Image: Shutterstock
What’s new: An assertion of time warfare by the U.S. against the Chinese.
Why it’s important: Time and timing are fundamental to all critical infrastructure and IT applications. They enable cellular telecoms, land mobile radios, SCADA systems, support electrical and water distribution systems, space-based and terrestrial navigation systems, and computer operations. Hacking a nation’s national time and timing could do real damage. Depending upon the type and amount it could disable sufficient systems to cause deaths and major societal upheaval.
What else to know:
China
- The Chinese national time architecture includes BeiDou and other satellites, nation-wide eLoran coverage from 10 transmitter sites, and a 20,000 km network of fiber with 294 timing stations. This fiber network is called the “High-precision Ground-based Timing System.”
- We understand that China’s timing architecture aims to synchronize all the various ways in which time and timing are delivered so that, regardless of which a user is accessing, they will have the same time as is provided by other sources. We have not read assertions of accuracy other than the differential eLoran achieving 20 nanoseconds.
- Based on other systems we speculate that the 10 eLoran sites and 294 timing stations all have their own clocks and can provide holdover and sync if the primary time source is unavailable.
United States
- In the U.S. authoritative time and timing are provide by the U.S. Naval Observatory for the Department of Defense, including GPS, and the National Institutes of Standards for civil applications other than GPS.
- While the U.S. certainly uses other clocks and fiber for time and timing, to our knowledge, there is not the same kind of integrated and synchronized timing architecture as is the case in China. Weak, easily jammed and spoofed GPS signals are the most widely used source of time and timing in the U.S. to the best of our knowledge.







