What is GPS spoofing? Science behind digital ghost haunting UAE flights

The skies over the United Arab Emirates and the Persian Gulf have turned into a high-tech danger zone. As the military friction between the US and Iran intensifies following Operation Epic Fury, commercial pilots are facing a terrifying new reality: their planes are being hijacked by invisible digital ghosts.

This phenomenon, known as GPS spoofing, is far more dangerous than simple signal blocking.

WHAT IS GPS SPOOFING, AND WHY IS IT DANGEROUS?

Most people are familiar with jamming, which is essentially radio noise that drowns out satellite signals. Spoofing is much more sinister. It involves sending a fake signal to an aircraft that the onboard computers believe is real. Instead of the navigation system failing, it shows the pilot a completely false location.

Spanish nationals, who are trapped in the Middle East amid the US and Israeli conflict with Iran, board a military repatriation flight at an unknown location in Oman. (Photo: Reuters)

Spanish nationals, who are trapped in the Middle East amid the US and Israeli conflict with Iran, board a military repatriation flight at an unknown location in Oman. (Photo: Reuters)

In recent incidents near the UAE border, aircraft systems suddenly indicated they were miles off course, sometimes appearing to fly over Iranian territory while actually remaining in international airspace. This creates a nightmare for pilots who must decide whether to trust their high-tech instruments or their manual backup tools.

If a pilot follows a spoofed signal, they could accidentally stray into restricted military zones, risking a lethal response.

HOW DOES ELECTRONIC WARFARE AFFECT CIVILIAN FLIGHTS?

The Middle East is currently home to some of the most advanced electronic warfare systems on the planet. Iran has deployed indigenous tech like the Cobra V8, which can disrupt signals up to 250 kilometres away. While these tools are designed to blind enemy missiles and drones, they do not discriminate.

Civilian airliners, which rely heavily on the Global Positioning System (GPS) for precision landing and fuel efficiency, are being caught in the crossfire. Reports suggest that over 1,000 vessels and hundreds of flights have experienced these digital hiccups since March 1. The confusion has forced many airlines to reroute, leading to longer flight times and increased fuel consumption.

CAN PILOTS PROTECT PLANES FROM FAKE SIGNALS?

Technology is evolving to fight back, but it is a cat-and-mouse game. Modern jets are being equipped with anti-spoofing software that checks if a signal is coming from a satellite or a ground-based attacker. However, the most reliable defence remains the human element.

Pilots are being trained to use old-school ground-based radio beacons and even physical maps when their digital displays start acting up. As the electronic fog of war thickens, the safety of thousands of passengers now depends on the ability of crew members to spot a digital lie before it leads them into a combat zone.

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