New TETRA Radio Encryption Flaws Expose Law Enforcement Communications
Aug 11, 2025
Encryption / Network Security
Cybersecurity researchers have discovered a fresh set of security issues in the Terrestrial Trunked Radio (TETRA) communications protocol, including in its proprietary end-to-end encryption (E2EE) mechanism that exposes the system to replay and brute-force attacks, and even decrypt encrypted traffic. Details of the vulnerabilities – dubbed 2TETRA:2BURST – were presented at the Black Hat USA security conference last week by Midnight Blue researchers Carlo Meijer, Wouter Bokslag, and Jos Wetzels. TETRA is a European mobile radio standard that's widely used by law enforcement, military, transportation, utilities, and critical infrastructure operators. It was developed by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI). It encompasses four encryption algorithms: TEA1, TEA2, TEA3, and TEA4. The disclosure comes a little over two years after the Netherlands-based cybersecurity company discovered a set of security vulnerabilities in TETRA standard called TETRA:BURST, c...