A satellite, no bigger that a domestic fridge, blasts into orbit from a secret military launch site. Controlled from the ground, it stealthily moves towards the satellite of a rogue enemy country. Suddenly it explodes, destroying the second satellite and shutting down the communication capability of the country instantly.
A recent U.S. Defence Department exercise has helped increase awareness in the military about the value of using high-altitude balloons operating near the edge of space to set up emergency communications networks on short notice, according to an Air National Guard official. The balloons played a significant role in the exercise, which featured a scenario in which Air National Guard units responded to a fictional earthquake in Hilo, Hawaii, from June 18 to 20, according to Lt. Col. Patty Tuttle, commander of the Arizona Air National Guard's Second Detachment.
It has been more than two and a half years since John D. Rockefeller IV and Ron Wyden took to the US Senate floor to criticise a secret intelligence program that, they said, was inefficient, too expensive and, in any case, unnecessary. The senators didnt name the project, but at the time, it was widely identified as the successor to the Misty program of stealth satellites that cannot be detected in orbit. Republican leaders considered disciplinary action against the senators for talking about a secret program even though they didnt identify it. Now, Mike McConnell, the director of national intelligence, has done essentially the same thing the senators did back then: talked about a major spy program without indicating which one. And McConnell didnt just criticise it; he said he was killing it.
DIY Anti-Satellite System Satellite tracking software freely available on the Internet and a smattering of textbook physics could be used by any organisation that can get hold of an intermediate range rocket to mount an unsophisticated attack on military or civilian satellites. Such an attack would require modest engineering capability and only a limited budget. That is according to researchers writing in Inderscience Publishers' International Journal of Critical Infrastructures. A terrorist organisation or rogue state could threaten essential satellite systems, say Adrian Gheorghe of Old Dominion University Norfolk, in Virginia, USA and Dan Vamanu of "Horia Hulubei" National Institute of Physics and Nuclear Engineering, in Bucharest, Romania. Military satellites, global positioning systems, weather satellites and even satellite TV systems could all become victims of such a simple attack. Gheorghe and Vamanu have carried out an analysis of just how easy it could be to knock out strategic satellites, their findings suggest that dozens of systems on which military and civilian activities depend make near-space a vulnerable environment. The team used a so-called "mathematical game" and textbook physics equations for ballistics to help them build a computer model to demonstrate that anti-satellite weaponry is a real possibility. Accuracy and elegance are not issues in carrying out a satellite attack, the researchers say, as long as the projectile hits the satellite. In fact, all it would take to succeed with an amateurish, yet effective anti-satellite attack would be the control of an intermediate range missile, which is well within the reach of many nations and organisations with sufficient funds, and a college-level team dedicated to the cause.
"Any country in possession of intermediate range rockets may mount a grotesquely unsophisticated attack on another's satellites given the political short-sightedness that would be blind to a potentially devastating retaliation," the researchers say.
On January 11, 2007, China deliberately destroyed one of its own weather satellites in a test, which some analysts suggested as having the potential to revive a techno-political race believed to be defunct since the 1980s. According to Gheorghe and Vamanu that was the cool analytical view, but some hot diplomats are quoted as saying this demonstration is inconsistent with international efforts to avert an arms race in space and so undermining security.
"While it may be true that, when it comes to nuts and bolts, things may not be quite as simple as they sound here, the bare fact remains - it can be done."
Their conclusions suggest that the risk of deliberate satellite sabotage should be placed higher on the security agenda.
In the mid-1980s, while the United States worked to develop President Reagan's "Star Wars" strategic defence initiative space-based missile defence program, the Soviet Union was secretly developing its own version. It was a program so top secret that photos of the Energiya launch vehicle were only taken from the opposite side to ensure that the true nature of the Polyus (or Skif-DM) program remain hidden.
In an article written by Russian historian Konstantin Lantrotov and translated by Soviet space history expert Dr. Asif Siddiqi, the Volume 14 #2 issue of 'Quest: The History of Spaceflight' provides the first full account of the Polyus (Skif-DM) space-based laser battle station program, a major element of the Soviet space program. The article focuses on a detailed account of launch preparations, the visit to Baykonur by Soviet Communist Party General Secretary, Mikhail Gorbachev, and its launch on 15 May 1987.
The People's Liberation Army (PLA) continues to build cyberwarfare units and develop viruses to attack enemy computer systems as part of its information-warfare strategy, the U.S. Department of Defence (DOD) warned in a report released on Friday.
The director of a little-known U.S. spy agency that analyses imagery from the skies says that the increasing availability of commercial satellite photos may require the government to restrict distribution.
The United States is stepping up its efforts to allay Russian concerns over its plan to deploy a limited missile defence system in Europe. The proposal is the focus of talks in Brussels on Thursday that will involve Nato and Russian officials. Washington says the missile system is intended to protect the US from possible long-range missile attacks from Iran and North Korea.
Russian space experts believe that the Untied States may have used an anti-satellite weapon last month to destroy a small Russian research satellite, the Interfax news agency reports. The satellite was a small spacecraft built and launched for Moscow State University to monitor space radiation. The probe, nicknamed Universitetsky or Tatiana, was launched as a payload in January 2005 from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome.
Russian space experts are wondering whether the United States used an anti-satellite weapon last month to kill a small Russian research satellite, the Novosti news agency reported Wednesday. The claim that the Pentagon intentionally crippled the satellite brought an almost immediate denial from U.S. military officials.