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Connecting
The Many Undersea Cut Cable Dots
BY
RICHARD SAUDER (IDN) *
So
now we can add to our list of data points the professed intent of the
American military to “fight the net”, using a “robust offensive
suite of capabilities” in a “ full-range electronic and computer
network attack.”
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The
trouble began on January 30
with CNN reports that two cables were
cut off the Egyptian Mediterranean coast, initially severely disrupting
Internet and telephone traffic from Egypt to India and many points in
between. According to CNN the two cut cables “account for as much as
three-quarters of the international communications between Europe and
the Middle East.“
CNN
reported that the two cut cables off the Egyptian coast were “FLAG
Telecom's FLAG Europe-Asia cable and SeaMeWe-4, a cable owned by a
consortium of more than a dozen telecommunications companies”.(10)
Other reports placed one of the cut cables, SeaMeWe-4, off the coast of
France, near Marseille.(9)(12)
However,
many news organizations reported two cables cut off the Egyptian coast,
including the SeaMeWe-4 cable connecting Europe with the Middle East.
The
possibilities are thus three, based on the reporting in the news media:
1)
the SeaMeWe-4 cable was cut off the coast of France, and mistakenly
reported as being cut off the coast of Egypt, because it runs from
France to Egypt;
2)
the SeaMeWe-4 cable was cut off the Egyptian coast and mistakenly
reported as being cut off the coast of France, because it runs from
France to Egypt; or
3)
the SeaMeWe-4 cable was cut both off the Egyptian and the French coasts,
nearly simultaneously, leading to confusion in the reporting.
I
am not sure what to think, because most reports, such as this one from
the International Herald Tribune, referred to two cut cables off the
Egyptian coast, one of the two being the SeaMeWe4 cable,(11) while other
reports also referred to a cut cable off the coast of France.(9)(12)
It thus appears that the same cable may have suffered two cuts,
both off the French and the Egyptian coasts. So there were likely
actually three undersea cables cut in the Mediterranean on 30 January
2008.
In
the case of the cables cut off the Egyptian coast, the news media
initially advanced the explanation that the cables had been cut by
ships' anchors.(10)(13) But on 3 February the Egyptian Ministry of
Communications and Information Technology said that a review of video
footage of the coastal waters where the two cables passed revealed that
the area had been devoid of ship traffic for the 12 hours preceding and
the 12 hours following the time of the cable cuts.(5)(11) So the cable
cuts cannot have been caused by ship anchors, in view of the fact that
there were no ships there.
The
cable cutting was just getting started. Two days later an undersea cable
was reported cut in the Persian Gulf, 55 kilometers off of Dubai.(11)
The cable off of Dubai was reported by CNN to be a FLAG Falcon
cable.(10) And then on 3 February came reports of yet another damaged
undersea cable, this time between Qatar and the UAE (United Arab
Emirates).(6)(7)(11)
The
confusion was compounded by another report on February
1 of a
cut undersea cable running through the Suez to Sri Lanka.(19) If the
report is accurate this would represent a sixth cut cable. The same
article mentions the cut cable off of Dubai in the Persian Gulf, but
seeing as the Suez is on the other side of the Arabian peninsula from
the Persian Gulf, the article logically appears to be describing two
separate cable cutting incidents.
These
reports were followed on February 4
with a report of even more cut undersea
cables. The Khaleej Times reported a total of five damaged undersea
cables: two off of Egypt and the cable near Dubai, all of which have
already been mentioned in this report.
But
then the Khaleej Times mentions two that have not been mentioned
elsewhere, to my knowledge:
1)
a cable in the Persian Gulf near Bandar Abbas, Iran, and
2)
the SeaMeWe4 undersea cable near Penang, Malaysia.(3)
The
one near Penang, Malaysia appears to represent a separate incident
altogether. The one near Bandar Abbas is reported separately from the
one off Dubai and is evidently not the same incident, since the report
says, “FLAG near the Dubai coast” and
“FALCON near Bandar Abbas in Iran” were both cut. Bandar
Abbas is on the other side of the Persian Gulf from Qatar and the UAE,
and so presumably the cut cable near Bandar Abbas is not the one in that
incident either. Interestingly, the report also states that, “The
first cut in the undersea Internet cable occurred on January 23, in the
Flag Telcoms FALCON submarine cable which was not reported.(3) This news
article deals primarily with the outage in the UAE, so it raises the
question as to whether this is a reference to yet a ninth cut cable that
has not hit the mainstream news cycle in the United States.
By
my count, we are probably dealing with as many as eight, maybe even
nine, unexplained cut or damaged undersea cables in late
January-early February 2008, and not the mere three or four that most
mainstream news media outlets in the United States have reported.
Given
all this cable-cutting mayhem in the span of mere days, who knows but
what there may have possibly been other cut and/or damaged cables that
did not make it into the news cycle, because they were lost in the
general cable-cutting noise by this point. Nevertheless, let me
enumerate what I can, and keep in mind, I am not pulling these out of a
hat; all of the sources are referenced at the conclusion of the article;
you can click through and look at all the evidence that I have. It's
there if you care to read through it all.
-
one off of Marseille, France
-
two off of Alexandria, Egypt
-
one off of Dubai, in the Persian Gulf
-
one off of Bandar Abbas, Iran in the Persian Gulf
-
one between Qatar and the UAE, in the Persian Gulf
-
one in the Suez, Egypt
-
one
near Penang, Malaysia
-
initially unreported cable cut on 23 January 2008 (Persian Gulf?)
Three
things stand out about these incidents:
·
- all of them, save one,
have occurred in waters near predominantly Muslim nations, causing
disruption in those countries;
·
- all but two of the cut/damaged
cables are in Middle Eastern waters;
·
- so many like incidents in such
a short period of time suggests that they were not accidents, but were
in fact deliberate acts, i.e., sabotage.
The
evidence therefore suggests that we are looking at a coordinated program
of undersea cable sabotage by an actor, or actors, on the international
stage with an anti-Muslim bias, as well as a proclivity for destructive
violence in the Middle Eastern region.
The
question then becomes: are there any actors on the international stage
who exhibit a strong, anti-Muslim bias in their foreign relations, who
have the technical capability to carry out clandestine sabotage
operations on the sea floor, and who have exhibited a pattern of
violently destructive policies towards Muslim peoples and nations,
especially in the Middle East region?
The
answer is yes, there are two: Israel and the United States of America.
In
recent years, Israel has bombed and invaded Lebanon, bombed Syria, and
placed the Palestinian Territories under a pitiless and ruthless
blockade/occupation/quarantine/assault. During the same time frame the
United States of America has militarily invaded and occupied Iraq and
Afghanistan, and American forces remain in both countries at present,
continuing to carry out aggressive military operations.
Simultaneous
with these Israeli and American war crimes against countries in the
region, both Israel and the United States have made many thinly veiled
threats of war against Iran, and the United States openly seeks to
increase its military presence in Pakistan's so-called “tribal
areas”.(15) Israel and the United States both have a technically
sophisticated military operations capability.
Moreover,
the United States Navy has a documented history of carrying out
espionage activities on the sea floor. The U.S. Navy has long had
special operations teams that can go out on submarines and deploy
undersea, on the seabed itself, specifically for this sort of operation.
This has all been thoroughly documented in the excellent book, Blind
Man's Bluff: The Untold Story of American Submarine Espionage, by Sherry
Sontag and Christopher Drew (New York: Public Affairs, 1998).
The classic example is Operation Ivy Bells, which took place
during the Cold War, in the waters off the Soviet Union. In a joint,
U.S. Navy-NSA operation, U.S. Navy divers repeatedly tapped an
underwater cable in the Kuril Islands, by swimming out undersea, to and
from U.S. Navy submarines.(14)
This
sort of activity is like something straight out of a spy novel thriller,
but the U.S. Navy really does have special submarines and deep diving,
special operations personnel who specialize in precisely this sort of
operation. So cutting undersea cables is well within the operational
capabilities of the United States Navy.
Couple
this little known, but very important fact, with the reality that for
years now we have seen more and more ham-handed interference with the
global communications grid by the American alphabet soup agencies (NSA,
CIA, FBI, HoSec) and major telecommunication companies.
Would
the telecommunication companies and the American military and alphabet
soup agencies collude on an operation that had as its aim to sabotage
the communications network across a wide region of the planet? Would
they perhaps collude with Israeli military and intelligence agencies to
do this?
The
honest answer has to be: sure, maybe so. The hard reality is that we are
now living in a world of irrational and violent policies enacted against
the civilian population by multinational corporations, and military and espionage agencies the world over. We see
the evidence for this on every hand. Only the most myopic among us
remain oblivious to that reality.
In
light of the American Navy's demonstrated sea-floor capabilities and
espionage activities, the heavy American Navy presence in the region,
the many, thinly veiled threats against Iran by both the Americans and
the Israelis, and their repeated, illegal, military aggression against
other nations in the region, suspicion quite naturally falls on both
Israel and the United States of America. It may be that this is what the
beginning of a war against Iran looks like, or perhaps it is part of a
more general, larger assault against Muslim and/or Arab interests across
a very wide region. Whatever the case, this is no small operation,
seeing as the cables that have been cut are among the largest
communication pipes in the region, and clearly represent major strategic
targets.
Very
clearly, we are not looking at business as usual. On the contrary, it is
obvious that we are looking at distinctly unusual business.
The
explanations being put forth in the mainstream news media for these many
cut, undersea communications cables absolutely do not pass the smell
test. And by the way, the same operators who cut undersea cables in the
Persian Gulf, Mediterranean Sea, Malaysia and possibly the Suez as well,
presumably can also cut underwater cables in the Gulf of Mexico, the
Great Lakes, the Chesapeake Bay and Puget Sound. This could be a
multipurpose operation, in part a test run for isolating a country or
region from the international communications grid. The Middle East
today, the USA tomorrow?
What's
that you say? I don't understand how the world works? That kind of thing
can't happen here?
In
any event, if the cables have been intentionally cut, then that is an
aggressive act of war. I'm sure everyone in the region has gotten that
message. I'm looking at the
same telegram as they are, and I know that it's clear as a “bell” to
me.(14)
It
is little known by the American people, but nevertheless true, that Iran
intends to open its own Oil Bourse this month (February 2008) that will
trade in “non-dollar currencies”.(16) This has massive
geo-political-economic implications for the United States and the
American economy, since the American dollar is at present still (if not
for much longer) the dominant reserve currency internationally,
particularly for petroleum transactions.
However,
due to the mind-boggling scale of the structural weaknesses in the
American economy, which have been well discussed in the financial press
in recent weeks and months, the American dollar is increasingly shunned
by corporate, banking and governmental actors the world over. No one
wants to be stuck with vaults full of rapidly depreciating dollars as
the American economy hurtles towards the basement. And so an operational
Iranian Oil Bourse, actively trading supertankers full of petroleum in
non-dollar currencies, poses a great threat to the American dollar's
continued dominance as the international reserve currency.
The
American fear and unease of this development can only be increased by
the knowledge that, “Oil-rich Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) member
states Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE have set 2010 as
the target date for adopting a monetary union and single currency.”(2)
The American government's fear must have ratcheted up another notch when
Kuwait “dropped its dollar peg” in May “and adopted a basket of
currencies”, arousing “speculation that the UAE and Qatar would
follow suit or revalue their currencies.”(2)
Although
all the GCC members, with the exception of Kuwait, agreed at their
annual meeting in December 2007 to continue to peg their currencies to
the American dollar,(2) the hand writing is surely on the wall. As the
dollar plummets, their American currency holdings will be worth less and
less. At some point, they will likely decide to cut their losses and
decouple the value of their currencies from that of the dollar. That
point may be in 2010, when they establish the new GCC currency, maybe
even sooner than that. If Iran succeeds in opening its own Oil Bourse it
is hard to imagine that the GCC would not trade on the Iranian Oil
Bourse, given the extremely close geographic proximity. And it is hard
to believe that they would not trade their own oil in their own
currency.
Otherwise,
why have a currency of their own? Clearly they intend to use it. And
just as clearly, the three cut or damaged undersea communications cables
in the Persian Gulf delivered a clear message. The United States may be
a senescent dinosaur, and it is, but it is also a violent, heavily
armed, very angry senescent dinosaur. In the end, it will do what all
aged dinosaurs do: perish. But not before it first does a great deal of
wild roaring and violent lashing and thrashing about.
There
can be no doubt that Iran, and the other Gulf States, were intended
recipients of this rather pointed cable cutting telegram, for all of the
reasons mentioned here; and additionally, in the case of Iran, probably
also as a warning for its perceived insults of Israel and dogged pursuit
of its nuclear program in contravention of NeoCon-Zionist dogma that
Iran may not have a nuclear program, though other nations in the region,
Pakistan and Israel, do.
I
must mention that one of my e-mail correspondents has pointed out that
another possibility is that once the cables are cut, special operations
divers could hypothetically come in and attach surveillance devices to
the cables without being detected, because the cables are inoperable
until they are repaired and start functioning again. In this way, other
interests who wanted to spy on Middle Eastern communications, let's say
on banking and trading data going to and from the Iranian Oil Bourse, or
other nations in the Middle East, could tap into the communications
network under cover of an unexplained cable “break”. Who knows? --
this idea may have merit.
It
is noteworthy that two of the cables that were cut lie off the Egyptian
Mediterranean coast, and another passes through the Suez. During the
height of the disruption, some 70 percent of the Egyptian Internet was
down. (13) This is a heavy blow in a day when everything from airlines,
to banks, to universities, to newspapers, to hospitals, to telephone and
shipping companies, and much more, uses the Internet. So Egypt was hit
very hard.
An
astute observer who carefully reads the international press could not
fail to have noticed that in recent days there had been a report in the
Egyptian press that “Egypt rejected an Israeli-American proposal to
resettle 800,000 Palestinians in Sinai.” This evidently greatly upset
the Zionist-NeoCon power block holding sway in Tel Aviv and Washington,
DC with the result that Israel reportedly threatened to have American
aid to Egypt reduced if Egypt does not consent to the resettlement of
the Palestinians in Egyptian territory.(17) This NeoCon-Zionist tantrum
comes hard on the heels of the Israeli desire to cut ties with Gaza, as
a consequence of the massive breach of the Gaza-Egypt border by hundreds
of thousands of Palestinians in January 2008. (18)
What
are NeoCon-Zionist tyrants to do when their diplomatic hissy fits and
anti-Arab tirades no longer carry the day in Cairo? Or in Qatar and the
UAE? Maybe they get out the underwater cable cutters and deploy some
special operations submarines and divers in the waters off of Alexandria
and in the Suez and in the Persian Gulf.
This
would be completely in line with articulated American military doctrine,
which frankly views the Internet as something to be fought. American
Freedom Of Information researchers at George Washington University
obtained a Department of Defense (Pentagon) document in 2006, entitled
“Information Operation Roadmap”, which says forthrightly and
explicitly that “the Department must be prepared to 'fight the
net'”.(20) This is a direct quote. It goes on to say that, “We Must
Improve Network and Electro-Magnetic Attack Capability. To prevail in an
information-centric fight, it is increasingly important that our forces
dominate the electromagnetic spectrum with attack capabilities.“ (20)
It also makes reference to the importance of employing a “robust
offensive suite of capabilities to include full-range electronic and
computer network attack.”(8)(20)
So
now we can add to our list of data points the professed intent of the
American military to “fight the net”, using a “robust offensive
suite of capabilities” in a “ full-range electronic and computer
network attack.”
Maybe
this sudden spate of cut communications cables is what it looks like
when the American military uses a “robust
offensive suite of capabilities” and mounts an “electronic and
computer network attack” in order to “fight the net” in one region
of the world. They
have the means, and the opportunity, I've amply demonstrated that in
this article. And now we also have the motive, in their own words, from
their own policy statement. The plain translation is that the American
military now regards the Internet, that means the hardware such as
computers, cables, modems, servers and routers, and presumably also the
content it contains, and the people who communicate that content, as an
adversary, as something to be fought.
Oh
yes, just a couple of more dots to connect before you fall asleep
tonight:
1)
The USS San Jacinto, an anti-missile AEGIS cruiser, was scheduled to
dock in Haifa, Israel on 1 February 2008. The Jerusalem Post reported
that this ship's anti-missile system “could be deployed in the region
in the event of an Iranian missile attack against Israel.”(1) Are we
to expect another “false flag” attack, like the inside job on 9-11
perhaps? -- an attack that will be made to appear that it comes from
Iran, and that is then used as a pretext to strike Iran, maybe with
nuclear weapons? And when Iran retaliates with its own missiles, then
the Americans and Israelis will unleash further hell on Iran? Is that
the Zionist-NeoCon plan, or something generally along those lines?
2)
I have to wonder because just this past Saturday, there was a report in
the news that, “Retired senior officers told Israelis ... to prepare
'rocket rooms' as protection against a rain of missiles expected to be
fired at the Jewish State in any future conflict.” Retired General Udi
Shani reportedly said, “The next war will see a massive use of
ballistic weapons against the whole of Israeli territory."(4)
Now
that we know the Israeli military establishment's thinking, and now that
we have a view into the American military mindset, we ought to be
looking at international events across the board with a very critical,
analytical eye, especially as they relate to possible events that either
are playing out right now, or may potentially play out in the relatively
near future, say in the time frame of the next one month to five years.
These people are violent and devious; they have forewarned us, and we
should take them at their word, given their murderous record on the
international stage.
[Copyright
© Richard Sauder 2008. All rights reserved.]
Richard
Sauder is a native Virginian. He holds degrees in Sociology, Latin
American Studies, Forestry and Political Science. Dr, Sauder currently
lives and works in San Antonio, Texas. He can be contacted at:
dr_samizdat@yahoo.com
References
1)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1964815/posts
2)
http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/business/?id=24186
3)
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/theuae/2008/February/theuae_February121.xml§ion=theuae
4)
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5h_w9R7AdaQhgaZPvz3MYw7ApULcw
5)
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/02/04/2153455.htm
6)
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5i03tUdyj8wf2Xa9P4trWEjqAJdyQ
7)
http://www.arabianbusiness.com/510132-internet-problems-continue-with-fourth-cable-break?ln=en
8)
http://www.globalresearch.ca/PrintArticle.php?articleId=7980
9)
https://confluence.slac.stanford.edu/display/IEPM/Effects+of+Fibre+Outage+through+Mediterranean
10)
http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/02/01/internet.outage/?iref=hpmostpop
11)
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/02/04/technology/cables.php
12)
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/31/business/worldbusiness/31cable.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
13)
http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/01/31/Cut-cable-disrupts-Internet-in-Middle-East_1.html
14)
http://www.specialoperations.com/Operations/ivybells.html
15)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/pakistan/Story/0,,2213925,00.html
16)
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=37468§ionid=351020103
17)
http://www.roadstoiraq.com/2008/02/02/egypt-rejected-an-american-israeli-proposal-to-re-settle-800000-palestinians-in-sinai/
18)
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/01/24/wgaza124.xml
19)
http://www.smartmoney.com/news/on/index.cfm?story=ON-20080201-000320-0524
20)
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB177/info_ops_roadmap.pdf