PDA

View Full Version : Chinese test anti-satellite laser weapon(!)


exitwound
01-18-2007, 01:53 PM
Uh oh. This is a major escalation of China's space-war program which has already tested "laser-blinding" technology that would be able to blind spy satellites in orbit, negating one of the West's chief strategic advantages.

http://www.aviationweek.com/avnow/news/channel_awst_story.jsp?id=news/CHI01177.xml

U. S. intelligence agencies believe China performed a successful anti-satellite (asat) weapons test at more than 500 mi. altitude Jan. 11 destroying an aging Chinese weather satellite target with a kinetic kill vehicle launched on board a ballistic missile.

The Central Intelligence Agency, the National Security Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, NASA and other government organizations have a full court press underway to obtain data on the alleged test, Aviation Week & Space Technology will report in its Jan. 22 issue.

If the test is verified it will signify a major new Chinese military capability.

Neither the Office of the U. S. Secretary of Defense nor Air Force Space Command would comment on the attack, which followed by several months the alleged illumination of a U. S. military spacecraft by a Chinese ground based laser.

China's growing military space capability is one major reason the Bush Administration last year formed the nation's first new National Space Policy in ten years, Aviation Week will report.

"The policy is designed to ensure that our space capabilities are protected in a time of increasing challenges and threats," says Robert G. Joseph, Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security at the U. S. State Dept. " This is imperative because space capabilities are vital to our national security and to our economic well being," Joseph said in an address on the new space policy at the National Press Club in Washington D. C.

Details emerging from space sources indicate that the Chinese Feng Yun 1C (FY-1C) polar orbit weather satellite launched in 1999 was attacked by an asat system launched from or near the Xichang Space Center.

The attack is believe to have occurred as the weather satellite flew at 530 mi. altitude 4 deg. west of Xichang located in Sichuan province. Xichang is a major Chinese space launch center.

Although intelligence agencies must complete confirmation of the test, the attack is believed to have occurred at about 5:28 p.m. EST Jan. 11. U. S. intelligence agencies had been expecting some sort of test that day, sources said.

U. S. Air Force Defense Support Program missile warning satellites in geosynchronous orbit would have detected the Xichang launch of the asat kill vehicle and U. S. Air Force Space Command monitored the FY-1C orbit both before and after the exercise.

The test, if it occurred as envisioned by intelligence source, could also have left considerable space debris in an orbit used by many different satellites.

USAF radar reports on the Chinese FY-1C spacecraft have been posted once or twice daily for years, but those reports jumped to about 4 times per day just before the alleged test.

The USAF radar reports then ceased Jan. 11, but then appeared for a day showing "signs of orbital distress". The reports were then halted again. The Air Force radars may well be busy cataloging many pieces of debris, sources said.

Although more of a "policy weapon" at this time, the test shows that the Chinese military can threaten the imaging reconnaissance satellites operated by the U. S., Japan, Russia, Israel and Europe.

The Republic of China also operates a small imaging spacecraft that can photograph objects as small as about 10 ft. in size, a capability good enough to count cruise missiles pointed at Taiwan from the Chinese mainland. The Taiwanese in the past have also leased capability on an Israeli reconnaissance satellite.

exitwound
01-18-2007, 05:39 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/space/01/18/china.missile/index.html

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- China last week successfully used a missile to destroy an orbiting satellite, U.S. government officials told CNN on Thursday, in a test that could undermine relations with the West and pose a threat to satellites important to the U.S. military.

According to a spokesman for the National Security Council, the ground-based, medium-range ballistic missile knocked an old Chinese weather satellite from its orbit about 537 miles above Earth. The missile carried a "kill vehicle" and destroyed the satellite by ramming it.

The test took place on January 11.

Aviation Week and Space Technology first reported the test: "Details emerging from space sources indicate that the Chinese Feng Yun 1C (FY-1C) polar orbit weather satellite launched in 1999 was attacked by an asat (anti-satellite) system launched from or near the Xichang Space Center."

A U.S. official, who would not agree to be identified, said the event was the first successful test of the missile after three failures.

The official said that U.S. "space tracking sensors" confirmed that the satellite is no longer in orbit and that the collision produced "hundreds of pieces of debris," that also are being tracked.

The United States logged a formal diplomatic protest.

"We are aware of it and we are concerned, and we made it known," said White House spokesman Tony Snow.

Several U.S. allies, including Canada and Australia, also have registered protests.

Under a space policy authorized by President Bush in August, the United States asserts a right to "freedom of action in space" and says it will "deter others from either impeding those rights or developing capabilities intended to do so."

The policy includes the right to "deny, if necessary, adversaries the use of space capabilities hostile to U.S. national interests."

Low Earth-orbit satellites have become indispensable for U.S. military communications, GPS navigation for smart bombs and troops, and for real-time surveillance. The Chinese test highlights the satellites' vulnerability.

"If we, for instance, got into a conflict over Taiwan, one of the first things they'd probably do would be to shoot down all of our lower Earth-orbit spy satellites, putting out our eyes," said John Pike of globalsecurity.org, a Web site that compiles information on worldwide security issues.

"The thing that is surprising and disturbing is that [the Chinese] have chosen this moment to demonstrate a military capability that can only be aimed at the United States," he said.

short_circuit
01-06-2008, 04:50 AM
The Chinese again..! :moose:

Atlas
01-06-2008, 06:35 PM
It's a year old article

short_circuit
01-06-2008, 06:46 PM
It's a year old article
Look at the date ew posted the article, 01-18-2007, or do you mean me because I gave the thread a bump? A Google's spider was searching over the thread, I found it because I was seeing what the spider was recording. The thread was missing "The Chinese again..!" and so I gave the thread a bump.lol http://blackhole.xerces.com/images/icons/icon10.gif

Atlas
01-06-2008, 07:25 PM
Look at the date ew posted the article, 01-18-2007, or do you mean me because I gave the thread a bump? A Google's spider was searching over the thread, I found it because I was seeing what the spider was recording. The thread was missing "The Chinese again..!" and so I gave the thread a bump.lol http://blackhole.xerces.com/images/icons/icon10.gif


When things go bump in the night...we bump BACK

http://www.moviecitynews.com/arrays/images/2004/hellboy/hellboy_pic2.jpg

exitwound
01-07-2008, 04:20 PM
When things go bump in the night...we bump BACK

http://www.moviecitynews.com/arrays/images/2004/hellboy/hellboy_pic2.jpg

Damn straight! Great Hellboy reference, BTW.... :hellfire: :devilish: :hellfire:

This may be a year old article, but it is still a very "current issue." We face an ongoing threat to the very backbones, quite literally, of our digital infrastructure.....and we have no valid defense, AFAIK, at this stage. I am sure that highly classified work is being done as we speak on this issue, but I have serious concerns that it is not nearly enough.