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U.S. Central Command has told lawmakers it received “multiple threat reports” that adversaries exploited commercially available location data to target or surveil U.S. personnel deployed in theater, according to a letter shared with Reuters on May 28, 2026.
The Centcom message, dated April 14, did not provide operational specifics but covers a region including the Strait of Hormuz.
Lawmakers led by Senator Ron Wyden and a bipartisan group say this is the first official confirmation that commercially traded location records have been used against U.S. forces in an active war zone.
Location data—collected by apps and services and bought and resold by data brokers for advertising—can reveal troop concentrations and patterns of life, the letter warned, creating vulnerabilities to missiles, drones, roadside bombs and counterintelligence operations.
Past reporting and academic buys have shown military movements can be reconstructed from brokered datasets.
Lawmakers urged the Pentagon to adopt measures such as disabling advertising IDs on government devices, defaulting off location sharing and moving personnel away from tracking-prone browsers; Google defended Chrome’s security.
The Pentagon said it would respond to requests for comment.








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