VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД
breakingnews
Go to main page   USA   News   Debka: Whoever hacked the drone, hacked the CIA  
MORE ON THE STORY
Republican presidential candidate U.S. Rep. Ron Paul  (AFP Photo / Scott Olson) 16.12.2011, 21:01 44 comments

Ron Paul: the peace candidate for a war-torn nation

While the families of US soldiers rejoice this week at the end of operations in Iraq, Thursday night’s debate of potential Republican candidates revealed that just about everyone vying for the GOP nod wants to wage more war.

US Election 2012
Undated picture shows member of Iran's revolutionary guard pointing at U.S. RQ-170 unmanned spy plane as he speaks with Hajizadeh at unknown location in Iran (	REUTERS/Handout) 16.12.2011, 02:44 45 comments

How Iran hacked super-secret CIA stealth drone

More damage is being dished out to the US intelligence community as sources in Iran admit to hacking the CIA’s lost drone and bringing it down with not much more than computer navigating know-how.

Downed US drone in Iran
Predator C Avenger (Image from ga-asi.com) 14.12.2011, 23:29 45 comments

US will "absolutely" continue drone war on Iran

Even with the loss of not one, but two multi-million-dollar drones in recent weeks, the head of the US Defense Department says that America will “absolutely” continue stealth jets missions over Iran.

Downed US drone in Iran
Iranian Revolutionary Guard, Brigadier General Amir-Ali Hajizadeh (R) looking at what Iranian officials claim is the US RQ-170. Slogans on banner read in Farsi «Death to America, death to Israel, death to England.» (AFP Photo / Iran's Revolutionary Guard website) 14.12.2011, 22:09 17 comments

Cyber war accelerates between Iran and US

RT’s ongoing investigation of American drone aircraft being downed as a possible result of a cyber attack has been accentuated by recent confirmations by way of a documentary out of Mexico.

Drone crash in Seychelles 13.12.2011, 21:34 34 comments

Cyber war on US drones? Another spy craft crash, now in Seychelles

With America still scrambling to explain why and how they lost a drone aircraft over Iran last week, the Pentagon is trying to make sense of how another high-tech unmanned spy craft crashed Tuesday morning in the Seychelles.

Downed US drone in Iran

Debka: Whoever hacked the drone, hacked the CIA

Published: 17 December, 2011, 01:07

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) logo in lobby of the CIA Headquarters in Langley, Virginia (AFP Photo)

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) logo in lobby of the CIA Headquarters in Langley, Virginia (AFP Photo)

TAGS: Conflict, Nuclear, SciTech, Iran, USA


New reports investigating Iran’s interception of a top-secret drone craft belonging to the CIA allege that the hijacking of the stealth airship could have roots not just overseas but in Washington as well.

Ongoing reports from RT have revealed that Iranian intelligence officer claimed in recent days that the recovery of America’s RQ-170 Sentinel stealth drone on December 4 was not due to an equipment malfunction, as US authorities say happened with another craft last days later, but rather the handiwork of Iranian engineers.

As RT reported yesterday, overseas officials speaking on condition of anonymity say that they were able to crack the computers of the drone to hijack the craft and lead it to a safe landing after it caught the drone creeping over from a mission in Afghanistan. Now military sources speaking to Israel-based news outlet Debka insist that Iranian officials made their way into the drone commander centers at CIA headquarters outside of Washington in Langley, Virginia. Debka has close connections with the Israel intelligence community and in the past has been known for correctly reporting on issues of importance to the American intelligence community before US outlets.

According to the report, US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s insisting to Fox News this week that the Pentagon will “absolutely” continue drone missions over Iran was a falsity, as those inside the DoD have actually suspended those stealth missions out of Afghanistan as American authorities fear that a second craft will be apprehended as well by Iran.

Less than two weeks after Tehran intercepted the Sentinel, another US-manned drone crash-landed at an American base in the Indian Ocean island nation of Seychelles.

Debka’s report, published Friday, makes note of how during similar episodes in the past, the US upped their military operations after such accidents in order to ensure America that security is not threatened. In this instance, however, America responded by first denying the disappearance and then pleading with Iran to return the craft with no known drone operations being conducted over Iran since.

The Israel-based outlet adds that in addition to hacking the GPS network of the craft, as Iranian engineers admitted earlier this week, the command center in Langley must have been infiltrated as to keep those controlling the robotic plane from noticing that the craft had been guided onto an enemy base. Had the CIA been aware of the hacking of the GPS network only, adds Debka, they would have surely triggered the craft’s self-destruct mechanism, rendering any wreckage unmanageable for Iranian authorities recovering the debris. Instead, Tehran officials were left with a pristine drone craft and have since thanked America for the gift and claim that they have decoded the technology of the craft.

Debka’s analysis of the hijacking also raises a last point worth bringing up — with the Sentinel’s mission over Iran being the first such flight there for the craft, whoever intercepted it was well aware of the precise day and hour of the mission. With Washington doubting their technology out of Tehran, going as far as to call it an “ox-cart culture” in recent weeks, the possibility that the attack was infiltrated from within the United States or with the cooperation of American officials seems more than likely now.

The topic of a war with Iran was debated by contenders for the Republican Party’s nomination for president last night, though Congressman Ron Paul insisted that continued American missions like the one in question are only creating hostilities between nations.

"You're trying to dramatize this that we have to go and treat Iran like we've treated Iraq," Paul said. "You cannot solve these problems with war,” said the candidate.

+3 (3 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
NYPD 16.12.2011, 22:45 6 comments

NYPD involved in online scandal again

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has defended the NYPD for their actions on Occupy Wall Street demonstrators, even if they did beat peaceful protesters and arrest accredited journalists.

Occupy Wall Street
courtesy twitter.com/freddiegibbs 17.12.2011, 02:19 17 comments

TSA lets rapper keep his weed

When he’s not recording tunes like “Personal OG” and “National Anthem (Fuck the World),” rapper Freddie Gibbs likes to travel. He also likes to smoke weed. A real lot.

Nick (unregistered) January 18, 2012, 02:38
0

 ENJOY THE TOYS LADS. IT'S ALL YOU ARE GETTING.

Thomas January 15, 2012, 02:15
0

Robbie Sykes, what have you been smoking? Your Quote: "Does anyone on here have experience with drones?? I didn't think so. If the drone became "unaware" of where it is it will land itself in a safe manner. yes, Iran could have had something to do with this but it could be a malfunction. Why didn't it self destruct?? What if it landed in a school yard or near a hospital?? It was never supposed to blow itself up. It didn't have the capability." Even drones used for scientific purposes have a self destruct mechanism. The P-175, was a drone which had to be destroyed over the Antarctic, because it got lost! And this was a drone for a scientific mission only. And it was destroyed because of fear of being recovered by a foreign nation. And what if the drone captured by Iran would have landed near a school yard or hospital, would that change anything? A drone does not land by itself for safety reasons when it malfunctions. Only when you force a drone into autopilot (via jamming), and manipulating the GPS data for its destination, you can intercept it. When the jamming and GPS data change would not have happend, then Iran could never have gotten their hands on it. Via jamming only, it would have flown back to Afghanistan instead and still be in the possesion of the U.S. When a drone gets 'lost', you just blow it up! Sorry to destroy your bubble, but that's how it is.

Dennis (unregistered) January 14, 2012, 19:26
+1

It is a trojan horse folks, full of viruses and  locater pings,