Your GPS glitched for a few seconds driving through northern Europe last February. That brief hiccup wasn’t a software bug—it was a Russian satellite at least 1,200 kilometers above Earth flexing its electronic warfare muscles.
Space-Based Interference Gets Traced to Source
Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin cracked the case using forensic-level precision. By analyzing the microsecond differences in interference signals hitting monitoring stations in Amsterdam and Trondheim, they reconstructed a “quasi-hyperboloid” surface in space where the transmitter had to be. Only one object matched that geometry during the February 11 event: Cosmos 2546, a Russian military satellite from the EKS early-warning constellation.
The team, led by Professor Todd Humphreys and collaborators at Stanford and Spanish firm GMV, documented 75 days of similar wide-area interference since 2019. Each burst lasts under 10 seconds but blankets areas from Iceland to Italy—a footprint no ground-based jammer could achieve.
Continental-Scale Reach Changes the Game
These aren’t your typical GPS disruptions near conflict zones. The Russian satellites can bathe entire continents in interfering signals, targeting GPS, Galileo, and China’s BeiDou while conveniently leaving Russia’s GLONASS system untouched. The interference hits frequencies around 1577.5 MHz—close enough to GPS L1 to degrade your navigation but offset enough to maintain plausible deniability.
Most telling? The pattern follows business hours, Tuesday through Thursday, suggesting scheduled operations rather than accidental emissions. As Humphreys told researchers, “I can no longer say this is accidental with confidence.”
Intent Remains Disputed Despite Clear Evidence
GMV’s Richard Bowden confirmed the signals are “without a doubt, intentional and placed on or around GNSS signals” but stopped short of calling them weapons. The bursts might represent operational communications from Russia’s missile-warning satellites that happen to interfere with civilian GPS.
Humphreys sees it differently, calling the activity a “massive escalation in the electronic warfare background conflict.” If Russia retuned these transmitters directly onto GPS frequencies with higher power, continental-scale navigation denial becomes reality—like moving from practice rounds to live ammunition.
The brief disruptions haven’t caused major outages yet, but they’ve proven space-based GPS jamming works at continental scale. Your navigation app might shrug off a few-second glitch, but the implications for aviation, shipping, and military systems are harder to ignore.



























