Internet Anthropologist Think Tank: Iran's Internet OUT: NOT

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    Monday, February 04, 2008

    Iran's Internet OUT: NOT


    by Dylan Bowman on Monday, 04 February 2008
    INTERNET DISRUPTION: The Falcon network runs from Egypt to India, linking 11 countries in the region.

    "It seems now to be way beyond the realm of coincidence that a further 4th critical international communications cable should break within seven days," one ArabianBusiness.com reader commented.

    "Clearly Iran, who was most affected, would gain nothing from such an action and is perhaps the target of those responsible," said another reader.

    Those theories were fuelled further on Monday when Egypt said damage to the cables in the Mediterranean Sea was not caused by ships, as previously thought.

    Egypt's Transport Ministry said footage recorded by onshore video cameras of the location of the cables shows no maritime traffic in the area when the cables were damaged.

    "The ministry's maritime transport committee reviewed footage covering the period of 12 hours before and 12 hours after the cables were cut and no ships sailed the area," a statement by the Communications Ministry said.

    "The area is also marked on maps as a no-go zone and it is therefore ruled out that the damage to the cables was caused by ships."

    It is not clear how badly Iran's internet access has been affected by the cable breaks.

    The Iranian embassy in Abu Dhabi told ArabianBusiness.com that "everything is fine", but internet connectivity reports on the web, citing a router in Tehran, appear to indicate that there is currently no connection to the outside world.

    Two intercontinental cables connecting Europe and Asia were cut off the coast of Egypt on Wednesday, followed by breaks in two more cables off the UAE coast on Friday. Flag owns two of the affected cables.

    The initial breaks affected internet access and international calls in Egypt, the Gulf and south Asia, while disruption resulting from damage to the latter two was centred around the Gulf region. The location of the breaks and short space of time in which they have happened has sparked fears the cables were intentionally damaged by the US and Israel to deprive Iran of internet access.


    Internet problems continue with fourth cable break
    Services in Qatar seriously disrupted by damage to cable linking Gulf state to UAE.

    Internet crisis deepens
    Third undersea cable break between UAE and Oman adds to web woes after two breaks just days earlier.


    SOURCE: FROM EMAIL:

    BACKGROUND

    The economic problems this will cause Iran are enormous.
    It also restricts their command and control of Qods.
    They are opperating BLIND in many cases now.
    And must find other means for com.
    In country, Iranian connection should work fine.

    INTERNET STATUS:

    UPDATE: All of Iran not down, rerouted and slow.
    http://www.nic.ir/
    http://www.iranet.ir/
    http://www.sharif.ac.ir/

    Several Iranians have checked in Internet working fine.
    But it is being rerouted through Singapore...

    cable infographic
    1 Polyethylene cover
    2,4 Stranded steel armour wires
    3,5 Tar-soaked nylon yarn
    6 Polycarbonate insulator
    7 Copper sheath
    8 Protective core
    9 Optical fibres
    Not to scale





    Gerald
    5 cable cuts
    Cable damage hits one million Internet users in UAE
    Asma Ali Zain (Staff Reporter)

    4 February 2008

    SOURCE:
    A total of five cables being operated by two submarine cable operators have been damaged with a fault in each. These are SeaMeWe-4 (South East Asia-Middle East-Western Europe-4) near Penang, Malaysia, the FLAG Europe-Asia near Alexandria, FLAG near the Dubai coast, FALCON near Bandar Abbas in Iran and SeaMeWe-4, also near Alexandria




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    3 Comments:

    Anonymous Anonymous said...

    5 cable cuts

    A total of five cables being operated by two submarine cable operators have been damaged with a fault in each. These are SeaMeWe-4 (South East Asia-Middle East-Western Europe-4) near Penang, Malaysia, the FLAG Europe-Asia near Alexandria, FLAG near the Dubai coast, FALCON near Bandar Abbas in Iran and SeaMeWe-4, also near Alexandria

    http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/theuae/2008/February/theuae_February121.xml§ion=theuae

    9:18 PM  
    Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Correct. Iran is not cut off.

    http://www.renesys.com/blog/2008/02/attention_iran_is_not_disconne_1.shtml

    11:08 PM  
    Anonymous Anonymous said...

    I would not so quickly dismiss Iran involvement. Campaign there to eliminate private satellite links for one, could be escalating to deny internet access to private citizens. And they have the submarines. Also possible strike on Iran in offing, though I believe its too early for that.

    5:51 AM  

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