NATO increasingly sees its soldiers’ phones as a liability
The Russians love eavesdropping on them
VIKTOR KOVALENKO, a Ukrainian conscript defending the eastern city of Debaltseve from pro-Russian forces, once emerged from a shelter and, despite standing instructions not to do it, switched on his phone to call his wife. Soon “shells started exploding around me,” he recalls. Similar attacks killed others in his battalion. The year was 2015, and the enemy was learning to direct artillery fire to transmitting mobiles. Since then, phone use on the front line has sharply fallen but still continues, concedes Captain Volodymyr Fitio of Ukraine’s army.
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Enemy armies with black mirrors”
Europe May 22nd 2021
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- NATO increasingly sees its soldiers’ phones as a liability
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