US Loses Edge on Spy Satellites
By John J. Lumpkin
Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, April 9, 2002; 8:42 AM
WASHINGTON -- Pictures from sharp-eyed satellites, once the domain of
the United States and Russia, are becoming so easy to obtain that the
military may have to alter its strategies knowing adversaries with a
minimum of know-how and money can be watching.
Perhaps a half-dozen countries as well as some private companies have
spy satellites that, while not as good as those used by the United
States, are able to supply solid military intelligence.
"The unique spaceborne advantage that the U.S. has enjoyed over the past
few decades is eroding as more countries - including China and India -
field increasingly sophisticated reconnaissance satellites," CIA
Director George J. Tenet said in a recent Senate hearing.
Tenet said adversaries are quickly learning how to take advantage.
"Foreign military, intelligence and terrorist organizations are
exploiting this - along with commercially available navigation and
communications services - to enhance the planning and conduct of their
operations," he said.
In the past, only Moscow had satellite capability approaching that of
the United States.
Now, with its own spy satellites, China would be able to learn of the
location and composition of a U.S. carrier battlegroup dispatched during
a potential dispute over Taiwan.
Eleven years ago, the United States threatened an amphibious assault on
Iraq from the Persian Gulf before hitting Iraq's army with a "left hook"
from the western flank. If Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had had access
to the kind of commercially available satellite imagery now for sale,
it's conceivable he could have moved his troops to meet the coalition's
surprise land assault.
The latest advances in foreign countries are largely the result of their
research rather than technology purchases or espionage, experts said.
The United States pioneered much of the technology; now, other countries
are replicating it.
"We're losing our monopoly," said James Lewis, a former Commerce and
State Department space policy expert now with the Center for Strategic
and International Studies. "After the war in the Persian Gulf, other
countries figured out it was really good to have space capabilities."
U.S. military satellites remain the best – they can discern far more
detail and collect more images. Their numbers allow them to take
pictures more frequently of a given area. A new generation of spy
satellites, part of a project called "Future Imagery Architecture," is
planned.
But now that other countries have access to high-resolution imagery,
they can count tanks, track fleets and acquire other information useful
in predicting U.S. military moves.
That means the military will have to practice the same "denial and
deception" techniques adversaries have used to avoid detection by U.S.
reconnaissance, experts say. Tanks are camouflaged under trees. Secret
projects are hidden in buildings when a reconnaissance satellite is
overhead.
During the first months of the Afghan war, the United States simply
bought exclusive access to the right parts of the orbit of the Ikonos
satellite, then the best commercial satellite in the skies. This
prevented anyone else from having a look at Afghanistan, and the U.S.
company that runs Ikonos, Space Imaging Inc., was happy to sell.
It's unclear if the U.S. government will do that in future wars. While
it can exercise "shutter control" over U.S.-owned satellites,
foreign-owned satellites are under no such restriction. Foreign
companies also may not want to sell imagery solely to the Americans.
Rep. Mac Thornberry, R-Texas, who has studied these issues, suggested
the military develop ways to jam satellite transmissions and prevent
ground stations from receiving the pictures.
"The more information an adversary has, the more vulnerable we are," he
said. "We have to think about jamming and other capabilities at the
appropriate times."
Both the United States and the former Soviet Union worked on weapons
that would bring down spy satellites in the event of a major war. But
interest in those technologies has waned.
James also said he worries that the United States is losing its edge in
building the best satellites. New restrictions on exports of satellite
components, while slowing the transfer of sophisticated technology, have
also caused U.S. manufacturers to close, he said. These rules were
enacted after an investigation into the Clinton administration's
decision to let two U.S. aerospace companies export satellites to be
launched atop Chinese rockets.
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