CBS/AP/ December 17, 2009, 4:29 AM

Insurgents Intercepted Drone Spy Videos

Updated at 6:35 p.m. EST

Insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan have hacked into live video feeds from Predator drones, a key weapon in a Pentagon spy system that serves as the U.S. military's eyes in the sky for surveillance and intelligence collection.

Though militants could see the video, there is no evidence they were able to jam the electronic signals from the unmanned aerial craft or take control of the vehicles, a senior defense official said Thursday, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence issues.

Obtaining the video feeds can provide insurgents with critical information about what the military may be targeting, including buildings, roads and other facilities.

CBSNews.com Special Report: Afghanistan

Shiite fighters in Iraq used off-the-shelf software programs such as SkyGrabber - available for as little as $25.95 on the Internet - to regularly capture drone video feeds, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. The interception, first done there at least a year ago, was possible because the remotely flown planes had unprotected communications links.

Within the last several months, the military has found evidence of at least one instance where insurgents in Afghanistan also monitored U.S. drone video, a second defense official said. He had no details on how many times it was done in Afghanistan or by which group.

As CBSNews.com's Declan McCullagh reports, .

In 2002, a British engineer who enjoys scanning satellite signals for fun stumbled across a NATO video feed from the Kosovo war. CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips reported then on the apparent surveillance security shortfall, and the U.S. military's decision to essentially let it slide.

The Defense Department has addressed the issue, and is working to encrypt all of its drone video feeds from Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, defense officials said. One defense official noted that upgrading the encryption in the drones is a lengthy process because there are at least 600 unmanned vehicles along with thousands of ground stations to address.

Officials said that systems in key threat areas were upgraded first.

Dale Meyerrose, former chief information officer for the U.S. intelligence community, compared the problem to street criminals listening to police scanners.

"This was just one of the signals, a broadcast signal, and there was no hacking. It is the interception of a broadcast signal," said Meyerrose, who worked to field the unmanned systems in the 1990s, when he was a senior Air Force officer.

The problem, he said, is that when the drones were first being developed they were using commercial equipment, which as time goes on could become vulnerable to intercepts.

Read more: U.S. Warned of Predator Drone Hacking

The Predator, also currently used in the hunt for al Qaeda and other militants in Pakistan, Somalia and elsewhere, can fly for hours remotely controlled by pilots thousands of miles away. It can fly armed or unarmed, and is part of a growing arsenal of such craft that includes the Reaper and Raven as well as a new, high-tech video sensor system called the Gorgon Stare, being installed on Reapers.

In the first 11 months of the Obama Administration there have been 47 Predator missile strikes inside Pakistsan - as many as were launched during the entire Bush presidency, report s CBS News correspondent Bob Orr.

The military has known about the vulnerability for more than a decade but assumed adversaries would not be able to exploit it.

Then in December 2008, the military apprehended a Shiite militant in Iraq whose laptop contained files of intercepted drone video feeds, the Journal reported. In July, they found pirated feeds on other militant laptops, leading some officials to conclude that groups trained and funded by Iran were regularly intercepting feeds and sharing them with multiple extremist groups.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates asked the Pentagon's intelligence chief, James R. Clapper, Jr., to look into the problem and coordinate the work to address it. Officials said that when the intercepts were discovered in July 2008, it raised concerns, but technical adjustments were not difficult and were put in motion quickly.

The hacking is just another example of how formidable and inventive the extremists can be. The U.S. has spent billions of dollars, for instance, fighting homemade bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan, the No. 1 killer of troops and the weapon of choice by militants who have easy access to the materials needed to make them and use modern telecommunications networks to exchange information about how to improve them.

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said the military continually evaluates the technologies it uses and quickly corrects any vulnerabilities found.

(AP)

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
54 Comments Add a Comment
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50BMS13 says:
Google, or Bing, MQ-9 Reaper Gorgon....A $15,000,000 surveillance system that can locate and follow over 60 targets in real time. These MQ-1 Drones are fitted with a single camera system for a single target. It is obsolete already. Who cares if they had a glitch in the camera system. The new "Gorgon" is amazing. 64 live feeds in real time!
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finkfurst replies:
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50BMS13 - You really relish your killing machines, don't you?
50BMS13 replies:
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finkfurst
They are peace-keeping machines. When you take out the enemy, the enemy that wants to kill you, you create peace. If Al-Qaeda and the Taliban lay down their weapons and surrender, the fighting will be over...
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slownewsday___ says:
Just curiously, why post the technical specs of the drone we're currently using in wartime actions on a major news page?

I mean, if someone feels like looking it up, great, but otherwise... why just give it to everyone without their asking? Is it just a neat graphic for your story?

.
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50BMS13 replies:
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The USAF has top secret stealth drones that are still classified. These are the cheap drones. Slownewsday__.....are you the slownewsday I know or is there other slownewsdays?
finkfurst replies:
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by slownewsday___ December 18, 2009 12:29 AM EST
Just curiously, why post the technical specs of the drone we're currently using in wartime actions on a major news page?
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Who the hell do you think provided the information???? Why can't you idiot Yanks ever see beyond the end of your nose?
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bubbadubba says:
"Hey Ahmed, that looks like our house on the video.No really, that's my IED parts and vest next to the AK47. Is that the neighbor's camel in our yard? What's that noise, sounds like a train. I don't remember a train being close to..............AHHHHHHHH,,,,,,,,,
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50BMS13 replies:
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bubbadubba
ROFLMAO....too funny!
50BMS13 replies:
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bubbadubba
Still the funniest post I seen these last 2 days!
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nocatnowaco says:
good price. if the software is just $26, one would wonder how munch the joy stick will be sold for when it will become available? is the hardware will be made in china?
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rwsmith29456 says:
"I've intercepted a video from a drone"..."Where is it?"...."It seems to be circling over a building." KA-BLOOOOOOOOOOOM!
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50BMS13 replies:
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rwsmith29456
LOL...funny!
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pensacola8-2009 says:
The video streaming was purposely left unsecured because it was felt that if it was known that a surveillance was plane was flying around, then the suspects would be seen coming out of the their hiding places to flee for cover, and provide analysts a real-time way to verify that a target of opportunity was present for destruction. The places of cover were also of equal interest, too.

In many ways, the video-streaming drones replicate the network coverage of the Twin Tower attacks seen live on September 11th.
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bubbadubba replies:
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And what people are not being told is that decoy videos are being transmitted openly so the targets will think the drones are in another location.
This story doesn't matter, the terrorist will never know if the video they hacked into is real or fake.
amurguz replies:
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Much like the U.S. government...is it real, or fake?
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oldwhiteguy1 says:
Perhaps, its OK that insurgents can see the drone video feeds.
Its flying, its flying, its flying...BOOM-you're dead! Its like an old fashioned 'public hanging!'
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Skruffy1 says:
In light of the fact that we've been using these drones with little or no encrpytion, maybe we should be a little less smug about our ability to see and kill bad guys (or people who look like bad guys... anyone near bad guys... or wedding parties) from halfway around the globe from the safety of nice air-conditioned quarters without getting our hands dirty.
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dwilson59 replies:
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Its good to be the USA
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50BMS13 says:
BEWARE OF THE REAPER!!! Moooooooooooouuuuuuuuaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!

When planting IED's keep an eye to the sky!!!!!
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50BMS13 says:
Allah must hate the drones...after all, they are going after his loyal IED implanters and terrorists...and the "sets of 72 virgins" must be fatiguing to produce and get ready.....
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