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Chinas anti-satellite missile test points to developing
space weapons race
By John Chan
29 January 2007
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After a lengthy silence, the Chinese government finally admitted
last week to having tested an anti-satellite missile by destroying
one of its aging weather satellites on January 11. While insisting
that it still opposed the militarisation of space, Chinas
move is clearly a step in the opposite direction. The anti-satellite
test was the first since both the former Soviet Union and the
US carried out similar experiments in 1980s.
News of the test, which was leaked to the media by US authorities,
provoked a chorus of criticism from Washington and its allies,
accusing China of initiating a space arms race. Such comments
are completely hypocritical. Rather than starting an arms race,
Beijing is responding to the Bush administrations efforts
to establish and maintain US military supremacy in space.
The Chinese test was first reported by the website of the American
magazine Aviation Week & Space Technology on January
17. A ballistic KT-2 missile launched from Sichuan provinces
Xichang space centre struck and destroyed a Chinese Feng Yun-1C
weather satellite orbiting 865 kilometres above the earth. The
US air force missile warning system detected the launch, and its
space command monitored the Feng Yun-1C during and after the collision.
The following day, US National Security Council spokesman Gordon
Johndroe confirmed that the US had detected the test. The
US believes Chinas development and testing of such weapons
is inconsistent with the spirit of cooperation that both countries
aspire to in the civil space area, he declared. Britain,
Australia, Canada, Japan and South Korea quickly condemned Chinas
militarisation of space.
Joseph Biden, chairman of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
described the test as provocative, but urged the US
administration not to start a space arms race. A New York Times
editorial on January 20 also called for moderation, stating: The
United States, with many more satellites in orbit than any other
power and a military that has become increasingly dependent on
satellites, has the most to lose from an unbridled space arms
race.
There is no doubt, however, that the Bush administration exploited
the Chinese test to justify its own extensive preparations for
space warfare. In a congressional hearing on January 11, Defence
Intelligence Agency director Michael Maples named China and Russia
as primary states of concern over their military space
programs. Several countries continue to develop capabilities
that have the potential to threaten US space assets, and some
have already deployed systems with inherent anti-satellite capabilities,
such as satellite-tracking laser range-finding devices and nuclear-armed
ballistic missiles, he said.
The US military space and nuclear weapons programs are far
more advanced than those of China or Russia. In 1983, the Reagan
administration intensified strategic pressure on the Soviet Union
by calling for the building space-based weapon platforms designed
to block Soviet nuclear missilesthe so-called Star
Wars program. Both the US and the Soviet Union tested anti-satellite
weapons but discontinued the tests, fearing that the debris would
damage their own satellites and affect the functioning of missile
warning systems.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the US continued
to develop space military programs, which were accelerated under
the Bush administration. In 2001, Washington withdrew from the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (ABM) with Russia and initiated
a program to build a missile shield. While insisting that the
anti-ballistic missile system was purely defensive, an effective
shield greatly strengthens Americas ability to launch a
first strike without fear of reprisal.
Former defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld actively pushed for
an expanded space warfare program. In 2004, the US Air Force published
a paper that outlined long- and short-term US strategies not only
for anti-satellite missiles, but ground-based lasers and hunter-killer
satellites. It also proposed the development of space-based weapon
systems that could attack ground targets by firing very high-velocity
metal rod bundles.
In 2005, the US voted against a UN resolution calling for negotiations
on a ban on space weapons. Last October, Bush signed a new National
Space Policythe first full revision in a decadethat
rejected any arms control agreements that might limit US flexibility
in space. It also asserted the right to deny states hostile
to US interests access to outer space.
Undersecretary of State Robert Joseph told the Washington
Post in December: We reserve the right to defend ourselves
against hostile attacks and interference with our space assets.
We will, therefore, oppose others who wish to use their military
capabilities to impede or deny our access to and use of space.
We will seek to protect our space assets by active or passive
means.
The US military is heavily dependent on space technology for
communication, spying, navigation, targetting and other functions
and therefore vulnerable to any attack on its satellites. But
while US policy is couched in terms of defence, the
military systems being developed have obvious offensive capabilities
aimed at destroying similar enemy capacities. According to estimates
by the US-based Centre for Defence Information, the Pentagon requested
nearly a billion dollars for space weapon programs for the current
year.
China, which is treated as a potential enemy by Washington,
has reacted to the Pentagons dominance in space. Alarmed
by the effectiveness of US hi-tech weapons in the 1990-91 Gulf
War, the Chinese military began intensively studying the American
militarys use of space and initiated an anti-satellite weapon
program. Such a capacity is obviously a component of Chinese preparations
to counter the US in both conventional and nuclear warfare.
To catch up to the US, China has been expanding its space programs,
with the assistance of Russia. Beijing has now sent three astronauts
into spaceone in 2003 and two in 2005. It is only the third
country to do so after Russia and the US. According to a retired
Russian general Leonid Ivashov, Chinas anti-satellite missile
is based on a model (IS-1) developed by the Soviet Union in the
1970s.
A Financial Times editorial on January 19 noted that
two events last year might have rattled Beijing. First,
the US nuclear cooperation agreement with nuclear-armed India
is the clearest indication yet of Washingtons wish to build
up a counterweight to China in Asia and the Pacific. But second,
last summer the Bush administration came out with a new policy
asserting that the US regarded space as important a dimension
for the nations security as air or sea power.
Within China, the state-run media have barely mentioned the
countrys successful testing of its anti-satellite capabilitiesa
sharp contrast to the nationalist propaganda surrounding its recent
deployment of new J-10 fighter jets. The low-key approach tends
to indicate that Beijing wanted to warn Washington against the
militarisation of space, rather than announce an aggressive space
weapons program.
Whatever Beijings intentions, however, the test could
easily accelerate a weapons race involving not only the US but
other countries as well. Regional rival Japan, which has demanded
a thorough explanation of the Chinese launch, has
been rapidly expanding its own space program. In 2003, Japan began
launching reconnaissance satellites, which clearly have military
uses, and are part of the US anti-ballistic missile program.
See Also:
China's defence report highlights growing
dangers of war
[18 January 2007]
Pentagon report targets
China as a military threat
[21 June 2006]
Pentagon spells out
strategy for global military aggression
[9 February 2006]
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