SpaceX rocket launches Luxembourg
satellite for NATO
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[February 02, 2018]
By Joey Roulette
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - A SpaceX
Falcon 9 rocket blasted off from Florida on Wednesday carrying into
orbit a Luxembourg-made communications satellite designed in part to
expand NATO's surveillance reach and its capability to deter cyber
attacks on alliance members.
The liftoff at 4:25 p.m. EST (2125 GMT) from Cape Canaveral Air Force
Station followed a technical glitch that prompted a 24-hour flight
delay. It marked the second rocket launch this year for billionaire
entrepreneur Elon Musk and his privately owned Space Exploration
Technologies.
It comes a week before the California-based company is slated to conduct
its highly anticipated first test flight of the much larger and more
powerful Falcon Heavy rocket, which packs three times the thrust of the
Falcon 9.
Wednesday's payload was a communications satellite built for LuxGovSat
S.A., a public-private joint venture between the Luxembourg government
and Luxembourg-based telecommunications company SES, in part to fulfill
that nation's growing defense obligations to NATO.
The so-called GovSat-1 satellite will provide, among other things,
greater cyber protection for Luxembourg's European Union partners and
NATO allies, including the United States, Luxembourg Defense Minister
Etienne Schneider told a news conference on Tuesday.
GovSat-1 also will serve civilian telecommunications security functions.
Thirty-four minutes after liftoff, the satellite was successfully
released into a highly elliptical "parking" orbit, according to SpaceX.
It will eventually settle into a round orbit 22,370 miles (36,000 km)
high, where it will circle the Earth for 15 years.
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A spokesman for Schneider said the $279 million satellite, which weighs
about 4-1/2 tons, is part of a broader policy of doubling the country's
contributions to NATO.
Citing new security threats, a senior NATO official told Reuters in
March that the alliance planned to spend more than $3 billion on defense
technology, a third of which would go toward satellite communications.

Unlike many recent SpaceX launches, the company had not initially
planned on retrieving the rocket's reusable main-stage because the
payload had to be carried to such a high orbit that the booster was left
without sufficient fuel to fly back to Earth for a return landing.
However, the booster "amazingly" survived its ocean splash-down intact,
Musk said in a Twitter message posted later with a photograph of the
vehicle floating at sea. "We will try to tow it back to shore," he said.
The same Falcon 9 booster was used last year in a mission to launch a
top-secret payload into space for the U.S. government.
(Additional reporting by Irene Klotz at Cape Canaveral; Editing by Steve
Gorman and Sandra Maler)
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