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Mediterranean Undersea Cables Cut, Again

miller60 writes "Three undersea cables in the Mediterranean Sea have failed within minutes of each other in an incident that is eerily similar to a series of cable cuts in the region in early 2008. The cable cuts are already causing serious service problems in the Middle East and Asia. See coverage at the Internet Storm Center, Data Center Knowledge and Bloomberg. The February 2008 cable cuts triggered rampant speculation about sabotage, but were later attributed to ships that dropped anchor in the wrong place."

4 of 329 comments (clear)

  1. Hmm. by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wonder what the going rate is to have a ship drop anchor in the location of your choice? There must be somebody, if you ask around quietly, who would be willing to set up a grubby little shipping company with no real assets worth suing for and have their rusty crap freighter drag an anchor across whatever bit of seabed needs some accidental scraping.

  2. Re: Dropping Anchor by nightsweat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just cut the cable and the reroute takes the traffic through the US and through the NSA monitoring operation.

    --

    the major advances in civilization are processes which all but wreck the societies in which they occur - A.N. White
  3. Oh god, not this again... by Xest · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would like to point all the conspiracy theories who think everything in the world that goes wrong is to be laid at the feet of someone or something to a sobering article and some facts (yes I know facts are hard to comprehend when you're the type of person who thinks steel has to completely melt into a liquid for a building to collapse, but please, stick with me).

    First, let's start with a reference:

    http://www.iscpc.org/publications/About_Cables_in_PDF_Format.pdf

    Page 34 is a good place to start, coupled with page 13. The fact is that there are hundreds of these cables across the world and many covering local areas are kept close to each other as can be seen on the map. Now look at page 34 and realise that the following can cause cable cuts:

    Anchors, Trawlers, Sharks, Earthquakes, Landslides, Fault lines, Currents, Waves, Extreme weather, Ice bergs (not in the middle east though I'd hope!).

    Many other human activities can be responsible too of course (sinking ships, cargo/litter being dumped off ships etc.)

    Now check here:

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/08/seabed_cable_break_fix_forecast/

    Where it's noted that about 2 cables a week break on average.

    So really, when there's so many cables (sometimes close together), when there's so many hazards for the cables, and when two cables a week requiring repairs is the norm does it really have to be an "OMG they're out to get us" drama, when instead of the average 2 cuts a week we have the oh so above average 3?

    Finally, last time this happened, the boats responsible were caught via satellite and brought to justice:

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/04/14/undersea_cable_cut_ships_nabbed/

    Sorry guys, as much as I myself think making George Bush president twice is probably one of the worst things a population can ever do conspiracy theories about America trying to cut off Iran or whatever simply don't cut it (pun not intended). This is neither an odd occurance, nor is it a coincidence unless it's a coincidence that it happens every god damn week.

    There is no reason a single trawler pulling big heavy nets along the ocean floor couldn't be responsible for damage to the whole lot, the cables are all shown as very close to each other, and despite the summary suggesting all 3 cuts happened within 5 minutes of each other, they didn't, the SeaMeWe cables were cut within 5 minutes of each other and FLAG about half hour later- that sounds very much like an anchor or trawler at play.

    For all the anti-religious sentiment on Slashdot, many people here aren't half prone to believing in some rather far fetched ideas when it comes to stuff like this. Personally, I prefer to at least be consistent and believe that it's all a load of crap which usually it seems it is!

  4. Re: Dropping Anchor by lgw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is your Google broken?

    Seriously, this isn't exactly a controversial point. Iran has *huge* government subsidies for the poor, but its theocracy is not otherwise popular (and even if they just stop having elections, a government needs money to exist).

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.