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China Will Soon Be Able to Destroy Every Satellite in Space

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China Will Soon Be Able to Destroy Every Satellite in Space
And the U.S. military should be worried.
July 30, 2018
by Zachary Keck


To be fair, the technologies for anti-satellite and ballistic missile defense systems are very similar. Indeed, China has used the SC-19 missile for some of its past ballistic missile defense tests, as well as its direct-ascent anti-satellite (DA-ASAT) tests. Regardless of the precise missile employed, ballistic missile intercepts and anti-satellite missiles both use hit-to-kill technologies to accomplish their missions.

China will soon be able to destroy every satellite in space, a senior U.S. military official has said.

According to Breaking Defense , Lt. Gen. Jay Raymond, commander of the 14th Air Force, said this week that China’s amassing formidable anti-satellite capabilities. Raymond claimed that Beijing is already capable of holding every low-orbit satellite at risk, and “soon every satellite in every orbit will be able to be held at risk” by China’s anti-satellite (ASAT) capabilities.

Speaking at the 31st Space Symposium in Colorado Springs this week, Raymond also confirmed that China’s anti-satellite missile test last July was a success.

As I reported elsewhere , last July, China claimed it had successfully tested a ballistic missile defense system. However, a week later, the U.S. government revealed that the test was actually of an anti-satellite missile.

“We call on China to refrain from destabilizing actions—such as the continued development and testing of destructive anti-satellite systems—that threaten the long term security and sustainability of the outer space environment, on which all nations depend,” the State Department said at the time, Space News reported. “The United States continuously looks to ensure its space systems are safe and resilient against emerging space threats.”

It was not the first time that China had tried to conceal its ASAT tests. For example, in May 2013, China claimed that it had launched a rocket into space from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest China. State-run media reported in 2013 that, “the experiment was designed to investigate energetic particles and magnetic fields in the ionized stratum and near-Earth space. According to a preliminary analysis by the NSSC [National Space Science Center], the experiment has reached expected objectives by allowing scientists to obtain first-hand data regarding the space environment at different altitudes.”

Almost immediately following the test, U.S. officials began raising questions about it, suggesting off-the-record that China had in fact tested a new ASAT missile: the Dong Ning-2 (DN-2). The DN-2 is a ground-based, high earth-orbit attack missile.


The available evidence strongly suggests that China’s May 2013 launch was the test of the rocket component of a new direct ascent ASAT weapons system derived from a road-mobile ballistic missile. The system appears to be designed to place a kinetic kill vehicle on a trajectory to deep space that could reach medium earth orbit (MEO), highly elliptical orbit (HEO), and geostationary Earth orbit (GEO). If true, this would represent a significant development in China’s ASAT capabilities.

To be fair, the technologies for anti-satellite and ballistic missile defense systems are very similar. Indeed, China has used the SC-19 missile for some of its past ballistic missile defense tests, as well as its direct-ascent anti-satellite (DA-ASAT) tests. Regardless of the precise missile employed, ballistic missile intercepts and anti-satellite missiles both use hit-to-kill technologies to accomplish their missions.

China also used the SC-19 missile to destroy an aging weather satellite in January 2007. China faced strong international condemnation after announcing that test. Since then, it has concealed its anti-satellite tests, including ones in 2010 and January 2013.

As I’ve noted before :

The military applications of ASAT missiles appear fairly obvious. China would seek to use the ASAT missiles to knock out U.S. satellites in order to degrade its C5ISR capabilities, rendering distributed U.S. military and allied assets unable to communicate or share information. The U.S. is seeking to counter China’s growing capabilities in this area in a number of ways, including through creating greater redundancy in its own systems.

https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/china-will-soon-be-able-destroy-every-satellite-space-27182
 
So can any country that can destroy ballistic missile which has an unpredictable trajectory. Satellites move on a fixed orbit.
 
Another troll post.

• "China Will Soon Be Able to Destroy Every Satellite in Space": China has already demonstrated back on April 1st, 2018, its capacity to deorbit even the largest spacecraft, with the controlled-reentry of Tiangong-1 space station. And undisclosed lasers have beeen used as "space broom". (See my previous reports)
• This troll article claims that the DN-2 and SC-19 missiles could "Destroy Every Satellite in Space", which is simply not proven. Many Geo satellites orbit at longitudes that are out of reach.
No proof that DN-2 or SC-19 could even fly over 15,000 km to hit satellites that stay at the opposite of the earth, over the Americas or Europe.

I hope china will help us getting the same tech.
NASA and indian spy satellites over us are big problems.We should shoot them down.

There are prerequisites, before any interception of hostile satellites could be conducted. The detection and identification requires expensive assets, but the tracking for the final targeting is of the utmost difficulty.

Not to mention the space based assets, some ground based assets are amongst the costlier ever built:


As already disclosed by the media, China is known to have operated at least 3 ASAT laser stations, in Anhui, Sichuan and Xinjiang.
No need to build another one barely 125 km from the Line of Actual Control at Ngari which would not give China any additional capability to identify all Indian spy satellites!



From now on, nowhere to hide, any Indian spacecraft as small as 5 centimeters can be tracked (and jammed)!

December 2017

Last January, the Chinese Academy of Sciences invited Liu Cixin, China’s preeminent science-fiction writer, to visit its new state-of-the-art radio dish in the country’s southwest. Almost twice as wide as the dish at America’s Arecibo Observatory, in the Puerto Rican jungle, the new Chinese dish is the largest in the world, if not the universe. Though it is sensitive enough to detect spy satellites even when they’re not broadcasting, its main uses will be scientific, including an unusual one: The dish is Earth’s first flagship observatory custom-built to listen for a message from an extraterrestrial intelligence. If such a sign comes down from the heavens during the next decade, China may well hear it first.

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazin...-happens-if-china-makes-first-contact/544131/



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▲ Sattrack: FAST, the final game-ender. 图为被誉为“天眼”的国家重大科技基础设施——500米口径球面射电望远镜工程全景。 2017-12-19


So in the future, maybe Pakistan could use some ground based lasers (from China) to intercept satellites that fly over its horizon. Orbital data of these spacecrafts could also be provided by the PLA.

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US is planning to develop a Space Force, therefore this kind of fear-mongering.

Reality is very complex: https://thediplomat.com/2014/11/chinas-deceptively-weak-anti-satellite-capabilities/

Destroying your own weather monitoring satellite orbiting Earth at 700 KM altitude is easy, and doesn't prove anything.

I’m sure the X-37B (now at over 300 days since launch) with its moving orbits and trajectories is just the start of almost permanently stationed kill vehicles. All it has to do is shoot hockey pucks.
 
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Everyone with advanced anti missile technology can achieve the same, Arrow 3 is being said to be able to down satellites too
 
Wishful thinking.
According to numerous Israeli experts, including Prof. Yitzhak Ben Yisrael, former director of the Israeli Administration for the Development of Weapons and Technological Infrastructure and currently the chairman of the Israeli Space Agency, it is also possible that the Arrow 3 could serve as an anti-satellite weapon.[3]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arrow_3

And if an interceptor has a sufficent range and capability to strike targets around earth's atmosphere, striking a satellite is one of the easiest targets.
 
According to numerous Israeli experts, including Prof. Yitzhak Ben Yisrael, former director of the Israeli Administration for the Development of Weapons and Technological Infrastructure and currently the chairman of the Israeli Space Agency, it is also possible that the Arrow 3 could serve as an anti-satellite weapon.[3]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arrow_3

And if an interceptor has a sufficent range and capability to strike targets around earth's atmosphere, striking a satellite is one of the easiest targets.
Arrow 3 could be modified for ASAT capability but the theme of discussion here is taking out every satellite in space, and this is wishful thinking for even China.

Check the link I have shared; ample explanation there. Extremely complex, time-consuming and expensive operation.
 
According to numerous Israeli experts, including Prof. Yitzhak Ben Yisrael, former director of the Israeli Administration for the Development of Weapons and Technological Infrastructure and currently the chairman of the Israeli Space Agency, it is also possible that the Arrow 3 could serve as an anti-satellite weapon.[3]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arrow_3

And if an interceptor has a sufficent range and capability to strike targets around earth's atmosphere, striking a satellite is one of the easiest targets.
Why Israel didn't send satellite in space? You guys have technology for that
 
Arrow 3 could be modified for ASAT capability but the theme of discussion here is taking out every satellite in space, and this is wishful thinking for even China.

Check the link I have shared; ample explanation there. Extremely complex, time-consuming and expensive operation.

Correct. You are going to need a big missile to hit some of the satellites WAY up there (40,000 km)
 
China test fired in 2009/2010 & destroyed a sattelite in space. Nothing new.
 
Shooting down a sateliete could not so hard for many countries in the future, so countries have to find an alternative way for communication.
 

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