Contents
1. The HF Radio Backbone
Venezuela's military runs on High Frequency radio. Not as a backup — as the backbone.
The Fuerza Armada Nacional Bolivariana (FANB) operates across six military regions, each with a Regional Command Center (CRC). Long-range command and control between these regions uses HF bands (3–30 MHz) with Automatic Link Establishment (ALE) — a protocol that automatically selects the best frequency, identifies stations by call sign, and logs every connection attempt.
What I documented:
- 45+ Army HF frequencies across 5 infantry divisions + General Staff
- 70+ Navy HF frequencies covering all maritime operations
- 50+ Army ALE identifiers mapped to specific units, bases, and command elements
- 80+ Navy ALE identifiers including individual ship call signs for 25+ vessels
- 4 documented ALE networks — Riverine HQ, Riverine Forces, Coast Guard, Riverine Ops
- 3 cross-branch shared frequencies — Army, Navy, and National Guard on the same channels
Those three shared frequencies are the critical finding. Army, Navy, and National Guard all communicate on them. Monitor one branch, hear all three.
Cross-Branch Shared Frequencies
| Frequency (kHz) | Branches | Mode |
|---|---|---|
| 7849.0 | Army, Navy, National Guard | USB/LSB |
| 10272.0 | Army, Navy, National Guard | USB |
| 10600.0 | Army, Navy, National Guard | USB |
Army HF Frequencies (USB/ALE)
| Unit | Frequencies (kHz) |
|---|---|
| General Staff / C2 | 7849.0, 8060.0, 9795.0, 10600.0, 11155.0, 12191.0, 13449.0 |
| General Profile | 7516.0, 7849.0, 8060.0, 8181.0, 10600.0, 11601.0, 12161.0, 14569.0 |
| 1st Infantry Division | 8184.0, 8260.0, 11625.0, 12191.0, 13500.0 |
| 2nd Infantry Division | 5760.0, 6870.0, 7597.0, 8060.0, 8187.0, 9052.0, 9232.0, 10156.0, 11610.0, 13449.0 |
| 3rd Infantry Division | 7597.0, 8050.0, 9232.0, 9259.0, 10150.0, 12191.0, 13464.0, 13506.0 |
| 4th Infantry Division | 9795.0, 12185.0, 13455.0 |
| 5th Infantry Division | 5406.0, 6786.0, 7399.0, 9233.0, 9906.0, 10115.0, 12191.0, 14569.0 |
Army ALE Address Identifiers (50+)
| Call Sign | Unit / Function |
|---|---|
| CGE | Army Headquarters (Cuartel General de Ejercito) |
| CGEJM | Army Mobile HQs |
| CLC | Local Communications Center |
| CLC22M | Mobile Command Post, 22nd Infantry Brigade |
| CLC23M | Mobile Command Post, 23rd Special Operations Brigade |
| CLC51 | 51st Jungle Infantry Brigade |
| CLM | Maintenance Logistics Center |
| CRC | Regional Command Center |
| CCM | Mobile Command Center |
| C5F | Civil Affairs (Asuntos Civiles) |
| CUFAN | Unified Command of National Armed Forces |
| CUFAN1 | Personnel Division |
| CUFAN2 | Intelligence Division |
| CUFAN3 | Operations Division |
| CUFAN4 | Logistics Division |
| CUFAN5 | Civil Affairs Division |
| CUFAN6 | Command & Control Division |
| MIRA1 | Presidential Palace (Miraflores) — Military Command Element |
| MIRA2 | Presidential Palace — Military Command Element |
| MIRA3 | Presidential Palace — Military Command Element |
| PCRC | Regional Command Post Communications |
| PCRM | Regional Command Post Mobile |
| PNME | Riverine Forces River Post |
| PORLAMAR | Destacamento de Apoyo Aéreo #7 |
| RESERVA1-10 | Infantry/Armor Battalion Reserves |
| SCLC | Subordinate Local Communications Center |
| SCLC222M | Mobile Command Post, 222nd Infantry Battalion |
| SCLC512 | 512th Jungle Infantry Battalion |
| SCLM | Maintenance Logistics Service Center |
Navy HF Frequencies (70+)
All Navy frequencies (kHz): 4390.0L, 4632.0U, 5439.0L, 6248.0L, 6260.0L, 6265.0L, 6335.0L, 6357.0L, 6360.0L, 6880.0L, 6888.0L, 6890.0U, 6894.0L, 6895.0U, 7849.0U/L, 8060.0L, 8260.0L, 8270.0L, 8280.0L, 8285.0L, 8291.0L, 8297.0L, 8340.0L, 8358.0L, 8500.0L, 8525.0L, 8540.0L, 8582.0L, 8810.0L, 8825.0U/L, 9017.0L, 9070.0L, 9075.0L, 9190.0U, 9350.0L, 9355.0L, 9380.0L, 9390.0L, 9400.0L, 10272.0U, 10590.0L, 10600.0U, 10650.0L, 12220.0L, 12479.0L, 12480.0L, 12510.0L, 12528.5L, 12537.0U, 12546.0L, 12600.0L, 12660.0L, 13139.0L, 13500.0U, 14759.0L, 14790.0L, 14911.0L, 15536.5U, 16458.0L, 16680.0L, 17080.0L, 17380.0L, 19098.0L, 19200.0U, 20400.0L, 22245.0L
(U = USB, L = LSB)
Navy ALE Networks
| Frequency | Network | Key Stations |
|---|---|---|
| 7310.0 USB | Riverine HQ Network | Base Naval Ciudad Bolívar; Addresses 0-4 (Floating Posts & Patrol Launches) |
| 8280.0 LSB | Riverine Forces | COFFMU1 (Comando Fluvial Fronterizo); DIV (Naval Infantry Command, Vargas) |
| 10650.0 LSB | Coast Guard | DCCOP (Central Ops, Caracas); GC12 (ARBV General Morán); T64 (LSM Los Llanos) |
| 20400.0 LSB | Riverine Ops | ABC Riverine HQ; DIVIMCO1 (Marine Infantry); PNEN1 (Orinoco-Apure Axis) |
Naval Vessel ALE Call Signs
| Hull # | Vessel Name | ALE Call Sign(s) | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| F-21 | Mariscal Sucre | 5JL1, SUCRE | Frigate |
| F-22 | Almirante Brión | BRION | Frigate |
| F-24 | General Soublette | 1C3Z, 5JL1, T5L1, SOUBLETTE | Frigate |
| T-61 | Capana | 1W1S, CAPANA | LST |
| T-62 | Esequibo | 4T8S, ESQUIBO | LST |
| T-63 | Goijaira | 2TB9 | LST |
| T-64 | Los Llanos | 3V2Y, 8DV9, LLANOS | LST |
| T-72 | La Orchila | 6QA8 | Support |
| T-81 | Supply Ship | 9AH4 | Supply |
| BE-11 | Simón Bolívar | BOLIVAR | Training |
| PC-11 | Constitución | CONSTITUCION, PC11 | Patrol |
| PC-12 | Federación | FEDERACION, PC12 | Patrol |
| PC-13 | Independencia | INDEPENDENCIA, PC13 | Patrol |
| PC-14 | Libertad | LIBERTAD | Patrol |
| PC-16 | Víctor | VICTOR, PC16 | Patrol |
| GC-11 | Almirante Clemente | CLEMENTE, GC11 | Coast Guard |
| GC-12 | Gral. Trinidad Morán | GC12, MORAN | Coast Guard |
| GC-21 | Guaicamacuto | — | Coast Guard |
| B-8424 | Río Negro | NEGRON | Patrol |
Navy Command ALE Identifiers (80+)
Command & HQ: ADIPC, ARMARIO, BDIRCO, BNA, BNARAB, BNARCO, BNARTEL, BNF, BNFACO, BNG, BNGU, BRIFFR, BRIFFRI5, CANCO, CANES, CEDAOR, CEDCOM, CEDCOMEBA, CEDCOMEF, CEDEFCOP, CEDLO, CEDOP, CEDOPGR, CEOFAB, CEOFL, CFLCO, CGA, CGA3, CGACO, CGARM, CGUARD, CGUARDOP, CNZACE, CNZEDOP, COFFRI1, COFL, COMEDRA, CUMANA, CZNACEN, DCCOP, DHN, DICO, DIVIMBO, DIVIMCO1, EGR, EPAR, EPG, EPGLG, EPN, ESGN, ESOAR, ETAR, FALCON, JCCOP, OCAMAR
Riverine Posts: PNFA1, PNFA3, PNFA5 (Orinoco-Apure) • PNME2-5 (Río Meta) • PNRN4-5 (Río Negro) • PNPP5 • PNEN1 (Orinoco-Apure Axis)
Radio Stations: PR1, PR2, PR4, PR5
Zone IDs: ZNACEN, ZNAOR, VARGAS
Air Force Bases (9 with GPS)
| Base | Location | Coordinates |
|---|---|---|
| LT Vicente Landaeta Gil AB | Barquisimeto | 10°02'33.50"N 069°21'30.80"W |
| Luis del Valle García AB | Barcelona | 10°06'25.70"N 064°41'20.98"W |
| Base Aérea Mariscal Sucre | Boca del Río | 10°14'59.92"N 067°38'57.91"W |
| Francisco de Miranda AB | Caracas/La Carlota | 10°29'06.12"N 066°50'36.66"W |
| Rafael Urdaneta AB | Maracaibo | 10°33'29.55"N 071°43'40.28"W |
| El Libertador AB | Maracay/Palo Negro | 10°11'00.15"N 067°33'26.35"W |
| Gral. José Antonio Páez AB | Puerto Ayacucho | 05°37'11.97"N 067°36'21.97"W |
| Santo Domingo FAB | Santo Domingo | 07°33'54.40"N 072°02'06.45"W |
| San Antonio del Táchira FAB | San Antonio | 07°51'08.75"N 072°26'05.76"W |
Aeronautical Frequencies
| Category | Frequencies |
|---|---|
| Caracas/Maiquetía VHF | 118.1, 118.4, 119.3, 119.5, 120.4, 121.7, 121.9 MHz • VOR: 114.8 MHz |
| HF Aeronautical | 3010, 6643, 8924, 11345, 17937, 21976 kHz |
| Caribbean VOLMET | 2950, 5580, 11315 kHz |
Naval Bases
| Base | Location | Assets | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Puerto Cabello ("Armario") | Carabobo | Frigate Squadron (F-21, F-22, F-24, F-26), Amphibious Squadron | MAJOR |
| Punto Fijo | Falcón | Patrol Squadron (PC-11 through PC-16) | MAJOR |
| La Guaira | Vargas | Coast Guard (GC-11, GC-12) | MAJOR |
| Caracas | Caracas | — | Major |
| Maracaibo | Zulia | — | Minor |
| Ciudad Bolívar | Bolívar | Riverine HQ | Minor |
| El Amparo | Apure | — | Minor |
| Turiamo | Aragua | — | Naval Airbase |
| Puerto Hierro | Sucre | — | Naval Airbase |
| La Orchila | Island | — | Naval Airbase |
The ALE identifiers are equally valuable. Each call sign maps to a specific unit or vessel. When "DIVSUP" connects to "REGCOM3" on 8060.0 kHz, you know the Division of Supply is contacting Regional Command 3. When "PCGFLU" transmits, that's a Coast Guard river patrol. When "FRALUI" calls in, that's the frigate Almirante Brión.
Every one of these frequencies is monitorable with consumer-grade equipment. An SDR dongle, a wire antenna, and a laptop anywhere in the Caribbean can intercept HF communications across the entire Venezuelan military.
2. The Satellite Is Dead
VeneSat-1, the Simón Bolívar satellite, was Venezuela's crown jewel — a $390 million Chinese-built communications satellite launched October 2008 from Xichang, China. It carried 28 transponders: 14 C-band, 12 Ku-band, and 2 Ka-band (exclusive to Venezuelan territory).
| Band | Count | Downlink (MHz) | Uplink (MHz) | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C-band | 14 | 3,700–4,200 | 5,925–6,425 | Caribbean + South America |
| Ku-band | 12 | 11,280–11,700 | 14,080–14,500 | Cuba, DR, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay |
| Ka-band | 2 | 19,000–19,300 | 28,800–29,100 | Venezuela Only |
Death Timeline
- February 2020: First solar array drive mechanism failed
- March 2020: Second solar array drive failed — total power loss
- March 13, 2020: Satellite declared out of service, tumbling uncontrolled
- March 25, 2020: Ministry of Science officially declared satellite lost
- Current state: Tumbling in elliptical orbit ~50 km above GEO — SPACE DEBRIS
March 24, 2020 at 13:13 EST: Venezuelan government transferred broadcasting to American Intelsat 14 (45°W, C-band). VTV, TVes, Telesur, Vive TV, Radio Nacional, and Miraflores FM — the presidential palace radio station — all migrated to an American satellite.
An anti-American regime broadcasting its propaganda through American satellite infrastructure.
VeneSat-1 Technical Details
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Known active transponder (pre-death) | 3886 MHz, vertical polarization, SR 23000 |
| Beacon frequency | 11700V |
| FTA Venezuela (active) | Intelsat 35e, 34.5°W, 11110 MHz, DVB-S2 |
| State media (active) | Intelsat 14, 45°W, C-band |
| Manufacturer | China Academy of Space Technology (CAST), DFH-4 bus |
| Contractor | China Great Wall Industry Corporation (CGWIC) |
| Cost | $240M (manufacture/launch) + $150M (ground) = $390M total |
| Mass | ~5,050 kg |
| Orbital slot | 78°W (ceded by Uruguay) |
What was NOT transferred: Ku-band military internet (CANTV Satelital broadband for military, health, education, electoral council, security). Ka-band Venezuela-exclusive transponders — permanently lost. Venezuela's military lost satellite communications entirely.
3. Ground Stations Inside Military Bases
Venezuela operates two satellite ground stations, both built by China Great Wall Industry Corporation (CGWIC) and handed over December 1, 2008.
| Station | Location | Role | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baemari / El Sombrero | Base Aérea Militar Capitán Manuel Ríos, Guárico state 9.3563°N, 66.9131°W |
Primary satellite control + teleport | PRIMARY |
| Luepa | Fort Manikuyá, Bolívar state | Backup control station | BACKUP |
Chinese access concern: China built the entire Operations Management System. Chinese personnel trained all Venezuelan technicians. According to the Washington Post, China may retain remote access even without physical presence. The House Select Committee on China flagged these as having "dual-use military applications."
4. Air Defense — The Paper Tiger
Venezuela's Integrated Air Defense System (SINODAM/SINDA) is a multi-layered network of Chinese radars and Russian surface-to-air missiles:
| System | Type | Origin | Jan 2026 Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| JY-27A | Long-range surveillance radar (12+) | China (CETC) | JAMMED |
| S-300VM | Long-range SAM | Russia | NOT CONNECTED |
| BUK M-2 | Medium-range SAM | Russia | NOT CONNECTED |
| FK-3 | Medium-range SAM | China | FAILED |
| Pantsir-S1 | Short-range point defense | Russia | FAILED |
| S-125 Pechora | Legacy SAM | Russia | OBSOLETE |
January 3, 2026: Every single layer failed. US Navy EA-18G Growlers deployed electronic attack that blinded every Chinese radar. The S-300VM and BUK M-2 batteries weren't even connected to their engagement radars. Anti-radiation missiles destroyed emitters that attempted to activate.
Billions in Russian and Chinese air defense equipment. Defeated by electronic warfare aircraft.
5. The Five-Country Intelligence Pipeline
Tech & Radars
SIGINT Analysis
Enforcement
Modernization
Manufacturing
- China provides JY-27A radars (CETC), CANTV telecom backbone (ZTE/Huawei), CEIEC "Great Firewall" deep packet inspection, facial recognition for SEBIN, and the Sistema Patria surveillance database.
- Cuba runs ~500 military advisors in Venezuela. SIGINT stations at Lourdes and Bejucal near Havana monitor the Caribbean with triangulation over thousands of kilometers. Data flows to correlation centers in Havana. Chinese radar feeds from SINDA are shared with Cuba.
- Venezuela enforces domestically through DGCIM (military counterintelligence — intercepts calls, SMS, email, deploys malware) and SEBIN (Helicoide complex + La Tumba underground detention).
- Russia modernizes Cuban surveillance infrastructure and provides Venezuela with secure comms gear, electronic warfare equipment, and S-300VM systems.
- Iran manufactures fiber optic cable through Venefibra ($10M factory in Catia la Mar) and supplies Peykaap III fast attack craft with Nasr anti-ship missiles.
Physical backbone: ALBA-1, a 1,630 km submarine fiber optic cable running directly from La Guaira, Venezuela to Siboney, Cuba. Owned by Telecomunicaciones Gran Caribe (60% Venezuelan state). This is the wire carrying intelligence data to Cuban analysis centers in Havana.
G-Network — The Node That Ties It Together
Telecomunicaciones G-Network C.A. — an ISP founded 2021 in La Guaira that received its CONATEL license in 4 months (normally takes years). Deployed 28 km of fiber along the presidential highway using unmarked vans. Infrastructure runs 200–500 meters from SEBIN headquarters.
A SEBIN operative's server was discovered at 38.61.255.205:5000 on G-Network IP space, created by an active SEBIN officer on the UN-documented torture list. G-Network employs a Russian consultant from Volgograd State Technical University. Five km away, an Iranian fiber optic factory produces cable.
6. Operation Absolute Resolve — Cyber Dimension
January 3, 2026
| Time | Event | Command |
|---|---|---|
| T-14 hours | BGP traffic redirection detected — intelligence gathering | CYBERCOM |
| 02:00 AM | Power grid across Caracas blacked out via SCADA compromise | CYBERCOM |
| 02:01 AM | US helicopters began landing — 1-minute cyber-to-kinetic | SOCOM |
| 02:01+ AM | EA-18G Growlers jam all radar and communications | SPACECOM / Navy |
| Result | Maduro captured. Venezuelan C2 completely paralyzed. | — |
What survived? HF radio. The same frequencies documented in this investigation. The 3–30 MHz bands that propagate via ionospheric skip, require no infrastructure, can't be taken down by a cyber attack, and can only be jammed within line-of-sight.
Every frequency in this document is the fallback the Venezuelan military reverts to when everything modern fails. On January 3, 2026, everything modern failed.
7. Exposed Infrastructure
CANTV Internal Architecture (from GitHub)
The Covetel cooperative published CANTV's email and portal architecture publicly on GitHub:
- Exchange server: owacorp.cantv.com.ve
- SOGo mail: sogo.cantv.com.ve
- CMS: Plone/Zope with PostgreSQL backend
- Directory: LDAP integration
CONATEL Subdomains (All Live)
| Subdomain | Function | Tech |
|---|---|---|
| conatelenlinea.conatel.gob.ve | Online services portal | Yii PHP framework |
| sigestel.conatel.gob.ve | Telecom management (licensing/certification) | — |
| sac.conatel.gob.ve | Citizen services | — |
| registroeventos.conatel.gob.ve | Event registration | — |
| habilita.conatel.gob.ve | Telecom licensing portal | Live |
| homologa.conatel.gob.ve | Equipment certification | 502 Bad Gateway |
SEBIN Infrastructure on G-Network
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| SEBIN Server | 38.61.255.205:5000 — Flask/Python login portal on G-Network IP space (ASN 272122) |
| Created by | Detective Javier Ochoa — active SEBIN officer, UN torture list (17 officers) |
| G-Network Fiber | 28 km along Caracas-La Guaira presidential highway, deployed with unmarked vans |
| Proximity | G-Network infrastructure 200–500m from SEBIN HQ (Plaza Venezuela) |
| Russian Consultant | Vadim Sidorov (Volgograd State Technical University) employed at G-Network |
| Iranian Factory | Venefibra fiber optic factory, 5 km from G-Network, $10M, operational Aug 2025 |
| CONATEL License | Obtained in 4 months (normally takes years) — political connections to Governor Terán (PSUV) |
Hytera TETRA Police Radios
| Equipment | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| PT580H | TETRA handheld portable | Caracas Police |
| MT680 | TETRA mobile radio (vehicle-mounted) | Caracas Police |
| DIB-R5 | TETRA base stations with TEDS | Redundant backup at separate locations |
Vulnerability: TEA1 encryption — TETRA:BURST backdoor (discovered July 2023). Manufacturer: Hytera Communications, Shenzhen, China. Another Chinese company providing Venezuela's security communications with a documented cryptographic weakness.
Submarine Cables
| Cable | Route | Length | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ALBA-1 | La Guaira → Siboney, Cuba → Ocho Rios, Jamaica | 1,630 km | INTEL PIPELINE 60% Venezuelan state-owned |
| CANTV Coastal | Maracaibo to Carupáno (13 cities) | — | $80M domestic cable |
| ARCOS-1 | 24 landing points, 15 countries | 8,700 km | International backbone |
| AMERICAS-II | USA → PR → USVI → Martinique → Curaçao → Trinidad → Venezuela → Brazil | — | International |
| ECFS | Eastern Caribbean to Venezuela | — | Caribbean island chain |
CEIEC — China's Great Firewall for Venezuela
US Treasury/OFAC sanctioned CEIEC (China National Electronics Import & Export Corporation) in November 2020 for providing CANTV with a "commercialized version of China's Great Firewall" — deep packet inspection, keyword filtering, traffic shaping, and metadata collection. CANTV controls ~70% of Venezuela's internet.
Censorship hierarchy: CEIEC (China) → CANTV (state) → CONATEL (regulator) → Private ISPs
Chinese Infrastructure Penetration
- Huawei: 1,400+ workers in Venezuela (400 Chinese), fiber optic network, military DICOFAN work, 5G
- ZTE: Sistema Patria surveillance, CANTV infrastructure, communication antennas, Vtelca joint venture
- Both companies have knowledge of "significant portions of the communications, data, and command and control architectures"
CEOFANB Website (Probed March 2026)
- ceofanb.mil.ve — WordPress + nginx, WordFence security
- REST API: locked (rest_login_required — 401)
- XML-RPC: blocked (403 Forbidden)
- Google Analytics: UA-105348112-1
- Internal email: correo.ceofanb.mil.ve (unreachable externally)
8. Starlink — The Regime's Nightmare
Starlink does not officially serve Venezuela — one of the only Latin American countries dark on the coverage map. But terminals are smuggled from Colombia and Argentina, selling on Telegram for $60–$600+.
Within 48 hours of Operation Absolute Resolve, Starlink offered free internet to all Venezuelans.
They can't block it. They can't jam it from the ground. They can't intercept it. They can't shut it down. CEIEC's Great Firewall is useless against it. CONATEL's censorship orders don't reach space.
For a regime that built its entire surveillance apparatus around controlling the wire, a communications system that doesn't use the wire is an existential threat.
9. Naval Order of Battle 2026
| Category | Class | Count | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Submarines | Type 209/1300 | 2 | NON-OPERATIONAL |
| Submarines | VAS 525 mini-sub | 1 | Active |
| Frigates | Almirante Brion | 1 | Missile frigate |
| Patrol | Gavión-class | 12 | — |
| Patrol | Point-class | 4 | — |
| Patrol | Págalo-class | 2 | — |
| Patrol | Guaicamacuto-class | 3 | — |
| Fast Attack | Peykaap III | Multiple | IRANIAN-MADE Nasr missiles |
| Amphibious | Capana-class LST | 4 | Landing ships |
| Coastal | Constitución-class | 3 | Gunboats |
| Support | Various | 7 | Tug, supply, oceanographic |
| Training | Simón Bolívar | 1 | Sail training |
Iranian Peykaap III Fast Attack Craft — Full Specifications
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Origin | Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGC-N), North Korean-derived hull |
| Length | 17.3m (56 ft 9 in) |
| Beam | 3.75m |
| Draft | 0.7m |
| Displacement | ~13.75 tons |
| Speed | 50+ knots |
| Crew | 3 |
| Armament | 2× Nasr anti-ship missile launchers + machine guns |
| Nasr Missile | Iranian copy of Chinese C-704, TV + mmWave radar guidance |
| Range | 35 km (export CM-90 variant: 90 km) |
| Tactics | High-speed swarm attacks in confined maritime environments |
The weapons pipeline mirrors the telecom pipeline — Iran manufactures, China designs, Venezuela deploys. Shown in Venezuelan naval parade July 2023, deployed in Caribbean waters.
Submarine Communications Gap
Venezuela has NO ELF/VLF submarine communication infrastructure. Only the US, Russia, India, and China operate ELF facilities. The two Type 209/1300 submarines (Sábalo and Caribe) are reportedly non-operational — haven't been to sea in years. Even if operational, submerged they would be completely cut off from command. Surfaced comms would use Navy HF frequencies listed above.
ALBA-1 Submarine Cable — Intelligence Pipeline
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Length | 1,630 km |
| Route | La Guaira, Venezuela → Siboney, Cuba (direct) |
| Owner | Telecomunicaciones Gran Caribe (60% Venezuelan state, 40% Cuba's Transbit) |
| Function | Physical backbone of Venezuela-Cuba intelligence data transfer |
| Chinese radar feeds | SINODAM/SINDA data shared with Cuban SIGINT via this cable |
| Status during Op Absolute Resolve | Unknown if disrupted |
10. Key Findings
Read the full narrative investigation on Substack.