America seeks faster ways to launch military satellites
If one gets destroyed, a replacement needs to be on its way soon
BY SHOOTING A missile into one of its own satellites in March, India upped the ante. The immediate intention, suggests Jeffrey Caton, a retired American air-force colonel who teaches at the Army War College, was to fire “a shot across the bow” of India’s rival China. The Chinese had, after all, blown up one of their own satellites in 2007, in a similar demonstration of their ability to do such things. India’s test, along with the wider profusion of anti-satellite weapons, has lent credence to the worries of defence chiefs around the world who believe that future conflicts between great powers will stretch into space.
This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Quickening the countdown”
Science & technology December 7th 2019
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