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US satellite strike escalates military space race
By Joe Kay
22 February 2008
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The decision by the US to shoot a missile at a dysfunctional
spy satellite has provoked sharp protests from Russia and China
and threatens to escalate competition over the control of space.
The US Navy made a successful strike using an SM-3 missile
late Wednesday night, according to Pentagon officials. The missile
was launched from the USS Lake Erie, located off the coast of
Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean. The interception took place about
150 miles above the Earths surface.
The US military has claimed that the action was necessary for
safety reasonsin particular, to prevent the satellites
fuel tank from reaching ground intact. Many scientists and military
experts have dismissed these arguments, however, pointing to a
far more likely rationale: the attempt by the US to showcase its
military capacity and send warning signals to potential adversaries,
particularly China.
Little is known about the exact intended purpose of the satellite
that was destroyed. It was launched in 2006 by the National Reconnaissance
Organization (NRO), the section of the Pentagon responsible for
spy satellites. It quickly ceased to function and would have fallen
back to the Earth sometime in March.
In an indication of the importance the US government attributed
to the missile launch, Defense Secretary Robert Gates personally
gave the final order and closely monitored the progress of the
missile.
The incident comes just over a year after China shot down one
of its own weather satellites in a move that signaled the countrys
threat to US dominance of space. The January 2007 test was condemned
by the US and other powers. For its part, Russia has vigorously
opposed US plans for constructing a missile defense system that
would include radar systems near Russias European border.
Both Russia and China denounced the US missile strike, seeing
it as a provocative act. Chinese Foreign Minister Liu Bianca said
the US action may influence the security of outer space
and may harm other countries.
Peoples Daily, the Chinese state newspaper, wrote,
The Untied States, the worlds top space power, has
often accused other countries of vigorously developing military
space technology, but did not shirk from using this technology
itself. The United States will not easily abandon its military
advantage based on space technology, and it is striving to expand
and fully exploit this advantage.
The Russian Defense Ministry Information Department warned
in a statement last week, Under cover of discussions about
the danger posed by the satellite, preparation is going ahead
for tests of an anti-satellite weapon. Such tests mean in essence
the creation of a new strategic weapon. Andrei Kokoshin,
former secretary of the Russian Security Council, said on Thursday
that the missile launch meant a new phase in the militarization
of space.
The decision to destroy the satellite was made only a few days
after Russia and China issued a statement calling for an international
ban on space weapons. The proposal, which is opposed by the US,
would expand the Outer Space Treaty of 1967, which bans weapons
of mass destruction in space.
The US military has official denied any military aim. However,
its official explanation for why the action was taken is not credible.
According to Joint Chiefs of Staff Vice Chairman James Cartwright,
the sole motivation was public safety. In particular, he warned
that if the satellite was not hit, a hydrazine fuel tank could
reach the ground and leak the potentially harmful chemical.
It is highly unlikely, however, that the tank would have reached
the Earth intact. Even if it did, it is even more unlikely that
it could have harmed anyone on the ground.
Theodore Postol, a professor of science, technology and national
security policy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
noted in comments on the NewsHour program on PBS Wednesday, The
idea that the hydrazine tank will survive to the ground really
makes no sense. He noted that the extremely high pressures
and temperatures generated upon reentry would almost certainly
split the tank open, dumping the fuel harmlessly into the atmosphere.
The Pentagon itself acknowledged that even minimal danger from
the chemical, supposing the tank reached the ground, would cover
only two football fields (about 10,000 square meters). Ivan Oelrich
of the Federation of American Scientists noted that this amounts
to about one ten billionth of the Earths surface. Over 70
percent of this surface is covered by water.
Large manmade objects fall to the earth from space at a rate
of about 50 to 200 a year, but there have been no casualties from
these objects since the beginning of the Space Age. The idea that
the Pentagon would spend $60 million to counter the tiny risk
involved is untenable. One commentator noted that if safety was
the motivation the money would be better spent on improving roads
and traffic lights, since far more hydrazine is transported on
a daily basis on the ground than is contained in the spy satellite.
Some commentators have suggested that one motivation for destroying
the satellite was concern over possible classified information
it might contain, including encryption technologies. Jeremy Close,
spokesman for European defense firm Astrium, noted, If part
of the satellite was to fall intact to the ground, or partially
intact, it might yield valuable information about the type of
cryptography used by the satellite to communicate with the ground.
The main aim, however, was to demonstrate US military capacity.
While the ability to destroy satellites is not new for the American
military, the Pentagon has moved aggressively to develop its missile
technology and flexibility. This is part of a broader attempt
to dominate space.
This was the first live strike by the US Navy using its missile
launch technology. The vessels used to launch the missile are
easily deployed throughout the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. It
was as much a display of versatility as it was of capacity.
The January 2007 Chinese anti-satellite test was viewed with
great concern by the US military. Michael Mosley, the US Air Force
chief of staff, compared the incident to the Soviet launching
of the first satellite in history, Sputnik, in 1957.
The American military relies heavily on satellites in everything
from communications to targeting. The US sees space as its domain
and is strongly opposed to any other country developing the ability
to control the ultimate high ground.
Domination of space has been a longstanding ambition of the
American ruling class, going back at least to Lyndon Johnson,
who noted that from space total control of the Earth may
be exercised. The so-called Star Wars program
of missile defense during the Reagan administration was part of
this ambition, though it was largely unsuccessful.
Control of space and missile defense was an early priority
of the Bush administration. In 2001, future Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld headed the Commission to Assess US National Security
Space Management and Organization. The panel concluded, It
is in the US national interest to...use the nations potential
in space to support its domestic, economic, diplomatic and national
security objectives; develop and deploy the means to deter and
defend against hostile acts directed at US space assets and against
the uses of space hostile to US interests. The panel warned
ominously of a Space Pearl Harbor.
In 2004, the Air Force produced a document calling for maintaining
space superiority, which it defined as the freedom
to attack as well as the freedom from attack.
In 2006, the Bush Administration released its National Space Policy,
which insisted on the necessity for space control
and the rejection of new legal regimes of or other restrictions
that seek to prohibit or limit US access to or use of space.
As the American ruling class seeks to bolster its global position
through the use of military force, control over spacewhich
by its very nature is a global frontierwill assumer ever
greater importance.
See Also:
Bush approves shoot-down of satellite
by Navy missile cruiser
[16 February 2008]
China's anti-satellite
missile test points to developing space weapons race
[29 January 2007]
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