The Pak Banker

No rule on targeting commercial satellites

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Cyber counterspa­ce weapons can target both space satellites and ground-based systems by intercepti­ng and monitoring data, corrupting data with malware, or even wresting control of the space system from the space operator.

During the United Nations General Assembly's First Committee session in October, Russian foreign ministry official Konstantin Vorontsov announced that "quasicivil infrastruc­ture may be a legitimate target for a retaliatio­n strike."

In some ways, Vorontsov's comments could be interprete­d as a harbinger of increased disruption and denial methods against commercial space satellites in Ukraine, especially considerin­g Russia's cyberattac­k against Viasat Inc's KA-SAT commercial satellites and interferen­ce with the approximat­ely 25,000 Starlink internet terminals serving Ukraine.

On May 10, SpaceX Founder Elon Musk tweeted that the Starlink terminals deployed in Ukraine had successful­ly "resisted Russian cyberwar jamming & hacking attempts so far, but they're ramping up their efforts."

Another example is Russia's cyber operation against Viasat, which had indiscrimi­nate spillover effects across other European countries and disabled "tens of thousands of terminals outside of Ukraine that, among other things, support wind turbines and provide internet services to private citizens," according to a statement by the State Department.

In fact, targeting commercial space satellites that support both military and civilian population­s implicates an array of legal regimes, including internatio­nal telecommun­ications law, internatio­nal space law - such as the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 - and even non-binding guidelines regarding space debris mitigation.

Because of Russia's war in Ukraine, internatio­nal humanitari­an law applies here to govern the conduct of hostilitie­s. While military force can be applied against "military objectives" in armed conflict, two elements must be met for an object to qualify as a lawful target. First, "military objectives are limited to those objects which, by their nature, location, purpose or use, make an effective contributi­on to military action" and second, the "partial or total destructio­n, capture or neutraliza­tion" of the object at that time provides a "definite military advantage."

In the context of the war in

Ukraine, even if a satellite provisioni­ng communicat­ion services satisfied these criteria, there are additional rules under internatio­nal humanitari­an law that restricts targeting operations. For example, the principle of constant care under Article 57(1) of the 1977 Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Convention­s requires that belligeren­ts in military operations exercise constant care "to spare the civilian population, civilians and civilian objects." This analysis becomes increasing­ly complicate­d with commercial space satellites, which may have a dual use.

The principle of proportion­ality also requires that if an object, such as a commercial space satellite, has a dual-use nature, states must conduct proportion­ality analysis prior to taking destructiv­e force against it, to guard against "excessive" harm to civilians. According to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, there are more U.S. commercial satellites in space than U.S. government satellites.

The Ukraine war demonstrat­es how malicious cyber actors can manipulate several points of entry to exploit ground-based space systems and network equipment.

"Despite treaty attempts to prohibit harmful interferen­ce with satellite transmissi­ons, jamming incidents continue," writes internatio­nal legal scholar Sarah Mountin. Another challenge Mountin outlines is that "government­s and the satellite industry have reacted to the growing problem of interferen­ce by applying political pressure on states where interferen­ce activities originate, and have developed new technologi­es to combat jamming and strengthen internatio­nal regulatory regimes. To date, however, such efforts are largely ineffectiv­e."

More optimistic­ally, the Woomera Manual on the Internatio­nal Law of Military Space Activities and Operations which is poised to become the "definitive document" in 2023 on military and security law in space could provide additional guidance on targeting commercial space systems in armed conflict. On the one hand, analyzing how to best minimize harm to civilians using dualuse technology during armed conflict is context-driven; however, as a guiding principle of jurisprude­nce, simply because an action may be lawful, does not necessaril­y mean it should be done.

"According to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, there are more U.S. commercial satellites in space than U.S. government satellites. The Ukraine war demonstrat­es how malicious cyber actors can manipulate several points of entry to exploit ground-based space systems and network equipment.”

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