1st-ever space conflict occurs over Middle East,
experts say. What is space warfare?
By
BRENDAN RASCIUS
MIAMI HERALD • November
8, 2023
An Israeli Iron Dome Missile Defense
system is tested during a live-fire exercise at White Sands Missile Range in
New Mexico in August 2021. (David Huskey/U.S. Army)
(Tribune News Service) — In early
November, a milestone in the history of human conflict appears to have been
crossed.
Israel’s Aerial Defense System shot
down a surface-to-surface missile near the Red Sea, an Israeli Defense Forces
spokesperson said in a statement provided to McClatchy News.
This was likely the first-ever
instance of state-to-state combat undertaken in space, Wendy Whitman Cobb, a
professor of strategy and security studies at the U.S. Air Force School of
Advanced Air and Space Studies, told McClatchy News.
The episode highlights the growing
significance of space — specifically the area just above Earth’s atmosphere —
as a theater of war, experts told McClatchy News. It also serves as a reminder
that subtler forms of space warfare are occurring regularly, while slipping
under the public’s radar.
What is space warfare?
Space warfare is an incredibly vague
concept in search of a more precise definition, experts said.
It “is generally accepted that it
includes ground-to-space warfare, such as attacking satellites from the Earth,
as well as space-to-space warfare, such as satellites attacking satellites,”
Martin Whelan, a senior vice president at the Aerospace Corporation, a
federally funded research institute, told McClatchy News.
However, Brian Chow, an independent
policy analyst, defined space warfare as involving assets already in space. By
that definition, the recent Israeli missile interception would not count as
space warfare as the missile was “not a space asset in orbit.”
Hostilities on the final frontier are
not limited to active military warfare, though, Whitman Cobb said. They most
often occur in more understated ways, such as through the use of cyber, jamming
and laser technology.
Whether these actions legally
constitute war is unclear as there are currently few laws governing space,
which itself is not even clearly defined, Whitman Cobb said.
The United Nations’ Outer Space
Treaty, ratified in 1967, is one of the only international agreements on the
subject of space. It bans the use of weapons of mass destruction, including
nuclear weapons, in outer space.
Still, countries regularly violate
international treaties and can choose to break from them at any time, Paul
Szymanski, president of the Space Strategy Center, a consulting group, told
McClatchy News.
This largely toothless oversight,
combined with the remoteness of space — a battlefield few can see — make it,
for all intents and purposes, the wild west, experts said.
‘Cat and mouse game in space’
“There’s just a lot that is
happening in space, sort of like in the 1960s and 70s you had Russian
destroyers cutting off American destroyers, sometimes accidentally or not
accidentally hitting them,” Szymanski said. “So this cat and mouse game is
going on in space.”
Cyber and otherwise electronic
interference in space constitutes a regular part of day-to-day operations for
governments, Szymanski said.
For example, the U.S. Space Force,
formed in 2019, acknowledged the use of counter communications systems, which
use ground-based equipment that can temporarily disable adversaries’
satellites.
This kind of interference is
difficult and time-consuming to trace, making it hard to know which parties, if
any, are responsible, Szymanski said.
“You wake up one morning and your
satellite stopped working,” Szymanski said. “Did it break just like my computer
broke last week? Did solar flares do something? Did a micrometeor hit it? Let’s
spend a few days, a few weeks trying to figure that out.”
Kinetic military action has also
occasionally been undertaken in space, though, until now, it’s only taken the
form of anti-satellite (ASAT) missile tests, Whitman Cobb said.
“Four states have actually conducted
ASAT tests to this point: the Soviet Union — now Russia — the United States,
China and India,” Whitman Cobb said. “All of those ASAT tests have been the
countries taking out a satellite of their own, not targeted against another
state.”
In 2022, the U.S. became the first
nation to commit to banning these tests, which create long-lasting debris
fields, according to the White House.
Serious ramifications
Space assets support modern life as
we know it, and attacks on them could have significant ramifications for the
military, the economy and space exploration, experts said.
One such possible scenario is “a
’Space Pearl Harbor’ as a shock-and-awe precursor to China’s military campaign
to seize Taiwan,” Chow said.
The Chinese military could launch a
large-scale preemptive attack on U.S. satellites, potentially deterring an
American military response, Chow wrote in a 2015 Defense News article.
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