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NASA JOINS SPACE COMMAND ON SPACE SUPREMACY [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]

Bill Howard
Fri, 12 Apr 2002 19:28:55 -0700

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----- Original Message -----
From: Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Bruce K. Gagnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2002 11:58 PM
Subject: NASA JOINS SPACE COMMAND ON SPACE SUPREMACY



NRO, Space Command, NASA Tout Common Language
          Of "Space Supremacy" at Conference

By Loring Wirbel (Colorado Springs, CO)


     The gloves are off in the wake of the "war on terror," and the U.S.
Space Command, the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), and even NASA are
singing from a unified songbook that boasts of "space supremacy."  At the
18th annual National Space Symposium in Colorado Springs in April, the
extent to which a new Cold War defines space priorities became abundantly
clear.

     While NRO, the nation's largest intelligence agency by budget, always
held a central role at the annual conference, its presence defined the
direction for military and civilian space communities alike at this year's
symposium.  Peter Teets, the former chief operating officer of
Lockheed-Martin, has been appointed to the dual roles of new NRO director
and Under Secretary of the Air Force.  In addition, Teets has been
designated as the primary procurement agent for the government responsible
for national-security space, the first time an NRO director has held this
post.

     Teets and U.S. Space Command Commander in Chief Gen. Ed Eberhart were
not shy in reiterating the message that the U.S. controls the planet through
control of planetary space.  Teets updated an earlier saying of former NRO
Director Keith Hall by proclaiming that "Afghanistan has reinforced
something about space dominance:  We have it, we like it, and we're going to
keep it."

     Civilian interests under NASA are bowing to the new realities of the
military setting the agenda.  NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe revealed that
the agency's top budget priority for fiscal 2003 will be to spend close to
$1 billion in nuclear propulsion, exploring both radioisotope thermal
generators such as those used for Cassini, as well as possible mini-reactors
for deep-space missions.  O'Keefe, a former Navy secretary and Pentagon
comptroller, also reiterated how well NASA had served the Pentagon in
providing imagery for the Afghan war, such as SeaWiFS and Terra spacecraft
images provided to the Navy.  O'Keefe said that NASA was looking forward to
providing agency resources for the "war on terror."

      The blurring of lines between military and civilian resources was
omnipresent at the conference.  Since the commercial space industry imploded
during the 2001 recession, civilian companies and agencies have looked to
their old friends in the military for dual-use functions.  Many talked at
the conference of using space-based technology for the Office of Homeland
Defense, though speakers from Boeing and Raytheon warned that there are
plenty of civil liberties hurdles they must overcome to use imaging and
database technologies to snoop on events in the U.S.  In fact, the corporate
speakers said that often, their own insurance companies provide bigger
blockades to using questionable technologies domestically, than do either
the Department of Justice or the Congress.

Space Grabs its Spoils After Winning the War

     Teets, Eberhart, and several uniformed officers of the Space Command
boasted of the role space played in Afghanistan.  The Global Positioning
System, particularly an augmented targeting program called GETS (GPS
Enhanced Theatre Support), allowed for extremely precise bombing by fighters
and unmanned aerial vehicles in Afghanistan.   The Global Broadcast System,
a special classified broadband communication system that rides on Navy UHF
Follow-On satellites, was used heavily in the war.  A GBS satellite parked
above the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia relayed everything from video
feeds of Predator UAVs, to video downlinks for special operations soldiers
on horseback in remote regions of western Afghanistan.

     In fact, communications advances were as important as the NRO's vast
array of intelligence satellites.  Eberhart said that while intelligence
usually gains the most attention, the provision of broadband services to
soldiers from space assets was just as important.  He said that "we in Space
Command provided Tommy Franks seven times the bandwidth that was provided to
Norman Schwarzkopf, and an individual soldier had 322 times the bandwidth
that was available in Desert Storm."  Teets added that "in no time in our
history has the capability of space been so pivotal."

     The Defense Department is now considering an expansion of the UAV
program to include autonomous vehicles that span the realm from the upper
atmosphere to space.  Ron Sega, director of defense research and
engineering, said that a new DoD program called the National Aerospace
Initiative is exploring the miniaturization of UAV technology, as well as
the revitalization of mini-satellite and micro-satellite concepts originally
developed under the Star Wars-related Brilliant Eyes program.

     Speakers from private commercial imaging companies Space Imaging and
Digital Globe pointed out that photos from Ikanos, Spot Image, and QuickBird
commercial satellites had already been used in war operations in
Afghanistan.  Space Imaging chief executive John Copple said that the
Pentagon did not buy commercial imaging products simply to keep them off the
market, but because they formed a useful adjunct to NRO imagery.

      Teets said that the highest priority for new NRO programs comes in the
Space-Based Radar, a system which would not be ready for fielding until late
in the decade, but which could provide moving target indication from space,
a space-based equivalent of the JSTARS radar plane.  Another high priority
for NRO is a program for "Transformational Communications," in which new
concepts of net-centric Internet Protocol routing, packet-switching, and
laser communications would be tested for both inter-satellite links, and for
links between satellites and ground stations.  But the expansive plans and
boasts from Kandahar did not mean that all has been smooth sailing for the
nation's space intelligence agency.

      As one example, a key element of the Missile Defense Agency is the
Space-Based Infrared System, or SBIRS, which would play the dual role of
replacing the aging Defense Support Program satellites in watching for
missile launches, while also serving as an infared technical intelligence
system.  The low-earth component of SBIRS, or SBIRS-Low, is proceeding in
early development with few problems.

     But SBIRS-High, a program of combined geosynchronous and elliptical
satellites that is being developed at Lockheed-Martin, is facing severe cost
overruns.   The escalation in costs from $1.8 billion to $4.5 billion for
SBIRS-High has initiated a mandated Congressional review.  The largest
overruns reportedly come in neither of the satellite systems, but in
software developed at the SBIRS central ground station at Buckley AFB,
Colorado.

     Eberhart called SBIRS-High "the most serious tailwind I'm facing right
now," and said that the NRO was conducting a review of possible satellite
systems to replace SBIRS-High, if it proves infeasible to build.  He said
that the "problems with SBIRS are not a question of whether the requirements
are valid - the system would be invaluable for technical intelligence and
battlefield characterization, and not just as a DSP replacement."

     One source at the conference said that NRO's highest-profile program,
the Future Imagery Architecture imaging satellite being developed by Boeing,
is facing similar cost overruns to SBIRS, and may confront a similar review
if the overruns exceed 25 percent of the initial budget.   A companion
system for signals intelligence, the Integrated Overhead SIGINT Architecture
or "Intruder" system, has faced serious problems in moving from IOSA-1 to
IOSA-2.  But Teets said nothing about the status of FIA or IOSA at the
conference.

When the Watchers Watch You ..

     Since the passage of the USA Patriot Act, there has been growing
concern about an erosion of the strict limitations that prevent NRO and the
National Security Agency from snooping on U.S. citizens.  In fact,
provisions of USA Patriot and several Justice Department directives have
encouraged the sharing of information across intelligence agencies.  Several
panels at the Space Symposium looked at how additional space assets could be
used in support of "homeland defense."

    Startup companies are as anxious to play as defense giants.  The
existing commercial imaging companies did not complain at all when the
Defense Department purchased all their images of Central Asia after the war
in Afghanistan began.  Now, new companies developing micro-satellites, such
as SpaceDev and MicroSat Systems, are looking to the NRO as a partner for
some of their experimental satellite programs, where clusters of small
satellites can be built for under $10 million per satellite.

     Among the larger aerospace companies, Raytheon is the defense
contractor with perhaps the biggest investment in what is called ISR, or
Intelligence/Surveillance/Reconnaissance.  The company formed a
cross-disciplinary group called "ISRnet" in recent months, and has already
used the model of the outsourced intelligence-processing it performs at the
Buckley Field intelligence base near Denver to set up a commercial secure
Web hosting site adjacent to Buckley.

     Raytheon has plenty of earthbound contracts related to post-Sept. 11
homeland defense.  It is developing explosive detectors for installation at
all airports, and is working with the Justice Department and INS on a "Smart
Border" project of fingerprint, facial, and iris scans for the Canadian and
Mexican borders.  There also is a project to provide the Federal Emergency
Management Agency with mobile command centers, using a satellite-based
communication system that borrows technology from intelligence projects.

     Hugo Poza, the vice president for homeland defense at Raytheon, said
that many of the databases and search engines his company developed for U.S.
intelligence agencies could be used to create a unified information
repository for domestic law-enforcement and emergency-response teams.  The
biggest failure of Sept. 11, he said, was not a lack of information about
the terrorists responsible, but a failure to share information held by
several agencies.  A unified database would help that, Poza said, but it
must be created carefully to assuage privacy concerns regarding its use.

     Conference attendees seemed anxious to provide whatever imaging or
signals intelligence resources they could to either U.S. "warfighters" or
domestic law-enforcement agencies, and concern about intelligence sharing
always seemed to take a back seat to providing a unified front for the war
on terror.  John Stammreich, vice president for homeland defense at Boeing,
ironically said that the insurance companies who are worried about privacy
indemnification often pose more concerns about civil liberties violations
than do federal agents.  He said that one attorney told him, "just because
you're holding an RFP (request for proposal), doesn't make it legal."

The Undisputed Boss

   The few European attendees at Space Symposium were showing noticeable
unease at the level of chutzpah coming from military space leaders.  Jeff
Harris, a former NRO director who now is deputy of Lockheed's Space Systems
Company, said that the U.S. now must act regularly in a pre-emptive and
proactive way around the globe, using space-based resources for local
skirmishes.  He said that the U.S. military should make all potential
adversaries "unquestionably afraid of U.S. capabilities."

     While O'Keefe of NASA made some nominal gestures toward
internationalism, particularly for keeping a multinational role active in
the International Space Station, Teets made sure not to talk of NATO or
burden-sharing or anything else that smacked of multilateralism.  He said
that the U.S. should be proud of its unilateral capabilities, and should
exploit "our space supremacy, our space dominance, to achieve warfighting
success."




Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 90083
Gainesville, FL. 32607
(352) 337-9274
http://www.space4peace.org
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  • NASA JOINS SPACE COMMAND ON SPACE SUPREMACY [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK] Bill Howard