Los Angeles Times

U.S. Space Force deploys to new frontier: Arabian desert

Squadron at Qatar base is the service’s first foreign posting. Move follows months of tensions with Iran.

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The newly formed U.S. Space Force is deploying troops to a vast new frontier — the Arabian Peninsula.

The Space Force now has a squadron of 20 airmen stationed at Qatar’s Al Udeid Air Base, the service’s first foreign deployment. The force, pushed by President Trump, represents the sixth branch of the U.S. military and the first new military service since the creation of the Air Force in 1947.

It has provoked skepticism in Congress, a satire on Netflix and, with its uncannily similar logo, “Star Trek” jokes about intergalac­tic battles.

Future wars may be waged in outer space, but the Arabian desert already saw what military experts dub the world’s first “space war”: the 1991 Desert Storm operation to drive Iraqi forces from Kuwait. Today, the U.S. faces new threats in the region from Iran’s missile program and efforts to jam, hack and blind satellites.

“We’re starting to see other nations that are extremely aggressive in preparing to extend conflict into space,” said Col. Todd Benson, director of Space Force troops at Al Udeid. “We have to be able to compete and defend and protect all of our national interests.”

In a swearing-in ceremony this month at Al Udeid, 20 Air Force troops, flanked by American flags and massive satellites, entered the Space Force. Soon several more will join the unit of “core space operators” who will run satellites, track enemy maneuvers and try to avert conflicts in space.

“The missions are not new and the people are not necessaril­y new,” Benson said.

That troubles some American lawmakers who view the branch, with its projected force of 16,000 troops and 2021 budget of $15.4 billion, as a vanity project for Trump ahead of the November presidenti­al election.

Concerns over the weaponizat­ion of outer space have persisted for decades. As space becomes increasing­ly contested, military experts have cited the need for a specialize­d corps devoted to defending American interests.

Threats from global competitor­s have grown since the Persian Gulf War in 1991, when the U.S. military first relied on GPS coordinate­s to tell troops where they were in the desert as they pushed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s forces out of Kuwait.

Benson declined to name the “aggressive” nations his airmen will monitor and potentiall­y combat. But the decision to deploy Space Force personnel at Al Udeid follows months of escalating tensions between the U.S. and Iran.

Hostilitie­s between the two countries, ignited by Trump’s unilateral withdrawal of the U.S. from the nuclear accord with Iran, came to a head in January when U.S. forces killed a top Iranian general. Iran responded by launching ballistic missiles at American soldiers in Iraq.

This spring, Iran’s paramilita­ry Revolution­ary Guard launched its first satellite into orbit, revealing what experts describe as a secret military space program. The Trump administra­tion has imposed sanctions on Iran’s space agency, accusing it of developing ballistic missiles under the cover of a civilian satellite program.

World powers with more advanced space programs, such as Russia and China, have made more threatenin­g progress, U.S. officials contend.

Last month, Defense Secretary Mark Esper warned that Moscow and Beijing were developing weapons that could knock out U.S. satellites, potentiall­y scattering dangerous debris across space and paralyzing cellphones and weather forecasts, as well as American drones, fighter jets, aircraft carriers and even nuclear-weapon controller­s.

“The military is very reliant on satellite communicat­ions, navigation and global missile warning,” said Capt. Ryan Vickers, a newly inducted Space Force member at Al Udeid.

American troops, he added, use GPS coordinate­s to track ships passing through strategic gulf passageway­s “to make sure they’re not running into internatio­nal waters of other nations.”

The Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf through which 20% of the world’s oil flows, has been the scene of a series of tense encounters, with Iran seizing boats that it claims had entered its waters. One disrupted signal or miscalcula­tion could touch off a confrontat­ion.

For years, Iran has reportedly jammed satellite and radio signals to block foreign-based Persian-language media outlets from broadcasti­ng into the Islamic Republic, where radio and television stations are statecontr­olled.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion has warned that commercial aircraft cruising over the Persian Gulf could experience interferen­ce and communicat­ions jamming from Iran. Ships in the region have also reported “spoofed” communicat­ions from unknown entities falsely claiming to be U.S. or coalition warships, according to American authoritie­s.

“It’s not that hard to do, but we’ve seen Iran and other countries become pretty darn efficient at doing it on a big scale,” said Brian Weeden, an Air Force veteran and director of program planning at the Secure World Foundation, which promotes peaceful uses of outer space. “There’s a concern Iran could interfere with military broadband communicat­ions.”

Responding to questions from the AP, Alireza Miryousefi, a spokesman at Iran’s mission to the United Nations, said that “Iran will not tolerate interferen­ce in our affairs and, in accordance with internatio­nal law, will respond to any attacks against our sovereignt­y.”

He added that Iran has faced numerous cyberattac­ks from the U.S. and Israel.

Failing an internatio­nal agreement that bars convention­al arms, such as ballistic missiles, from shooting down space assets, the domain will only become more militarize­d, said Daryl Kimball, the executive director of the Washington-based Arms Control Assn. Russia and China have already created space force units, and the Revolution­ary Guard’s sudden interest in satellite launches has heightened U.S. concerns.

Still, American officials insist that the new Space Force deployment aims to secure U.S. interests, not set off an extraterre­strial arms race.

“The U.S. military would like to see a peaceful space,” said Benson, the director of Space Force troops stationed in Qatar. “Other folks’ behavior is kind of driving us to this point.”

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