Venezuela: Next step to longer-range missiles


 
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POSTED AT 2:00 PM ON MAY 29, 2011 BY J.E. DYER 
 
<http://hotair.com/archives/2011/05/29/venezuela-next-step-to-longer-range-m
issiles/> REGULAR VIEW
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ssiles/


China launched a communication satellite for Venezuela in 2008.  The next
phase in Hugo Chavez's drive for Bolivarian excellence will entail the
Venezuelans
<http://www.france24.com/en/20110527-venezuela-china-launch-satellite-next-y
ear> launching their own satellite (with Chinese assistance) in 2012 - a
feat with dual implications.

One is related to the nature of the payload.  According to a Venezuelan
official this week, the satellite will have a surveillance mission:

Ricardo Menendez said Thursday that the earth-observation satellite, to be
built at a cost of $140 million, would be used to monitor troop movements
and illegal mining as well as study climate change and the environment.

In other words, it will carry an imaging sensor or sensors, taskable by the
Venezuelan authorities.  Although satellite imagery has been available
commercially for some time, it makes a significant difference to timeliness
(and other aspects of coverage) to be able to downlink the signal directly,
without a middleman, and define and task the image parameters yourself.
Depending on the orbital path, Venezuela may have regular "looks" at areas
of interest to Hugo Chavez's buddies abroad.  Presumably, the orbit will be
optimized for Central America, which will limit how much it can be optimized
for coverage of El Norte.  In any case, it will be optimized for military
applications.

The other implication involves rocket technology.  Launching satellites into
earth orbit is a significant step in developing the capability to build
long-range missiles.  Chavez is already building a
<http://hotair.com/greenroom/archives/2011/05/16/iranian-silo-based-missiles
-coming-soon-to-a-bolivarian-republic-near-you/> joint missile base with
Iran in northwestern Venezuela, a project that includes collaborating on the
development of a new missile series.  The technological boost from Chinese
rocketry will go together with joint missile development like a horse and
carriage, accelerating Venezuela's timeline to medium- and long-range
missiles of her own.

Being corrupt, oppressive, and ill-managed has yet to stop rotten
dictatorships from developing capabilities like these, especially when China
and Iran are there to lend a helping hand.  The US has no plan for defense
against missiles from the south, nor a concept for collaborating on missile
defense for our friends in Latin America.  But the missiles are coming, as
is an enhanced, military-grade intelligence capability for Hugo Chavez.

 



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