https://t.co/3I1qytgiqa#POTUS POTUS #DOJ DOJ #FBI FBI #CIA CIA #DIA DIA #ODNI ODNI #News #Times #NewsAndTimes #NT #TNT Putin Russia #Putin #Russia #GRU GRU #Israel Israel #World World #USA USA
The News And Timeshttps://t.co/PH3LtsdUTH | https://t.co/N97PQoK4kU…— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 24, 2023
Day: November 24, 2023
#WagnerGroup, #HamasAttack #MOSSAD #IDF #KNESSET #NETANYAHU #Gaza #Israel #Palestine #Ofakim #SuperNova #Reim
“Suddenly out of nowhere they [militants] come inside with gunfire…”:
M.N.: Where these the Wagner fighters who infiltrated the festival and hid by mixing with the… pic.twitter.com/GD647eS906
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 24, 2023
#WagnerGroup, #HamasAttack #MOSSAD #IDF #KNESSET #NETANYAHU #Gaza #Israel #Palestine #Ofakim #SuperNova
Hamas Israel attacks: The international victims of the assault on Israel https://t.co/p3QyNUBjBx
The total is about at least 50-60 MISSING Foreign nationals in Re’im Festival… pic.twitter.com/sbIlNgEDUv— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 24, 2023
route 232 in south israel near gaza border – Google Search https://t.co/B0sfxchzFn Quote: “One of the findings reinforcing this assessment, according to police and other senior security figures, is that the first terrorists arrived at the location from Route 232, and not from the… pic.twitter.com/nHIrToXyPp
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 24, 2023
Osher Vaknin and his twin Michael Vaknin – Google Search https://t.co/xLXyHX3YQD pic.twitter.com/xJV3xwkE0X
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 24, 2023
WASHINGTON – The potential for electronic warfare (EW) jamming that can knock out satellite navigation over wide areas is a very real threat. Perfect Jammer reports. Continue reading original article
The Military & Aerospace Electronics take:
5 Sept. 2019 — the potential effects of GPS jammers are not widely known, yet the threat gets bigger the more we rely on GPS. As a result, more and more countries are committed to developing GPS interference devices.
Because jamming technology now decides the battle. Whoever gains the upper hand in an electronic jamming war will determine the course of the war.
The U.S. Government is buying one hundred portable drone jammers to protect government facilities, property and personnel. The jammer interferes with the drone’s radio controls, avoiding dangerous alternatives involving bullets and other projectiles.
Related: Electronic warfare (EW) upgrades to boost EA-18G electronic attack
John Keller, chief editor
Military & Aerospace Electronics
portable electronic jamming equipment can be disguised as musical equipment – Google Search https://t.co/ccs7Y4gasi electronic warfare (EW) portable jammers | Military Aerospace pic.twitter.com/gvsJGK21Zx
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 24, 2023
portable electronic jamming equipment can be disguised as musical equipment – Google Search https://t.co/4go16PMExk Jamstik Studio Review: An Innovative MIDI Controller Disguised As A Travel-Friendly Guitar pic.twitter.com/pzLiJo3sE1
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) November 24, 2023
Jamming underpins the electronic attack mission. Electronic attack is a subset of the wider Electronic Warfare (EW) discipline discussed in more detail elsewhere. Jamming was first used offensively during the Second World War to attack radars and radios. Both these latter systems transmit radio signals. Radars do this to detect and track an object, radios do this to send and receive voice and data traffic.
At its simplest, jamming is intended to degrade the ability of radars or radios to perform their tasks, or even prevent them from doing so altogether. The jamming process also harnesses radio signals but does so in such a way as to attack these systems. Put simply, jamming uses artificially created radio interference offensively. An example of how jamming works can be witnessed when a car drives under a powerline with its radio on. The sound of the radio suddenly becomes drowned out by interference. This is caused by the electromagnetic radiation from the powerlines.
A jamming signal, known as a waveform, will be transmitted towards a radar or radio’s antenna. The intention is for the antenna to detect this signal. To ensure this occurs, the signal is transmitted on a frequency which can be detected by the antenna and which matches the frequency of the signal the jamming is targeting: If a radar is transmitting its signal on a frequency of 3.6 gigahertz/GHz, the jamming signal must be the same.
However, jamming a radar or radio successfully not only depends on the jamming signal’s frequency. Signal amplitude is also important. Let us consider a radio receiving traffic with amplitudes at a certain number of watts. If the jamming signal is weaker than the signals received by the radio then those latter signals will be left undisturbed. The jamming signal will be detected too but will be too weak to have any discernible effect.
If the jamming signal is stronger than the traffic received by the radio it will ‘wash out’ the former. In electronic warfare, jamming is effective when the radio or radar is receiving rather than transmitting. This is because the incoming radio signals will already be comparatively weak. This reduces the power levels the jammer needs to be effective. To explain how jamming works, imagine a solo violinist and a heavy rock band on the same stage. The solo violinist starts to play but their music immediately becomes inaudible when the rock band starts. This does not mean that the violinist’s music has stopped, merely that the loudness of the band drowns out the soloist.
Electronic Jamming Tactics
Jamming has increased in sophistication as electronic warfare has developed and includes an array of tactics. Barrage jamming is performed against two or more frequencies. This can be useful when the aggressor does not know exactly which radio or radar frequencies their adversary is using. Nonetheless, they may know with reasonable certainty which waveband of frequencies they may be using. Spot jamming is performed against specific frequencies known to be in use.
The advent of solid-state electronics in the 1960s revolutionised jamming. It enabled the development of sophisticated Digital Radio Frequency Memory (DRFM) systems. These are particularly useful for jamming radars. DRFMs detect an incoming radar signal, sample that signal and then subtly alert it, before retransmitting it back to the radar. This new, but false, signal could confuse the radar by presenting two or more targets where there was previously only one. It could show the target as appearing to travel faster or slower than it actual is. This tactic is known as deception jamming.
Likewise, false signals could be composed by the DRFM and transmitted to convince the radar there is a far more prominent or attractive target in its field-of-view rather than the one it originally detected. This tactic is known as seduction jamming. Over the long term, the advent of artificial intelligence techniques will make jamming tactics and techniques ever more sophisticated.