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International News Title: What Nation Just Built An "Unprecedented" Spy Radar Base In Cuba? According to a new surveillance report from The Diplomat, exclusive satellite imagery from March 2017 to May 2018 reveals a newly expanded “signals intelligence” military facility near Bejucal, Cuba.
The report focuses on a massive radome sitting on top of an elevated concrete mounting structure. From satellite imagery, the structure looks like a giant golf ball, but it is actually a protective dome housing a super sophisticated radar antenna inside. As mentioned by The Diplomat, this radome is the first of its kind among the various spy antennas at Bejucal, which have been used to intercept electronic communications, ballistic missile monitoring, and tracking of satellites from the United States. The most perplexing question American military strategists are now asking: who the hell provided the financing to build a new spy base in this third world country?
Newly constructed radome at Bejucal signals intelligence facility, Cuba. (Source: Victor Robert Lee & Digital Globe) The Diplomat provides more satellite imagery that shows the construction of the radome near the town of Bejucal between March 2017 and February 2018. While the function of the new radome is unknown from current satellite images, there is an understanding that similar antennas have been used for signals interception, missile tracking, satellite uplinks and downlinks, radio communications, tracking of objects in space, and in some cases to disrupt satellite communications, The Diplomat explained.
A time sequence of the construction of radome containing parabolic antenna at Bejucal sigint facility. (Source: Victor Robert Lee & Digital Globe) The Diplomat pointed out a significant clue about the new radome:
Partial view of signals intelligence facility at Bejucal, Cuba showing locations of the new radome and newly added smaller antennas. (Source: Victor Robert Lee & Digital Globe) The Diplomat details how Russian and the Chinese governments have pivoted to enhancing their military and economic investments in Cuba. In 2014, President Vladimir Putin wrote off 90 percent of the $32 billion Cuba owed on the Soviet-era debt. Now Russia is considering reviving its military base in Cuba.
Interesting enough, China is Cuba’s most significant international creditor and trading partner. Several Chinese companies have announced major development plans in Cuba over the last several years.
As there is limited evidence via the satellite imagery indicating Beijing is behind the radome construction, U.S. Senator Marco Rubio warned in 2016 that Beijing and Cuba were working on a program to improve the island’s electronic surveillance spy bases.
In February, we covered a surveillance imagery report from an undisclosed source, most likely from the Philippine National Intelligence Coordinating Agency (NICA), given to the Philippine Daily Inquirer as a treasure trove of new surveillance images which depicts Beijing’s drive to militarize the heavily disputed artificially-created islands it controls in the South China Sea. As shown below, the Chinese radome in the South China Sea (right) and the Cuban radome (left) look very similar in design.
And lastly, the Cuban government has been reported to have a long history of selling its intercepted data of U.S. communications to third-party buyers, said The Diplomat. In the visual below, there is a reason to believe the new radome could spy on USAF airbases, U.S. Central Command, and even as far as Washington, D.C. Which begs the question, was it Russia or China that financed the spy antenna?
Upgraded Cuban sigint base at Bejucal has an advantageous location for interacting with U.S. military and civilian communications. (Source: Victor Robert Lee & Digital Globe) Poster Comment: Someone's got to keep an eye on Bibi's terrorist agitators I suppose. (6 images) Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top • Page Up • Full Thread • Page Down • Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2. I worked on tracking stations for over a decade, both within and without radomes, all over the world. The presence or absence of a radome means absolutely nothing per se, and they ALL, or almost all, look very similar to each other due to their triangular-panel, microwave-transparent construction. It's just a simple, reliable, cost-effective way to build them. They're geodesic domes; just google some images. The fact that a Chinese station looks similar to a Cuba station means squat. Maybe they can come up with better facts to establish a Chinese origin but a radome certainly does not. And if their scale bar is anywhere near accurate, this is a tiny 5-meter dish. Useful, but not exactly high-resolution or bandwidth. Small ones can move like a bat out of hell, though; that's useful for tracking nearby launches or very low-flying satellites. Of course, I'd have to consult the microwave gearheads to grasp the state of the art - it's been a while for me on one of these structures. I'm sure the size required for a given performance spec has been reduced considerably as the satellites and amplifiers have improved.
Replies to Comment # 2. MY question is "WHY would Russia or China spend the bucks to build a spy satellite station in Cuba,when they already have subs and surface ships,as well as aircraft patrolling offshore gathering info? Not to mention all those Chinese "students" going to technical schools here.
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