SPACEWAR
US general warns China biggest threat in space
US general warns China biggest threat in space
By Didier LAURAS
Munich, Germany (AFP) Feb 19, 2023
Space has "fundamentally changed" in a just a few years due to a growing arms race, a US general said, singling out China as the "most challenging threat", followed by Russia.

"We are seeing a whole mix of weapons being produced by our strategic competitors," General Bradley Chance Saltzman, the US Chief of Space Operations, told a select group of media, including AFP.

"The most challenging threat is China but also Russia," he said, speaking late Saturday on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, listing technologies including anti-satellite missiles, ground-based directed energy and orbit interception capacities.

"We have to account for the fact that space as a contested domain has fundamentally changed. The character of how we operate in space has to shift, and that's mostly because of the weapons (China) and Russia have tested and in some cases operationalised," he said.

His words carry even more weight given surging US-China tensions -- highlighted by tense exchanges in Munich Saturday between Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Beijing's top diplomat Wang Yi over a suspected Chinese spy balloon.

Blinken warned Wang that China must not repeat such an "irresponsible act" of sending a balloon over US airspace, while Wang said the Washington's reaction -- it shot the craft down -- had damaged their countries' relations.

- Space arms race -

The space arms race is nothing new. As early as 1985, the Pentagon used a missile to destroy a satellite in a test.

Since then, the United States's rivals have been seeking to show they can compete -- China did the same in 2007, and India in 2019.

In February 2020, an American general noted that there were two Russian satellites placed into orbit that were tracking a US spy satellite.

And in late 2021, Russia destroyed one of its own satellites with a missile fired from Earth, in a show of forced condemned as an irresponsible act by NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg.

"Adversaries are leveraging space... targeting and extending the range of their weapons," said General Saltzman.

"That's really the change that happens inside the domain."

Countries are increasingly secretive when it comes to their military activities in space but the race is such that in 2019, the year that the Pentagon launched its Space Force, it predicted that Russia and China could potentially overtake the United States.

Saltzman rejects the idea that Washington is behind.

But the fight has evolved, shifting from the idea of destroying satellites with missiles or "kamikaze" satellites, to that of finding ways of damaging them with laser weapons or powerful microwaves.

"I am always going to make sure that I preserve capabilities to do the most critical functions, like national command and control, or nuclear command and control," said the general.

- 'Responsible behaviour' -

The Ukraine war has served as a reminder of the fundamental importance of space in conflicts today and in the future.

"Space is important to the modern fight," said Saltzman.

"You can attack space without going (into) space, through cyber networks or other vectors. We have to make sure we are defending all these capabilities."

The growing military activity, combined with increasing commercial production, does however raise the potential problems of collateral damage, destructive debris and, more broadly, an international code of conduct.

Saltzman has never held talks with his Chinese and Russian counterparts, his aides told AFP. In Munich, he met Norway's defence minister and participated in a panel.

"We talked about responsible behaviour," he said. "There is proper way to behave in space, that is not debris-generating, that does not interfere, that has safe distances and safe trajectories, and we communicate when we have problems."

Space will become "more and more congested", he added.

"If we can operate with a clear understanding of what the standards are, we are going to be a lot safer."

Related Links
Military Space News at SpaceWar.com

Tweet

SPACEWAR
Solstar Space awarded Phase I STTR contract in partnership with AFWERX and SpaceWERX
Santa Fe NM (SPX) Feb 16, 2023
Solstar Space (Solstar), the company making persistent on-orbit communications available, announced it was awarded a Phase I STTR contract by the Department of Air Force (DAF) to evaluate the company's Slayton Space Communicator for high-speed data communications. Solstar Space is developing a flight-proven modular device for spacecraft integration capable of providing satellite operators near real-time command and control through a 24/7 high bandwidth downlink and uplink data relay known as the S ... read more

SPACEWAR
Germany to give Slovakia Mantis air defence systems

Advanced manufacturing powering development of Next Generation Interceptor

Kremlin keeps mum on missile systems seen on Moscow rooftops

Netherlands set to boost push for Patriot missile defenses in Ukraine

SPACEWAR
N. Korea ballistic missile appears to have landed in Japan's EEZ: PM

Lockheed Martin gets $1BN contract for sea-based hypersonic strike capability

Russia fires dozens of missiles at Ukraine overnight: Kyiv

Final flight of HAWC Program screams through the sky

SPACEWAR
US ends search for downed Chinese balloon debris, other objects

Japan says past aerial objects likely Chinese spy balloons

US still in dark over mystery flying objects, rejects China balloon accusation

Oops -- US jet pilot misses mystery object with first missile

SPACEWAR
Babcock secures UK Military Skynet satellite contract

Multi aircraft and naval ships showcase interoperability

SES, ThinKom and Hughes enable multi-orbit resilient connectivity for critical airborne missions

Comtech receives additional funding for US Army Communications

SPACEWAR
US boosts artillery round production; As EU eyes joint muntion purchases for Ukraine

France says to send Kyiv armoured vehicles within week

Ukrainian soldiers take German tank course in double time

Northrop Grumman to manufacture US Marine Corps next generation handheld targeting system

SPACEWAR
Sanction-hit Russia displays combat-tested arms at UAE fair

Beijing slams 'false' US claims that China may arm Russia

Germany slams Swiss ban on munitions for Ukraine

Ukraine munition appetite tests Western defence industry

SPACEWAR
Hungary to vote on Finland, Sweden NATO bids early March

China says deeply concerned over 'out of control' Ukraine conflict

Why China's military support for Russia would be a 'game changer'

Putin tightens China ties as Biden slams Russia over treaty

SPACEWAR