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US condemns China satellite-killer test

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The United States, Australia and Canada have expressed concern to China over Beijing's successful test in space last week of a satellite-killing weapon, the White House said.
"The United States believes China's development and testing of such weapons is inconsistent with the spirit of cooperation that both countries aspire to in the civil space
area," said national security spokesman Gordon Johndroe.
"We and other countries have expressed our concern to the Chinese," Johndroe said.
A senior White House official, requesting anonymity, said that Britain, Japan and South Korea were expected to express their concerns to China soon
The official confirmed a report in Aviation Week magazine that US spy agencies have concluded that China conducted a successful test of a satellite-killing weapon on January 11, knocking out an aging Chinese weather satellite with a "kinetic kill vehicle" launched on board a ballistic missile.


http://www.breitbart.com/news/2007/01/18/070118175313.jezg0oda.html
 
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The prospect of "Star Wars" between China and the West loomed last night after Beijing used a ballistic missile to destroy a satellite in space.

The missile, which hit a 4ft-wide obsolete Chinese weather satellite 530 miles above the Earth, is thought to have been launched from the Xichang space centre in -China's Sichuan province.

It suggests that the Chinese have developed a major new capability that underscores the communist regime's desire to use its military might as well as burgeoning economic power to expand its influence.

"The US believes China's development and testing of such weapons is inconsistent with the spirit of co-operation that both countries aspire to in the civil space area," said Gordon Johndroe, spokes-man for the US National Security Council, yesterday. "We and other countries have expressed our concern regarding this action to the Chinese."

It is understood that Australia and Canada have also protested to China.

The ability to destroy satellites with such precision could undermine the US National Missile Defence programme, a network of rocket interceptors, computers and satellites intended to protect America and its key allies from nuclear attack. It became known as "Son of Star Wars" after President Ronald Reagan's so-called "Star Wars" programme proposed in the 1980s.

The test heightens tensions between Washington and Beijing, which increasingly see one another as long-term strategic rivals in the Pacific. China's navy is undergoing massive expansion that could threaten the independence of its neighbour Taiwan, which is backed by the US.

Taiwan was particularly alarmed at yesterday's announcement because it relies on satellites to monitor cruise missiles pointed towards it from the Chinese mainland.

China is seeking to challenge American military strength in the Far East, including its vital trade routes in the South China Sea and Straits of Malacca.

Short- and medium-range ballistic missiles have been developed with the potential to take on American aircraft carriers.

There has also been investment in new nuclear submarines. The People's Liberation Army Navy has launched as many as 60 ships in the past five years and last March announced that it would build an aircraft carrier.

Chinese military spending more than doubled between 1997 and 2003 and is now estimated to be second only to the US as a percentage of GDP.

One study last year projected that China's annual military budget would be $185 billion by 2025.

Chinese links to Iran are also causing serious concern in Washington. Last month, Beijing signed a $16 billion contract with Teheran to purchase natural gas and develop oil fields.

China and Russia have repeatedly refused to back sanctions against Iran over its controversial nuclear power programme, which America believes could be used to build a nuclear bomb.

Robert Hewson, a missiles expert with Jane's, the weapons analysts, said yesterday: "The indications are that the system the Chinese used was a KT-2 ground-launched rocket.

"At its first showing in 2002 it was billed as a commercial launch system but anyone with knowledge could tell that it was a tailor-made anti--satellite weapon.

"I was at the showing and it raised a lot of eyebrows. After the show it disappeared. Then this happens."

According to Aviation Week, US Air Force radars detected "signs of orbital distress" after the destruction of the satellite last Thursday, which is likely to result in pieces of debris showering the earth.

The test shows that the Chinese could soon have the capability to destroy the array of commercial satellites operated by the US, Europe, Israel, Russia and Japan.

Testifying before Congress last week, Lt Gen Michael Maples, head of the US Defence Intelligence Agency, warned that "Russia and China continue to be the primary states of concern regarding military space and counter-space programmes".

Other countries, he said, "continue to develop capabilities that have the potential to threaten US space assets, and some have already deployed systems with inherent anti-satellite capabilities, such as satellite-tracking laser range-finding devices and nuclear-armed ballistic missiles".

Beijing and Moscow have both denied seeking space weapons and have called for an international ban on "weaponising space".

In 2004, the US Air Force established the 76th Space Control Squadron, which is capable of using ground-operated electronic jamming devices and missiles to disable foreign satellites.

Last year, the Bush administration unveiled the first new National Space Policy in 10 years.

Robert Joseph, under--secretary for arms control and international security at the State Department, said at the time: "The policy is designed to ensure that our space capabilities are protected in a time of increasing challenges and threats.

"This is imperative because space capabilities are vital to our national security and economic wellbeing."

A Foreign Office spokesman said last night that the Government had raised the issue with China and was asking why the test had been carried out.
[URL=http://imageshack.us][/URL]
 
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BEIJING: China's apparent success in destroying one of its own orbiting satellites with a ballistic missile signals that its rising military intends to contest American supremacy in space, a realm many here consider increasingly crucial to national security.

The test of an antisatellite weapon last week, which Beijing declined to confirm or deny Friday despite widespread news coverage and diplomatic inquiries, was perceived by East Asia experts as China's most provocative military action since it testfired missiles off the coast of Taiwan more than a decade ago. Unlike the Taiwan exercise, the main target this time was the United States, the sole superpower in space.

With lengthy white papers, energetic diplomacy and generous aid policies, Chinese officials have taken pains in recent years to present their country as a new kind of global power that, unlike the United States, had only good will toward other nations.

But some analysts say the test shows that the reality is more complex. China has surging national wealth, legitimate security concerns and an opaque military bureaucracy that may belie the government's promise of a "peaceful rise."

"This is the other face of China, the hard power side that they usually keep well hidden," said Chong-Pin Lin, an expert on China's military in Taiwan. "They talk more about peace and diplomacy, but the push to develop lethal, high-tech capabilities has not slowed down at all."
Japan, South Korea and Australia are among the countries in the region that pressed China to explain the test, which if confirmed would make it the third power, after the United States and the Soviet Union, to shoot down an object in space.

China's Foreign and Defense Ministries declined to comment on reports of the test, which were based on United States intelligence data. Liu Jianchao, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, would say only that China opposed using weapons in space. "China will not participate in any kind of arms race in outer space," he told Reuters.

The silence on the test underscores how much China's rapidly modernizing military — perhaps especially the Second Artillery forces, in charge of its ballistic missile program — remains isolated and secretive, answering only to President Hu Jintao, who heads the military as well as the ruling Communist Party.

Having a weapon that can disable or destroy satellites is considered a component of China's unofficial doctrine of asymmetrical warfare. China's army strategists have written that the military intends to use relatively inexpensive but highly disruptive technologies to impede the better-equipped and better-trained American forces in the event of an armed conflict — over Taiwan, for example.

The Pentagon makes extensive use of satellites for military communications, intelligence and missile guidance, and some Chinese experts have argued that damaging its space-based satellite infrastructure could hobble American forces.

Yet while China's research and development of such weapons has been well known, the apparent decision to test-fire an antisatellite weapon came as a surprise to many analysts.

"If this is fully corroborated, it is a very significant event that is likely to recast relations between the United States and China," said Allan Behm, a former official in Australia's Defense Ministry. "This was a very sophisticated thing to do, and the willingness to do it means that we're seeing a different level of threat."

China's military expenditures have been growing at nearly a double-digit pace, even after adjusting for inflation, for 15 years. China has begun to deploy sophisticated submarines, aircraft and antiship missiles that the Pentagon says could have offensive uses.

Yet with a few notable exceptions, Beijing has avoided sharp provocations that could prompt the United States or Japan to focus more on what some officials in both countries regard as a potential China threat.

Chinese leaders emphasize that they are preoccupied with domestic challenges and intend to focus their energy and resources on economic development, a policy they say depends heavily on cross-border investment, open trade and friendly foreign relations.

Beijing has denied that it intends to develop space weapons and sharply criticized the United States for experimenting with a space-based missile defense system. It forged a coalition of Asian countries to jointly develop peaceful space-based technologies.

Last month it published and heavily promoted a white paper on military strategy that emphasized its view that space must remain weapon-free. "China is unflinching in taking the road of peaceful development and always maintains that outer space is the common wealth of mankind," the paper said.

Some of such talk amounts to little more than propaganda. But Jonathan Pollack, a China specialist at the Naval War College in Newport, R.I., says the Chinese military does in fact act cautiously when it comes to improving its strategic capabilities, like long-range missiles and nuclear weapons, to avoid causing alarm in the United States.
They have talked about antisatellite weapons," he said. "But we have always thought that the threat was ambiguous and that China probably wanted it that way. So what was the calculation to go ahead with an actual test?"

Some analysts suggested that one possible motivation was to prod the Bush administration to negotiate a treaty to ban space weapons. Russia and China have advocated such a treaty, but President Bush rejected those calls when he authorized a policy that seeks to preserve "freedom of action" in space.

Chinese officials have warned that an arms race could ensue if Washington did not change course.

At a United Nations conference in Vienna last June on uses of space, a Chinese Foreign Ministry official, Tang Guoqiang, called the policies of "certain nations" disconcerting.

"Outer space is the common heritage of mankind, and weaponization of outer space is bound to trigger off an arms race, thus rendering outer space a new arena for military confrontation," he said, according to an official transcript of his remarks.

Even so, Mr. Pollack of the Naval War College said that if China hoped that demonstrating a new weapon of this kind would prompt a positive response in Washington, they most likely miscalculated.

"Very frankly, many people in Washington will find that this validates the view of a China threat," Mr. Pollack said. "It could well end up backfiring and forcing the U.S. to take new steps to counter China."

Other analysts said the test might have more to do with proving a technology under development for many years than a cold-war-style negotiating tactic.

China maintains a minimal nuclear arsenal that could inflict enough damage on an enemy to guard against any pre-emptive strike, these analysts said. But the increasing sophistication of American missile interceptors, which are linked to satellite surveillance, threatens the viability of China's limited nuclear arsenal, some here have argued.

That may have prompted the Second Artillery to show that it had the means to protect fixed missile sites and ensure China's retaliatory capacity by showing that it could take out American satellites.

At the annual military fair in Zhuhai, held last November, the Guangdong-based newspaper Information Times and several other state-run media outlets carried a short interview with an unidentified military official boasting that China had "already completely ensured that it has second-strike capability.":toast: The analyst said China could protect its retaliatory forces because it could destroy satellites in space.

American officials have also noted the development. Earlier this month, Lt. Gen. Michael Mapes of the Army testified before Congress that China and Russia were working on systems to hit American satellites with lasers or missiles. And over the summer, the director of the National Reconnaissance Office, Donald M. Kerr, told reporters that the Chinese had used a ground-based laser to "paint," or illuminate, an American satellite, a possible first step to using lasers to destroy satellites.

"China is becoming more assertive in just about every military field," said Mr. Behm, the Australian expert. "It is not going to concede that the U.S. can be the hegemon in space forever."

http://imageshack.us:bunny:
 
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Should Pakistan invest in something like that? India is advancing too much in the satellite area, this would be a cheap way.
 
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Neo-Cons key phutee!:lol: :lol:

Looks like their 'Star wars' system is vulnerable now!:lol:

Anyway......joking aside Sergei Ivanov and Russian specialists have discounted Chinese Anti-satelite missile test. I am not so sure if this is true or just the usual Chinese restraunt style bullshiit propaganda.
 
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Neo-Cons key phutee!:lol: :lol:

Looks like their 'Star wars' system is vulnerable now!:lol:

Anyway......joking aside Sergei Ivanov and Russian specialists have discounted Chinese Anti-satelite missile test. I am not so sure if this is true or just the usual Chinese restraunt style bullshiit propaganda.

Russians can discount all they want to, the missile test was detected by the US and as such there has been such a strong reaction to it by US, Australia, Japan etc.

Supposedly, technically this is not a big feat.
 
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Russians can discount all they want to, the missile test was detected by the US and as such there has been such a strong reaction to it by US, Australia, Japan etc.

Supposedly, technically this is not a big feat.

Desi 'Blain'..... The truth is that 'Western' agencies and Govt's babbled a lot too when all of Kim's bukvass No-dong's and Taepo-Dongs plopped into the sea, and the missile tests all fizzled out. You remember that?;) The DPRK is not a threat to anyone. It's a hopeless and starving nation.

There is no confirmation from any side that backward China can actually acomplish targeting of a satelite in orbit.

I would rather believe Ivanov, than these propaganda sites willifying and trumpeting the charge that China is a threat.:disagree:

The United States can turn the entire Chinese mainland into a glass parking lot if it wants to. The Chinese have only 14 ICBM's capable of reaching the mainland U.S. And that too is unconfirmed.

The same was said about Saddam and all these bhookee nungee muslim countries that they are this and that.......for political mileage.

Facts are quite different regarding China. Let them sell underwear, towels and trinkets at Target and Wal-mart. They have a long way to go before they can even stand up to Russia or the U.S. in military capability.

Russia dismisses reports of Chinese anti-satellite test
From Radio Free Europe (link):


China denies carrying out such a test, although officials in Australia, Japan, North Korea, Taiwan, and the United States have expressed concern about what several of them suggested was a step toward the militarization of space.

"I have heard such reports, and they are quite abstract," Ivanov said. "I'm very much afraid they don't have [any] basis -- as you say that they are antisatellite and so on. I'm afraid it's not true. And perhaps I'm not even afraid, but it is good that it is not true."
 
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There is no confirmation from any side that backward China can actually acomplish targeting of a satelite in orbit..


You are heavily discounting out China. Experts while talking to the media ha said its not a path breaking achievement and is a 20 year old tech. It hit the news bcoz the title was eye catching and testing was done after a lonmg 20 years period.

The United States can turn the entire Chinese mainland into a glass parking lot if it wants to. The Chinese have only 14 ICBM's capable of reaching the mainland U.S. And that too is unconfirmed..


The US doesnt gain anything by that,so that talk is useless.


Facts are quite different regarding China. Let them sell underwear, towels and trinkets at Target and Wal-mart. They have a long way to go before they can even stand up to Russia or the U.S. in military capability.

Their manufacturing skills are amazing, just have a look at the tech items you buy now a days a lot of them are made in China.

China denies carrying out such a test, although officials in Australia, Japan, North Korea, Taiwan, and the United States have expressed concern about what several of them suggested was a step toward the militarization of space.

Thats bullshit, how can that be militarization of space.I dont think thats what is meant by militarisation of space.

I think militarisation of space is satelites capable of firing missiles at ground targets.
 
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WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 — Bush administration officials said that they had been unable to get even the most basic diplomatic response from China after their detection of a successful test to destroy a satellite 10 days ago, and that they were uncertain whether China’s top leaders, including President Hu Jintao, were fully aware of the test or the reaction it would engender.
In interviews over the past two days, American officials with access to the intelligence on the test said the United States kept mum about it in hopes that China would come forth with an explanation.

It was more than a week before the intelligence leaked out: a Chinese missile had been launched and an aging weather satellite in its path, more than 500 miles above the earth, had been reduced to rubble. But protests filed by the United States, Japan, Canada and Australia, among others, were met with silence — and quizzical looks from officials in The Chinese Foreign Ministry, who seemed to be caught unaware.

The mysteries surrounding China’s silence are reminiscent of the cold war, when every case of muscle-flexing by competing powers was examined for evidence of a deeper agenda.

The American officials presume that Mr. Hu was generally aware of the missile testing program, but speculate that he may not have known the timing of the test. China’s continuing silence would appear to suggest, at a minimum, that Mr. Hu did not anticipate a strong international reaction, either because he had not fully prepared for the possibility that the test would succeed, or because he did not foresee that American intelligence on it would be shared with allies, or leaked.

In an interview late Friday, Stephen J. Hadley, President Bush’s national security adviser, raised the possibility that China’s leaders might not have fully known what their military was doing.

“The question on something like this is, at what level in the Chinese government are people witting, and have they approved?” Mr. Hadley asked. He suggested that the diplomatic protests were intended, in part, to force Mr. Hu to give some clue about China’s intentions.

“It will ensure that the issue will now get ventilated at the highest levels in China,” he said, “and it will be interesting to see how it comes out.”

The threat to United States interests is clear: the test demonstrated that China could destroy American spy satellites in low-earth orbit (the very satellites that picked up the destruction of the Chinese weather satellite).

Chinese military officials have extensively studied how the United States has used satellite imagery in the Persian Gulf war, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and in tracking North Korea’s nuclear weapons program — an area in which there has been some limited intelligence-sharing between Chinese and American officials. Several senior administration officials said such studies had included extensive analysis of how satellite surveillance could be used by the United States in case of a crisis over Taiwan.

“This is a wake-up call,” said Robert Joseph, the under secretary of state for arms control and international security. “A small number of states are pursuing capabilities to exploit our vulnerabilities.”

As a result, officials said, the Chinese test is likely to prompt an urgent new effort inside the Bush administration to find ways to counter China’s antisatellite technology. Among the options are efforts to “harden” vulnerable satellites, improve their maneuverability so that they can evade crude kinetic weapons like the one that destroyed the Chinese satellite and develop a backup system of replacement satellites that could be launched immediately if one in orbit is destroyed.

American officials noted that the United States and Russia had not conducted such tests for two decades, and that the international norm had changed, in part because so many private satellites had been launched by many nations. “The Chinese seem out of step on this one, and we don’t know why,” one official said.

But the more immediate mystery about the destruction of the satellite revolves around China’s prolonged silence — and what it says about the commitments President Hu and President Bush have made concerning increasing their communication, and diminishing the secrecy around China’s military buildup.

Chinese leaders often hesitate to engage with foreign officials on matters of military secrecy. It took days to get the Chinese to respond in the first foreign policy crisis to confront the Bush administration — the forcing down, on Chinese territory, of an American spy plane in 2001. Eventually the plane’s crew was returned, unharmed, but the prolonged silence unnerved American officials.
In this case, the communication blackout raised the possibility that top Chinese officials were either trying to anger the United States or that the test was conducted without the full involvement of the one official who has authority to coordinate the military and civilian bureaucracies: President Hu. American officials said they believed that the Foreign Ministry — the one department that deals daily with the rest of the world — was left in the dark.
“What we heard, in essence, was, ‘We’ll get back to you,’ ” said a senior American diplomat. “It was unclear they even knew what was going on.”

Chinese political and military analysts, who would not speak on the record about an issue the Chinese government still regards as secret, said they considered it unlikely that the army’s Second Artillery forces, in charge of its ballistic missiles, would conduct a test of a sophisticated new weapon without approval from the highest levels.

But they suggested that the test might have been approved in principle, with little advance preparation for the diplomatic fallout in the event it was successful. That entails not just new military worries; the destruction of the weather satellite left debris in space that could damage satellites from other nations.

“It’s the kind of silence that makes you wonder what’s happening inside the country,” said another senior American official who has been monitoring the case. “I’m sure the Chinese leadership knew there were tests under way, in a general sort of way. But they don’t seem to have been prepared for a success, and they clearly had not thought about what they would say to the world.”

The timing is significant. Chinese officials have hinted in recent months that they are prepared to grant an American request to establish a military-to-military hot line that may be used to enhance communication. But China has moved slowly to establish the link, which is based on the cold war hot line to Moscow, and there is little evidence that Chinese military officers would have offered an explanation for the antisatellite test if it had been set up.

President Bush and Mr. Hu hold regular phone conversations about continuing issues, including how to manage North Korea’s nuclear program. But Mr. Hu and Mr. Bush never developed the kind of close ties that Mr. Bush’s aides forecast once the pragmatic-sounding Mr. Hu, who is close to Mr. Bush’s age, took office.

Their relationship suffered during an awkward trip by Mr. Hu to Washington last spring, when Mr. Bush declined to hold a state dinner for him — there was a working lunch instead — and the arrival ceremony was marred by a mistaken announcement that the anthem that would be played would be for the Republic of China, the formal name for Taiwan.

http://http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/22/world/asia/22missile.html?pagewanted=1&ei=5090&en=fef48ee12cf368e7&ex=1327122000&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss
 
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China confirms satellite downed

The missile was reportedly launched from near Xichang Space Centre
China has confirmed it carried out a test that destroyed a satellite, in a move that caused international alarm.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said a test had been carried out but insisted China was committed to the "peaceful development of outer space".

The US backed reports last week that China had used a ground-based medium-range ballistic missile to destroy a weather satellite.

A senior Taiwanese politician said he viewed it as an aggressive act.

It is the first known satellite intercept test for more than 20 years.

Several countries, including Japan, Australia and the US, have expressed concern at the test, amid worries it could trigger a space arms race.

Until Tuesday, China had refused to confirm or deny the 11 January test.

International concern

Liu Jianchao told reporters that China had notified "other parties and... the American side" of its test.

CHINA IN SPACE
China's first manned space mission launched in 2003 - following former Soviet Union and the US
Chinese astronauts aim to perform a spacewalk as early as next year
Until now, the US and Russia have been the only nations to shoot down space objects
China insists its space programme is of no threat, but other nations are wary
China says it spends $500m on space projects. NASA is due to spend $17bn in 2007


Space challenge to US
Test sparks space arms fears

"But China stresses that it has consistently advocated the peaceful development of outer space and it opposes the arming of space and military competition in space," he told a news conference.

"China has never, and will never, participate in any form of space arms race."

However, Dr Joseph Wu, head of the body responsible for Taiwan's relations with China, viewed it differently.

"This is an aggressive act by the Chinese side," he told the BBC on a visit to Japan.

"I don't think it's just limited to Taiwan only but of course... Taiwan stands out to be the first country that might have to suffer if a future conflict were to erupt between China and some other countries."

China sees Taiwan as part of its territory and has threatened to use force if the island ever moved to declare formal independence.

The US, which is committed to provide Taiwan with defensive weapons, supports the status quo.

US spy satellites watch over the Taiwan Straits, and coordinating any defence against a possible Chinese invasion would be made much harder if those spy satellites were destroyed.

Debris fears

The magazine American Aviation Week and Space Technology reported that a Chinese Feng Yun 1C polar orbit weather satellite had been destroyed by an anti-satellite system launched from or near China's Xichang Space Centre on 11 January.

The test is thought to have occurred at more than 537 miles (865km) above the Earth.

The report was confirmed by US National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe last Thursday.

He said at the time the US "believes China's development and testing of such weapons is inconsistent with the spirit of co-operation that both countries aspire to in the civil space area".

Japan and Australia also spoke of their fears of a possible new arms race in space.

There are already growing international concerns about China's rising military power.

While Beijing keeps its defence spending a secret, analysts say that it has grown rapidly in recent years.

China is now only the third country to shoot something down in space.

Both the US and the Soviet Union halted their tests in the 1980s over concerns that the debris they produced could harm civilian and military satellite operations.

While the US may be unhappy about China's actions, the Washington administration has recently opposed international calls to end such tests.

It revised US space policy last October to state that Washington had the right to freedom of action in space, and the US is known to be researching such "satellite-killing" weapons itself.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6289519.stm
 
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ISRO chief slams Chinese anti-satellite test

Agencies | Bangalore

Indian Space Research Organisation chief has slammed China for its anti-satellite missile test, terming the shooting down as one against international convention and said New Delhi should make efforts to exert pressure on Beijing not to undertake such strikes.


"They should not have done that. It's against international convention. First of all, we are not supposed to weaponise the outer space", Chairman of ISRO G Madhavan Nair said.


"By killing a satellite, you create much more debris. Today about 8,000 objects are there in orbit. By blasting one satellite, you create another few hundred (objects)", he said referring to China's anti-satellite missile test. "That way, I don't know why they did that."
Nair, also the Secretary in the Department of Space, said India has the capability to conduct such a test, but categorically added that it has no intention of undertaking such an exercise. Nair said India is committed to use of outer space for peaceful purposes only. He said with China conducting the test, India has to keep talking about it in international fora and bring some pressure on Beijing not to undertake such strikes.
China last month launched a missile to kill a satellite. Earlier reports from the United States said that China shot down an ageing weather satellite by slamming into it a ground-based missile about 860 km above Earth.

http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?main_variable=FLASH&file_name=cap3.txt&counter_img=3
 
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