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A Danger Room Exclusive: Computer Virus Hits US Drone Fleet
A computer virus has infected the cockpits of America’s Predator and Reaper drones, logging pilots’ every keystroke as they remotely fly missions over Afghanistan and other warzones.
(Photo courtesy of Bryan William Jones) The virus, first detected nearly two weeks ago by the military’s Host-Based Security System, has not prevented pilots at Creech Air Force Base in Nevada from flying their missions overseas. Nor have there been any confirmed incidents of classified information being lost or sent to an outside source. But the virus has resisted multiple efforts to remove it from Creech’s computers, network security specialists say. And the infection underscores the ongoing security risks in what has become the U.S. military’s most important weapons system.
“We keep wiping it off, and it keeps coming back,” says a source familiar with the network infection, one of three that told Danger Room about the virus. “We think it’s benign. But we just don’t know.”
Military network security specialists aren’t sure whether the virus and its so-called “keylogger” payload were introduced intentionally or by accident; it may be a common piece of malware that just happened to make its way into these sensitive networks. The specialists don’t know exactly how far the virus has spread. But they’re sure that the infection has hit both classified and unclassified machines at Creech. That raises the possibility, at least, that secret data may have been captured by the keylogger, and then transmitted over the public internet to someone outside the military chain of command.
Drones have become America’s tool of choice in both its conventional and shadow wars, allowing U.S. forces to attack targets and spy on its foes without risking American lives. Since President Obama assumed office, a fleet of approximately 30 CIA-directed drones have hit targets in Pakistan more than 230 times; all told, these drones have killed more than 2,000 suspected militants and civilians, according to the Washington Post. More than 150 additional Predator and Reaper drones, under U.S. Air Force control, watch over the fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq. American military drones struck 92 times in Libya between mid-April and late August. And late last month, an American drone killed top terrorist Anwar al-Awlaki — part of an escalating unmanned air assault in the Horn of Africa and southern Arabian peninsula.
But despite their widespread use, the drone systems are known to have security flaws. Many Reapers and Predators don’t encrypt the video they transmit to American troops on the ground. In the summer of 2009, U.S. forces discovered “days and days and hours and hours” of the drone footage on the laptops of Iraqi insurgents. A $26 piece of software allowed the militants to capture the video.
The lion’s share of U.S. drone missions are flown by Air Force pilots stationed at Creech, a tiny outpost in the barren Nevada desert, 20 miles north of a state prison and adjacent to a one-story casino. In a nondescript building, down a largely unmarked hallway, is a series of rooms, each with a rack of servers and a “ground control station,” or GCS. There, a drone pilot and a sensor operator sit in their flight suits in front of a series of screens. In the pilot’s hand is the joystick, guiding the drone as it soars above Afghanistan, Iraq, or some other battlefield.
Some of the GCSs are classified secret, and used for conventional warzone surveillance duty. The GCSs handling more exotic operations are top secret. None of the remote cockpits are supposed to be connected to the public internet. Which means they are supposed to be largely immune to viruses and other network security threats.
But time and time again, the so-called “air gaps” between classified and public networks have been bridged, largely through the use of discs and removable drives. In late 2008, for example, the drives helped introduce the agent.btz worm to hundreds of thousands of Defense Department computers. The Pentagon is still disinfecting machines, three years later.
Use of the drives is now severely restricted throughout the military. But the base at Creech was one of the exceptions, until the virus hit. Predator and Reaper crews use removable hard drives to load map updates and transport mission videos from one computer to another. The virus is believed to have spread through these removable drives. Drone units at other Air Force bases worldwide have now been ordered to stop their use.
In the meantime, technicians at Creech are trying to get the virus off the GCS machines. It has not been easy. At first, they followed removal instructions posted on the website of the Kaspersky security firm. “But the virus kept coming back,” a source familiar with the infection says. Eventually, the technicians had to use a software tool called BCWipe to completely erase the GCS’ internal hard drives. “That meant rebuilding them from scratch” — a time-consuming effort.
The Air Force declined to comment directly on the virus. “We generally do not discuss specific vulnerabilities, threats, or responses to our computer networks, since that helps people looking to exploit or attack our systems to refine their approach,” says Lt. Col. Tadd Sholtis, a spokesman for Air Combat Command, which oversees the drones and all other Air Force tactical aircraft. “We invest a lot in protecting and monitoring our systems to counter threats and ensure security, which includes a comprehensive response to viruses, worms, and other malware we discover.”
However, insiders say that senior officers at Creech are being briefed daily on the virus.
“It’s getting a lot of attention,” the source says. “But no one’s panicking. Yet.”
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67 Comments so far
Show AllI can remember a forward deployed drone having navigational problems and the navigation algorithm had a default of returning to home base or the manufacturer, I can't remember which.
Unfortunately that was some thousands of miles away and the drone ran out of juice somewhere over the Mediterranean Sea. Such a pity.
Nothing is 100% but there's an awful lot you can do to prevent a virus. Making systems and hardware read only, having random start points, encrypting code and checking checksums and putting things in watertight compartments plus using a decent Operating system stripped of all its unnecesary code and bloatware e.g. OpenBSD.
Of course you'd start by not using Micro$oft 'Windoze' with its endless errors, security flaws and infamous 'Blue screen of Death' -blue sky screen of death? What can I say? The dangerous permutations of this are mind boggling. What are the coordinates of Wall Street?
Stuxnet Part II?
The peace grinch hits the war Creech drones.That low down peace grinch must hate us for our freedoms...
Here is a computer virus we can live with.... Buttt; if that can be done to military computers, I wonder if it is possible for someone to put a virus in the computers which control a nucler power plant? That could get scary.
So, the drones have a bug up their ass?
Nothing worse than a hellfire-missile-armed drone with an itchy butt.
This really should make any sane person think twice about deploying drones on the US border (of course we don't care if the drones go astray in Afghanistan and kills a few wedding parties). Sane is the operative word here.
"Oops, the drone just turned and attacked San Diego. That's the third time this week...Houston? You've got a problem ...No, not WE, YOU...There's a drone headed your way"
“It’s getting a lot of attention,” the source says. “But no one’s panicking. Yet.”
translation: YIKES!
or did a pilot just spill his coffee in his lap?
YIKES!
Nope, on his control panel,,, "Oh shit, I hate it when that happens" !! __ "Pleh, pleh, pleh".
When Major Dufus get's excited he talks backwards... It's "help" he's means, not "pleh".
"an American drone killed top terrorist Anwar al-Awlaki"
Glad to see everyone is dutifully using the correct Obama language to describe something they cannot have real knowledge of. Well done. It's been said enough times now to be true.
AND Canada's PM HARPER ALLOWS THE USA to FLY these WAR MACHINES into Canada's airspace. I hope they cannot stop the virus. I hope the murder machines are closed down. If you kill someone, you go to jail and in the USA you die. When a country USA kills thousands of "COLLATERALS" they are revered in their country????????? OOPS we killed the wrong ones.
Ha ha ha! Karma is a bitch! Too bad that the virus didn't make the drones fire upon its handlers.
Schachtmann sez: "In a nondescript building ... a drone pilot and a sensor operator sit in their flight suits in front of a series of screens."
***
Sounds like the opening scene of a Monty Python skit.
Assuming that smart people would want to save their earthly habitat from destruction by dumb people, could cyberwar separate the smart hackers from the dumb MIC tools? The "good" people from the "bad"? The humanists from the bestialists? The ecologists from the polluters? The (d)emocrats from the plutocrats? The unselfish from the greedy? The conservationists from the death dealers? The liberals from the conservatives? etc...
If a log of thousands of keystrokes could be smuggled out of the building and placed into the right hands, it might be possible to figure out how to update the coordinates for targeting, thus, if the guidance systems could be hacked, it might be possible to turn the drones around and have them fire their missiles toward the bases from which they are operating, or any other target for that matter. I'd bet the ranch that "the insurgents" are working on this day and night.
>>“But no one’s panicking. Yet.”<<
Bullshit my ass no one's panicking. They are, probably literally, shitting their pants.
Weapon after weapon conquers everything but chaos.---LaoTzu
Just got done reading an article on another site about protesters at the DC Air & Space Museum protesting the drone exhibit there. Someone blogged "The use of Drones is cheaper on the US taxpayer and saves US lives, enough said." Interesting they put dollars ahead of lives. But this couldn't happen to a more deserving program. Hope someone finally hacks the thing to the ground. I'm reminded of the drone scene from the remake of The Day The Earth Stood Still. Gort sure knew how to deal with those buzzing bastards.
Great! and I hope everyone of these drones crashes.