Russia's anti-satellite threat tests laws of war in space
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[October 28, 2022]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Russian official's
threat this week to "strike" Western satellites aiding Ukraine
highlights an untested area of international law, raising concerns among
space lawyers and industry executives about the safety of objects in
orbit.
"Quasi-civilian infrastructure may be a legitimate target for a
retaliatory strike," senior foreign ministry official Konstantin
Vorontsov told the United Nations, reiterating Moscow's position that
Western civilian and commercial satellites helping Ukrainian's war
effort was "an extremely dangerous trend."
No country has carried out a missile strike against an enemy's
satellite. Such an act during the war in Ukraine could sharply escalate
tensions between Russia and the United States.
"This threat has brought us to a brink that we've never been to before,"
said Michelle Hanlon, co-director of the University of Mississippi
School of Law's Air and Space Law program. "There’s always been a sense
that this could happen, but never has somebody actually said that they
might do that out loud.”
Ukraine's military relies heavily on Elon Musk's SpaceX for broadband
internet beamed from its low-Earth orbiting Starlink satellite network.
U.S. firms like Maxar are capturing images of the war from satellites in
orbit. And tens of thousands of communications devices in Ukraine rely
on U.S. satellite communications giant Iridium's satellite network.
"It's really irresponsible to talk about shooting anything down in space
for any reason," Iridium chief executive Matt Desch told Reuters. "Space
has gotten to be quite messy."
"If somebody starts shooting satellites in space, I'd imagine it would
quickly make space unusable," Desch said.
Musk and SpaceX did not respond to emailed requests for comment. The
billionaire briefly caused alarm this month by saying he could no longer
afford to keep funding Starlink service in Ukraine, a position he
quickly reversed.
Under the laws of armed conflict, a Russian strike on a private U.S.
company's satellite could be seen as an act of war to which the U.S.
could respond, Hanlon said.
White House spokesman John Kirby said on Thursday that any attack on
U.S. infrastructure would be met with a response but he did not go into
detail.
"The legal aspects of all this are really murky at the moment," said
Brian Weeden, a space policy analyst at the Secure World Foundation. "We
don’t have any examples of wartime uses of force against satellites -
there’s really nothing to go off of."
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A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying a
payload of 53 Starlink satellites lifts off from Launch Complex 39A
at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S. May 18,
2022. REUTERS/Steve Nesius/File Photo
COMPLICATED CALCULUS
Whether a Russian anti-satellite strike would violate the 1967 Outer
Space Treaty, such as its prohibition on placing weapons of mass
destruction in space, is debatable, lawyers say. The Liability
Convention of 1972, to which Russia is also a signatory, stipulates
that countries must pay compensation for any damage caused by its
space objects.
Last year Russia demonstrated a direct-ascent anti-satellite missile
on one of its old satellites in orbit, blasting it to smithereens.
Since Russia's Feb. 24 invasion into Ukraine, Western officials and
companies have accused Moscow of repeated attempts to hack and jam
satellite internet signals over the region.
Anti-satellite missiles have been widely condemned by the West and
astronomers for creating hazardous orbital debris that endangers
critical space infrastructure, from crewed space stations to GPS
networks that millions of consumer and government platforms around
the world rely on.
The only other countries to have conducted direct-ascent
anti-satellite missile tests are the United States - which last
demonstrated an anti-satellite weapon in 2008 - China, and India.
Vorontsov did not single out any companies in his comments to a U.N.
panel on Wednesday. But SpaceX's Starlink has stood out as a
persistent target for Russia, which has attempted to signal-jam the
network's signals during the war, Musk has said.
A network of thousands of interconnected satellites encircling Earth
like Starlink have been championed by the U.S. military as being
resilient to potential anti-satellite attacks that could only target
a small portion of the network without fully disabling it.
"It complicates the calculus for the enemy," Lieutenant General
Philip Garrant, the U.S. Space Force's deputy chief of strategy and
operations, told Reuters. "If there's lots of satellites, they don't
know which one to target."
SpaceX's Starlink network consists of roughly 3,000 satellites, and
there are several dozen commercial U.S. imagery satellites eyeing
Russia and Ukraine.
"Destroying one or two, or even a dozen, isn’t gonna have much
effect," Weeden said.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Mary Milliken and William
Mallard)
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