Canada vulnerable to major attack: Ex-CIA analyst

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Canada vulnerable to major attack: Ex-CIA analyst

By Anthony Furey, Postmedia Network
First posted: Saturday, January 30, 2016 05:37 PM EST | Updated: Saturday, January 30, 2016 07:55 PM EST
THIS IS PART ONE OF A TWO PART SERIES. CHECK BACK ON MONDAY TO LEARN WHAT CANADA CAN DO TO PROTECT ITSELF FROM A CATASTROPHIC ATTACK.

Canada and the United States are currently vulnerable to an imminent threat that could “topple the pillars of civilization”, says the executive director of the EMP Task Force on National Homeland Security, a U.S. Congressional advisory board.

In a recent trip to Toronto, Dr. Peter Pry discussed the importance of protecting North American infrastructure from an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack the effects of which would be devastating.

A well-planned attack would be “a mortal threat to the West,” says Pry, who’s studied the issue since doing his doctorate in strategic studies and then becoming an analyst with the CIA, where he was their EMP point man.

In 1962 the U.S. government conducted a high-altitude nuclear missile test in Hawaii known as Starfish Prime. One of the results that puzzled researchers was why the lights were knocked out and the underground sea cables damaged.

That’s when they became aware that one effect of a nuclear explosion was super-energetic radio waves that carried many thousands of volts. If they hit electronics, they’d be fried in mere nanoseconds.

The common worry with a nuclear weapon is the on-the-ground explosion it makes. But researchers realized an EMP blast above the ground could have a much different, and arguably worse, impact. The higher up it detonates, the wider the field.

“If you can come up 300km in the centre of the USA, it will cover all the states and the edge will hit Canada. All with one bomb,” Pry says, who later worked with Congress for the House Armed Services Committee where he continued his research.

While there are zero deaths from the actual explosion – which is in the air – the EMP field would fry the entire electrical grid. The power transformers are knocked out. Cars shut off. Traffic lights stop.

“When the EMP field is created over the whole country it’s being injected into all your pipelines, all the railroad tracks, all the power lines, all the energy lines,” says Pry. “Naturally, it will cause everything electronic to collapse. This thing threatens the very existence of our electronic civilization. And we are an electronic civilization – everything depends on electronics.”

North America would be under blackout. And it would be a long blackout. Many power transformers and other major devices would need to be rebuilt – which would take a number of months, even years. Emergency generators only have fuel to survive for around 72 hours. And North America only has a food supply to feed people for a couple months.

“We estimated that given the current fact that the grid is unprotected, if something like this were to happen we could lose up to 90% of the population in a year... 9 out of 10 north Americans could die as a consequence.”

If you’re wondering why this isn’t discussed more often, it’s because it was classified information until a U.S. commission released it in 2004 and 2008. Now Pry is on a mission to educate policy makers and military planners on the issue.

Pry’s not alone in his mission either. A letter sent to President Barack Obama urging him to take action on EMP was signed not just by Pry but a former US ambassador to NATO, a former CIA director and various senators and congressmen.

But how serious is this? Could such an attack conceivably happen? Actually, it almost did. In April 2013, North Korea orbited a satellite over the centre of the United States.

“It went over us at the optimum altitude for putting an EMP field down over all 48 contiguous United States,” explains Pry. “So North Korean actually practised a satellite EMP attack.”

Plus, smaller versions of EMP attacks have been conducted by gangs and rebel groups across Europe and Asia.

The good news is protecting ourselves from an attack isn’t that difficult. “We know how to do this,” says Pry. “It doesn’t cost a lot of money. There’s no excuse for us to be vulnerable to this particular threat.”

***

Man-made electromagnetic pulse attacks (EMP) attacks aren’t the only thing that could take down North America’s electricity grid. They’re also natural occurrences.

Dr. Peter Pry, who’s spent much of his professional life studying EMP, warns that coronal mass injections (solar flares) can also cause massive damage to a world that’s increasingly dependent upon interconnected but fragile electrical grids.

One example of this is the March 1989 geomagnetic storm that took out the Hydro-Quebec power grid. But the big worry is that we’ll see a repeat of the 1859 Carrington Event, which Pry calls the “most powerful geokinetic storm known to us.”

The earth narrowly missed being hit by such a solar storm on July 23, 2012. It would have caused untold damage to electronics throughout the world.

“NASA estimates the probability of such an event is 12% per decade,” notes Pry. “That virtually guarantees that during our lifetime or that of our children we’re going to experience one of these. And sooner than later because we’re overdue for one.”

Will EMP impact airplanes?

“Probably all of them will come crashing down,” Peter Pry says. “This is where you get into the high fatalities because at any given time there are a half a million people being transported through the skies over North America on over a thousand airliners.”

Are EMP weapons readily available? Pry and his team gave funding to academics to test if they could independently build them:

“It took them a year but they built two radio frequency weapons. One of them was designed to fit inside a VW bus and the idea was it would go down Wall St. and shut down the computers and cause an economic crisis. The other one was designed to fit in a shipping crate for a Xerox machine and the idea was you would mail this to the Pentagon and it would sit in their mailroom and fry out all their computers.”

TIMELINE

1962 – Starfish Prime test draws attention to nuclear EMP effects

2004/2008 – U.S. declassifies EMP information, public discussion begins

2013 – Several U.S. states undertake steps to protect their grid

TBA – Canada has yet to take steps to harden its grid
Canada vulnerable to major attack: Ex-CIA analyst | FUREY | Canada | News | Toro
 

MHz

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If the CIA can't get anything right while they are still employed how the hell will they get it right once they are put out to pasture. This their idea of a retirement fund, spreading more false rumors. booga-booga.
 

Curious Cdn

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All of those years of intelligence analysis leads him to conclude that nuclear weapons are a threat to us. Does he still have his shoe phone?

If you want to protect against EMP, go back to using circuits with vaccuum tubes.
 

MHz

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Or have the item turned off.
Will EMP Pulse Fry Anything Electronic NOT Plugged Into The Grid?

In conclusion, just know that ALL electronics are vulnerable unless specifically hardened against EMP (the military presumable does this, etc.) or protected via a purposed or natural Faraday cage. Also know that electronics are embedded in nearly everything that we use today. A major EMP would be the end of civilization as we know it. Will your Chevy stop running? Maybe. You would have to know the answers to questions like… How big is the EMP? Where are you located? What year is your Chevy? Will your drill stop working? Maybe. Does it have any electronic control in it other than its basic switch and coil winding? Will it matter if the power grid is down anyway? (power grid transformers will fry) Will your generator work? Maybe. All previous caveats and questions apply… Most all generators have electronic controlling circuits in them.
 

spaminator

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How to protect Canada from a crippling attack

By Anthony Furey, Postmedia Network
First posted: Sunday, January 31, 2016 06:53 PM EST
THIS IS PART TWO OF A TWO PART SERIES. CLICK HERE TO READ PART ONE
While both Canada and the United States are currently vulnerable to an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack that has the potential to destabilize our power grid, water systems, food supply chain and more, the solution is relatively simple. But first the issue needs to become a priority for Canadian politicians.
Part one of this two-part feature explained former CIA analyst Dr. Peter Pry’s attempts to educate policy-makers and the military on the need to protect our electrical grid. If an enemy detonated a nuclear missile above the skies of North America, it could take out our grid for months. Countries like North Korea and various terrorist groups have already shown they can successfully launch EMP missiles.
“This is a bigger threat than the classic nuclear war we talk about,” Pry explained during a recent visit to Toronto. “It will kill a lot more people. One bomb will basically end your civilization.
“We’re not just talking about destroying electronics — at the end of the day we’re talking about killing millions of people. But it’s the old fashioned way — through starvation and disease and societal collapse.”
It reads like a lot of doom and gloom. However, solving the problem is well within reach.
Pry’s currently the executive director of the EMP Task Force on National Homeland Security, a U.S. Congressional advisory board. After information on EMP was declassified beginning in 2004, Pry began his public campaign and has already chalked up a few victories.
Recently, four states — Maine, Virginia, Florida and Arizona — have hardened their electrical grid. National legislation almost came to pass after Democrats and Republicans in Congress teamed up to unanimously pass the 2009 Grid Act. However, it failed to pass the Senate.
What would Canada need to do? Basically, we’d need to make it law that our electrical transformer stations and similar devices have giant surge protectors, so if an attack happens, the power only goes out for seconds rather than months.
“When it comes to issues of national and homeland security, this is why we have government,” says Pry. “Even the strictest constitutionalist should be able to support a bill that is basically for the purpose of providing for the national and homeland security of the American people so that a failed state like North Korea can’t kill 90% of our population with one bomb.”
The challenge is the issue doesn’t appear to be a priority in Canada. Representatives from CSIS, the RCMP and Public Safety Canada all confirm that attacks to what’s called “critical infrastructure” are concerns of theirs, but it appears no recent reports specifically mention EMP. It’s unclear to what degree government experts are studying the issue.
In the mandate letter sent to Ralph Goodale, minister of public safety and emergency preparedness, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau instructs him to “lead a review of existing measures to protect Canadians and our critical infrastructure from cyber-threats.” This review could be the beginning of the answer, but neither the minister’s office nor the department would confirm if EMP was a priority.
“I think the issue is relatively new to parliament itself,” explains Daniel Lang, the Conservative Senator representing the Yukon. “It should be a public conversation.”
Recently re-elected as the chair of the Senate committee on national security and defence, Lang explained the committee has asked for a mandate that would allow them to investigate attacks to critical infrastructure, which would include EMP.
It appears Canada is slowly on the path to protecting its grid. The question is will it be soon enough?
“They’re counting on us to be taken by surprise,” says Pry of the various hostile groups that are testing EMP attacks. “It’s going to be so disappointing if Canada doesn’t do the right thing.”
THREE DEVICES REQUIRING EMP PROTECTION:
  • Nuclear reactors: “You don’t want them going fukushima on you,” says Peter Pry.
  • EHV Transformers: “Most people have never heard of them but they’re what makes modern civilization possible. They are to our society what the aqueducts were to Rome.”
  • SCADA systems: “There’s millions of them everywhere. They run everything — traffic lights, the way water flows.”
A rare indication that the government has a plan ... From an emergency preparedness report — dated 1987:
“Procedures can also be implemented to reduce the risk of EMP damage when sufficient warning is available. These procedures involve the physical disconnection of any long wires, such as telecommunication lines or power lines, from the equipment.”
anthony.furey@sunmedia.ca
How to protect Canada from a crippling attack | Furey, Part 2 | Canada | News |
 

spaminator

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Take EMP attack threat seriously
Postmedia Network
First posted: Monday, February 01, 2016 06:03 PM EST | Updated: Monday, February 01, 2016 06:13 PM EST
Canada has a very real chance to protect itself from a very real threat. We just need the public pressure and political will to do it.
Over the past couple of days Sun Media papers ran a feature on how North America is vulnerable to an electromagnetic pulse (EMP) attack.
It sounds all science-fiction doom-and-gloom but, as Anthony Furey explained, it’s grounded in scientific reality. Now that information has been declassified by the U.S. government, scientists are trying to draw attention to the issue.
Super-energetic radio waves that follow a nuclear explosion will knock out all electronics they pass through. If an explosion is made many kilometres above the surface, the pulse will impact a large land mass – possibly blowing out the electrical grid for much of North America.
This would cripple our water and sewage systems, our vehicles, our communications devices and so much more. It would essentially take out our “electronic civilization”.
The bad news is rebel groups like the Chechens and rogue states like North Korea have already successfully launched small and test versions of such attacks.
The good news is we can protect ourselves from it quite easily.
It basically involves hardening our electrical grid with a certain type of surge protector to make sure our electricity only goes down for seconds and not months or more.
Both Democrats and Republicans in the U.S. have been working towards legislation to protect their grids – in fact four states have already done it.
“We know how to do this,” said expert Dr. Peter Pry. “It doesn’t cost a lot of money. There’s no excuse for us to be vulnerable to this particular threat.”
He’s right. Unfortunately the issue isn’t on Canada’s radar as much as it should be. Many Canadians may have only heard of the issue through our reports.
Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale has been tasked with looking at our critical infrastructure. We urge him to include EMP threat assessments as part of his work. We’re also optimistic to learn the Senate defence committee is seeking a mandate to investigate the issue. We just hope it succeeds.
A minor amount of effort will protect us from a major catastrophe. What’s the hold-up?
Take EMP attack threat seriously | EDITORIAL | Editorial | Opinion | Toronto Sun