The Guardian Australia

‘Life no longer as we know it’: war in space would have devastatin­g effects, military experts say

- Tory Shepherd

It would no longer be “life as we know it” if a space war destroyed the satellites that the world now relies on, space commanders have warned, and China and Russia have demonstrat­ed that they’re capable of doing just that.

Senior military leaders from the US and Canada are in Sydney for an Australian Strategic Policy Institute conference on space as the new frontier in “commerce, industry, competitio­n and war”. They have discussed the importance of working with allies, including Australia, to counter the threats posed by space war.

Lt Gen Nina Armagno, staff director of the US Space Force, said Russia’s destructio­n of one of their own satellites last year was a “stunning display”.

“We’re interpreti­ng that … as a message and demonstrat­ion of capability,” she said.

Brigadier general Michael Adamson, commander at 3 Canadian Space Division (Canada’s space force), said on behalf of Canada: “No way … holy crap, this is a topsy turvy world, you can’t do that.”

“Same with us,” Armagno said.

She said China was openly documentin­g and describing its demonstrat­ions of power in space. Asked what the end game could be, she said, “Life as we know it would no longer be as we know it.”

Attacks on satellites can take out GPS systems, banking systems, power grids, first responders’ communicat­ions, and impact on military operations, they said.

“I don’t want to be dramatic,” Armagno said. “What does war in space look like? We probably won’t see it with our naked eye but we will definitely feel the consequenc­es from the moment it begins.”

She also described China’s 2007 destructio­n of one of its own satellites as shocking, irresponsi­ble and intentiona­l. The US was also concerned about an occasion last year where a Chinese satellite with a grappling arm moved another satellite out of orbit.

Adamson said Russia’s own space program was faltering, leaving it less reliant on space infrastruc­ture. That in turn makes it more likely to “salt the Earth”, or destroy access to space, because it has “less to lose”, he said.

There are two ways attacks on satellites could take out communicat­ion networks. A direct attack – through anti-satellite missiles, grappling arms, or hacking or jamming a satellite – is one. The other is the debris created by a destroyed satellite. Armagno said the US was still tracking 600 pieces of debris from China’s 2007 “demonstrat­ion”.

Even a tiny piece of debris could seriously damage spacecraft such as the Internatio­nal Space Station, which manoeuvres to avoid them. The Russian event created 1,500 pieces of debris, which threatened cosmonauts and astronauts on the ISS.

Armagno said the US and its allies, including Australia, needed to work together to make space more resilient. That included building nimbler, smaller satellites in order to replace any that are destroyed. Australia was developing a number of such satellites and the ability to launch them into orbit, she said.

“It’s important for societies to

understand the relevance of space,” Armagno said.

“It’s not space for the sake of space, it really is for likeminded countries to ensure that space is free for spacefarin­g nations. We all share those values.”

Air commodore Nicholas Hogan, the Australian Defence Space Command’s space capability director general, spoke at the conference about the ability of China to “outpace” Australia.

“That’s why we [Australia, the US and Canada] work together,” he said.

Hogan said the use of anti-satellite technology was a “wicked” problem.

“If somebody had done something in a terrestria­l domain, air, land or sea that had a lasting impact of more than a decade, no one would have stood for that,” he said.

“But in space, there’s no laws, there’s no rules, there’s no norms … and this is the area in which we find ourselves. [It’s] one of those wicked problems.”

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? A tiny piece of debris from a destroyed satellite could seriously damage spacecraft such as the Internatio­nal Space Station, which manoeuvres to avoid them.
Photograph: AP A tiny piece of debris from a destroyed satellite could seriously damage spacecraft such as the Internatio­nal Space Station, which manoeuvres to avoid them.

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