Image for Article: Why have 1,000 ships at times lost their GPS in the Mideast?

Article Details

Title
Article: Why have 1,000 ships at times lost their GPS in the Mideast?
Impact Score
7 / 10
AI Summary (Processed Content)

Widespread GPS jamming in the Middle East, due to the regional conflict, has left approximately half of the ships in the Gulf and Gulf of Oman—around 1,000 vessels—struggling to determine their location. This is because many ships rely on outdated, single-frequency GPS receivers that are vulnerable to jamming and cannot use alternative global satellite systems.

The article details how jamming works by broadcasting a stronger signal on the same frequency, while spoofing is a more sophisticated threat that manipulates a ship's identification system to broadcast false locations. These disruptions also cripple critical onboard systems like clocks and radars, forcing crews to revert to traditional navigation methods like radar and visual landmarks.

The main topics covered are the scale of GPS disruption for shipping, the technical vulnerability of older maritime GPS systems, the methods of jamming and spoofing, the operational dangers and workarounds for ships, and the defensive use of jamming by regional states.

Original URL
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/internet/why-have-1000-ships-at-times-lost-their-gps-in-the-mideast/articleshow/129253833.cms
Source Feed
Tech-Economic Times
Published Date
2026-03-08 05:36
Fetched Date
2026-03-08 03:30
Processed Date
2026-03-08 03:31
Embedding Status
Present
Cluster ID
Not Clustered
Raw Extracted Content