Satellite Warfare: The New Frontier of Global Conflict

Explore how the critical satellite infrastructure used to monitor global conflicts is being weaponized, spoofed, and privately controlled, threatening transparency and accountability.
In the shifting geopolitical landscape of the Gulf region, a new frontier of global conflict has emerged - the battle for control over satellite data. As war continues to reshape the volatile area, the very infrastructure the world relies on to see these conflicts clearly is being deliberately disrupted, delayed, and privately controlled. This concerning trend raises critical questions about transparency, accountability, and the future of global security monitoring.
Satellite imagery has long been a vital tool for understanding unfolding events on the ground, providing an impartial, bird's-eye view of military operations, humanitarian crises, and other unfolding situations. However, as geopolitical tensions escalate, this precious data is increasingly becoming a weapon in its own right. Actors on all sides of regional conflicts are actively working to obstruct, spoof, and restrict access to satellite imagery, creating a troubling veil of secrecy around their actions.
{{IMAGE_PLACEHOLDER}}Source: Wired


