Sat Shoot-Down Part of Space Arms Race: Russia | |
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Feb 19, 2008 02:40 | |
![]() | AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Published: 17 Feb 18:06 EST (13:06 GMT) MOSCOW - Moscow fears a U.S. plan to shoot down a damaged spy satellite in the coming weeks is a veiled weapons test and represents an "attempt to move the arms race into space," Russia's defense ministry said. The U.S. Navy intends to use Aegis-equipped ships to destroy the satellite. ( U.S. Navy) The operation, which Washington says is motivated only by the desire to avoid a damaging crash on Earth, "does not look as innocent as they are trying to present it," the ministry said in a statement released late Feb. 16. "The impression arises that the United States is trying to use the accident with its satellite to test its national anti-missile defense system as a means of destroying satellites," the Russian ministry said. The ability to shoot down satellites is seen by many analysts as crucial in future conflicts due to the dependence of modern military equipment on satellite-based communications. Washington says a U.S. warship will fire a surface-to-air missile at the U.S. satellite, which is roughly the size of a bus, to ensure any Earth-bound debris will splash into the ocean. Without intervention, the satellite would hit earth in early March, a U.S. official said. The United States denies the shoot-down aims at protecting the satellite's technological secrets or at demonstrating anti-satellite capability. However, the Russian defense ministry said the U.S. plan was "in many ways close" to China's controversial shoot-down of an old weather satellite in January, which was condemned by the United States as a demonstration of its military reach in space. The U.S. State Department last week said that the Chinese operation was "designed specifically" to test their ability to destroy satellites, whereas the U.S. plan was aimed only at protecting people on the ground. Russian concerns about the U.S. plan are compounded by Washington's repeated refusal to take part in talks on limiting space-based weapons, the defense ministry said. The announcement last week that Moscow and Beijing were proposing a new treaty banning the use of weapons in space was immediately rejected by the White House. |
Feb 19, 2008 12:16 | |
![]() | I must confess that my first impression of reading the article was that it was a tit-for-tat satellite shoot-down for the benefit of China. Of course, if the satellite trajectory places its crash in a major US city, I might be convinced otherwise. |
Feb 19, 2008 21:01 | |
![]() | In 1980s Regan launched the space arms race. USA relied on its powerful economy to compete agaist USSR. Finally, USSR was undermined. How about this new round of space arms race? Who will be the winner? Or there is no winner? |
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