2045. "China continues to aggressively invest in technology intended for violation, degradation and destruction of our space opportunities," he said.

The retired General Charlie Moore, in the past, deputy US cyber team states that China is making a lot of efforts to deprive the US with preferences in space and cyberspace. According to him, in the PRC they try not only to improve their capabilities, but also to invent new technologies in the field of defense, onset and intelligence. Earlier there was information that China wants to learn how to knock down Starlink's satellites.