Politic?

This is a blog dedicated to a personal interpretation of political news of the day. I attempt to be as knowledgeable as possible before commenting and committing my thoughts to a day's communication.

Friday, July 30, 2021

Space Free-For-All

Earth from space
Getty Images
"[Russia deployed a combination of satellites over the past year that] we would describe as having the characteristic of a weapon and they practised a manoeuvre that we would say could only have been done to deliberately destroy another satellite."
"[China continues to] develop anti-satellite technology and that's everything from missiles that directly target satellites, to laser dazzle weapons, to electronic jamming to physically ramming other satellites."
"[China practises against] their own redundant satellites, demonstrating the ability to do it."
"A future conflict may not start in space but I'm in no doubt that it will come very quickly to space, and it may well be won or lost in space."
"If we don't think, and prepare for that today then we won't be ready when the time comes."
Air Chief Marshal Sir Mike Wigston, United Kingdom

A United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket launches the AEHF-4 satellite for the U.S. Air Force from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida in the early-morning hours. (United Launch Alliance)

Sounding the alarm. That in the considered opinion of Great Britain's top-echelon military elite, taking into consideration intelligence gained and gathered and shared with allies, that Russia and China are responsible through their activities, of a threat to militarize and weaponize space. Not, by any means a new concept or concern, it has long been debated, but now proof emerges that both countries are engaged in preparations to do both, obviously considering it in their best interests to engage in the unthinkable.

Now, chief of the British Royal Air Force claims that in the future conflicts would be "won or lost" above the Earth's atmosphere. Taking Earthly disagreements and their protagonists' ambitions to the heavens above. According to Air Chief Sir Wigston, both Moscow and Beijing engage in "questionable" activity like flying satellites within "close proximity" to others'. More "dangerous activity" is also on the horizon, planning to destroy other nations' satellites.

Take, for example, the Islamic Republic of Iran's deliberate stealth attacks on ships belonging to other nations such as the UAE, the U.S. and Israel in international waters that the Islamic Republic likes to consider its unrecognized own. The military-grade speedboats operated by the IRGC designed for hit-and-run and divers skilled in placing undervessel limpet mines to explode a ship owned by its 'enemies' creating a destabilizing situation of maritime uncertainty.

Now translate that to deep, dark space and the general picture has clarity. Who owns space? Is space to be considered the latest target for conquest? 
 
British military brass is unequivocal; they witness "reckless" behaviour from China and Russia acting as adversaries "several times a year". Then it was over to General Sir Patrick Sanders, head of Strategic Command, who stressed the disruptive implications implicit in a space war for civilian populations and the military alike, that not only does space provide "critical capabilities" to the military, but it also enables technology "we all recognize on our mobile phones to the technology that enables us to navigate the Carrier Strike Group around the globe".
 
Royal Navy aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth
The HMS Queen Elizabeth is part of the UK Carrier Strike Group sailing through the South China Sea  PA Media
 
That would be the very Carrier Strike Group en route to Japan sailing through the South China Sea which the CCP regards as its very own, giving it the authority to warn Britain that it would do well not to carry out any "improper acts". The Global Times had its own stark warning, of the People's Liberation Army Navy in a high state of combat readiness, as China monitors the eastward progress of the Carrier Strike Group. Britain, seethes Beijing, is "still living in its colonial days".

A month earlier, it was Moscow warning Britain that it had no patience for the games it was playing, sailing close to the Crimean coast. To emphasize its ire, twenty Russian warplanes and two coastguard vessels shadowed the British warship. A Russian patrol ship fired warning shots while a jet dropped bombs in front of the steaming HMS Defender sailing 12 miles off the Crimean (Ukrainian) coast, according to Moscow's defence ministry.

The two British chiefs spoke at the launch of Space Command at RAF High Wycombe, a newly-initiated joint force to be staffed by the Royal Air Force, the British Army, the Royal Navy and the civil service, which at full operating capacity will provide command and control of space capabilities, including the Space Operations Cnetre, RAF Fyligdales in North Yorkshire and SKY-NET satellites for military communications.
 
A badge of the Shenzhou-12 Manned Space Flight Mission is seen on the uniform of a staff member of the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center during a news conference before the Shenzhou-12 mission to build China's space station, at Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Gansu province, China June 16, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
Beijing destroyed a satellite with an anti-satellite weapon, creating debris that is still circulating Earth. File pic
 
The new unit plans to focus on sharing information on developing threats to include the use of ground-based and space-based radars; information gathering "from other like-minded allies". Its aim, to build a network of satellites to "move data around seamlessly" and garner "intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance from space", according to Sir Patrick. "Those are the sort of capability areas that we're looking at. The starting point is to understand what's up there and to get the basics right."   
"The Russian satellite system used to conduct this on-orbit weapons test is the same satellite system that we raised concerns about earlier this year, when Russia manoeuvred near a U.S. government satellite." 
"This is further evidence of Russia's continuing efforts to develop and test space-based systems, and consistent with the Kremlin's published military doctrine to employ weapons that hold U.S. and allied space assets at risk."   
Gen. John W. Raymond, commander, Space Command, head, U.S. Space Force
The Russian Defence Ministry stated the disputed event involved "a small space vehicle" that "inspected one of the national satellites from a close distance using special equipment", the inspection "provided valuable information about the object that was inspected, which was transmitted to the ground-based control facilities."

Britain and US accuse Russia of testing space weapon


 

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