Analysts: U.S. must ramp up space program.

AuthorVersprille, Allyson
PositionGlobal Defense

* The United States needs to put more emphasis on advancing space-based capabilities if it hopes to maintain its strategic advantage over China, analysts said.

"In parallel with its space program, China continues to develop a variety of capabilities designed to limit or prevent the use of space-based assets by adversaries during a crisis or conflict," said the Pentagon's annual report to Congress, "Military and Security Developments Involving the People's Republic of China 2015."

The report listed several incidents where China demonstrated these types of capabilities including: a 2007 anti-satellite missile test that resulted in the deliberate destruction of a defunct weather satellite and generated hundreds of pieces of debris; a 2013 launch that propelled an object moving on a trajectory toward geosynchronous orbit where many nations maintain communications and remote-sensing satellites; and an assumed 2014 follow-up test to the 2007 launch, though no satellites were destroyed.

"Many officials ... believe that they are developing a capability to reach even higher orbits, which would allow them to target nearly all of our space assets," said Henry Obering III, executive vice president at Booz Allen Hamilton and former director of the Missile Defense Agency. "Even though we rely heavily on space-based capabilities, we historically have chosen not to view space in the same way that we do air, land and sea when it comes to protecting our critical lines of communication."

Failure to understand that future battles are going to be fought in space could hurt the United States in the long run, he said, and tomorrow's direats will be more severe than today's as China specifically targets U.S. intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance and power projection capabilities.

"The People's Republic of China ... constitutes a fundamentally different approach and will in fact, in the event of a crisis or a conflict, pose a very, very strong challenge" to the U.S. position in space, said Dean Cheng, senior research fellow for the Asian Stuthes Center at the Heritage...

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