Military and civilian
satellites need protection
Satellite tracking software freely available on the Internet and some
textbook physics could be used by any organization that can get hold of an
intermediate range rocket to mount an unsophisticated attack on military
or civilian satellites. Such an attack would require modest engineering
capability and only a limited budget. That is according to researchers
writing in Inderscience Publishers' International Journal of Critical
Infrastructures.
A terrorist organization or rogue state could threaten essential
satellite systems, according to Adrian Gheorghe of Old Dominion University
Norfolk, in Virginia, USA and Dan Vamanu of "Horia Hulubei" National
Institute of Physics and Nuclear Engineering, in Bucharest, Romania.
Military satellites, global positioning systems, weather satellites and
even satellite TV systems could all become victims of such an attack.
Gheorghe and Vamanu have carried out an analysis of just how easy it
could be to knock out strategic satellites, their findings suggest that
dozens of systems on which military and civilian activities depend make
near-space a vulnerable environment. The team used a so-called
"mathematical game" and textbook physics equations for ballistics to help
them build a computer model to demonstrate that anti-satellite weaponry is
a real possibility.
Accuracy and elegance are not issues in carrying out a satellite
attack, the researchers say, as long as the projectile hits the satellite.
In fact, all it would take to succeed with an amateurish, yet effective
anti-satellite attack would be the control of an intermediate range
missile, which is well within the reach of many nations and organizations
with sufficient funds, and a college-level team dedicated to the cause.
"Any country in possession of intermediate range rockets may mount a
grotesquely unsophisticated attack on another's satellites given the
political short-sightedness that would be blind to a potentially
devastating retaliation," the researchers say.
On January 11, 2007, China deliberately destroyed one of its own
weather satellites in a test, which some analysts suggested as having the
potential to revive a techno-political race believed to be defunct since
the 1980s. According to Gheorghe and Vamanu that was the cool analytical
view, but some hot diplomats are quoted as saying this demonstration is
"inconsistent with international efforts to avert an arms race in outer
space and undermining the security in outer space".
"While it may be true that, when it comes to nuts and bolts, things may
not be quite as simple as they sound here, the bare fact remains - it can
be done." Their conclusions suggest that the risk of deliberate satellite
sabotage should be placed higher on the security agenda.
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