By Jim Garamone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6, 2015 – The space domain is changing, and
the U.S. military must remain ahead of these changes to maintain the nation’s
military dominance, the commander of U.S. Strategic Command said here today.
Navy Adm. Cecil D. Haney spoke at a Peter Huessy Breakfast
Series seminar sponsored by the Air Force Association, the Reserve Officers
Association and the National Defense Industrial Association.
The playing field in space is changing, and not always to
the advantage of nations that are peaceful and have democratic governments,
Haney said. “Today, our nation is dealing with a global security environment
that is more complex, dynamic and volatile than at any time in our history,” he
added.
The security environment features multiple actors operating
across all domains. Many actors challenge U.S. democratic values in many ways,
the admiral said.
Tensions With Nation States, Ungoverned Environments
“In addition to significant tensions involving nation
states,” Haney told the audience, “we are in an environment that is flanked
with numerous ungoverned or ineffectively governed areas that are breeding
grounds for bad actors and violent extremist organizations.” These groups, he
added, also use space and cyberspace to recruit and spread propaganda --
including misinformation -- in support of their causes.
“Perhaps of greater concern, however, is the proliferation
of these emerging strategic capabilities attempting to limit our decision and
maneuver space that ultimately impacts strategic stability,” Haney said.
The admiral focused on the emerging capabilities and what it
means for the United States. Space is getting cluttered, he said, noting that
it is more “congested, contested and competitive.” That alone makes U.S.
capabilities increasingly vulnerable, he said.
Congestion in Space
Congestion is a huge problem for Strategic Command. More
than 17,000 objects the size of a softball or larger are in orbit today, the
admiral said, and hundreds of thousands of smaller, untracked objects are
circling the Earth at orbital speeds.
Roughly 1,200 of those objects are satellites, Haney said.
The rest are debris, increasingly threatening operational satellites.
Complicating this already crowded environment is the
increase of small satellites, which also pose a threat, the admiral said.
“Consider for a moment the devastating effects just one collision could have on
our financial and economic sectors and our ability to conduct military
operations,” he said.
As more countries develop space capabilities, the problem
will grow, the admiral said. North Korea has been busy upgrading launch
facilities, Haney noted.
“Iran, just this past week, successfully launched a
satellite into orbit after a string of failures,” he said.
China has publicly stated that its goal for the next decade
is to outperform all other nations in space, investing large amounts of money
in increasing the number of platforms in every orbital regime, and increasing
their influence, Haney added.
Nations Seek to Take Away U.S. Strategic Advantage
Countries also are working to take away America’s strategic
advantage in space, the Stratcom commander said. “U.S. national security space
systems are facing a serious growing threat,” he added. “For example, multiple
countries have developed and are frequently using military jamming capabilities
designed to interfere with satellite communications and global positioning
systems.”
China and Russia warrant the most attention, the admiral
said. “Both countries have acknowledged they are developing -- or have
developed -- counter-space capabilities,” he said. “Both countries have
advanced directed energy capabilities that could be used to track or blind
satellites -- disrupting key operations -- and both have demonstrated the
ability to perform complex maneuvers in space.”
Space also plays a large role in 21st-century deterrence,
Haney said. “To effectively deter adversaries -- and potential adversaries --
from threatening our space capabilities, we must also understand their
capabilities and their intent and make it clear that no adversary will gain the
advantage they seek by attacking us in space,” the admiral said. “We must apply
all instruments of power and elements of deterrence.”
Operational Planning Comes First for Stratcom
Strategic Command is working to ensure the United States
maintains the strategic advantage in space today. Operational planning is first
with the command, the admiral said, ensuring it is prepared for all phases of
potential conflict. This means characterizing the operational environment, allowing
timely and accurate warning and assessment of threats to senior leaders
including the president, Haney said.
Operationally, the admiral said, Stratcom must protect and
defend space capabilities using new tools and new tactics, techniques and
procedures. The command, he said, also must use new partnerships and new
command and control relationships.
All this is happening at a time of constrained budgets, he
noted.
“I am pleased to see the president’s budget for fiscal 2016
recognizes the growing and demonstrated threat to our vital space assets --
assets our forces are reliant upon and assume will always be there,” Haney
said.
“We are early in the process, but let me make clear: Any
retrograde in the president’s budget could jeopardize these investments and
diminish our asymmetric advantage in space, exposing our nation to significant
risk in this foundational area,” he said.
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