US Tested Technology to Warn When China Tracks US Satellites: Space Force
More than 490 of the CCP’s 970 satellites are intelligence-capable satellites, according to a professor of strategy at the U.S. Naval War College.
The United States’ Space Rapid Capabilities Office (RCO) director, Kelly Hammett, has revealed that in January 2023, America quietly launched a payload designed to detect Chinese satellite tracking in space.
Hammett, explaining that the current prototype can tell if it is being “observed, tracked [or] targeted,” said that since the space vehicles were launched, his division received “very interesting data.”
The webpage said that the spacecraft allowed for quick transit into space and noted that the launch was the third in the corporation’s LDPE project.
Northrop Grumman’s news release stated that it used a “common baseline,” giving its clients—in this case, the U.S. Space Force—greater control over the mission. It also noted that the launch carried enough equipment for five space missions and did not specify the equipment’s purpose.
The RCO, according to Hammett, plans to proliferate the prototype’s capabilities across the Space Force and has already taken steps in that direction.
As a nod to the communist state’s 970-strong satellite inventory—per a July 2024 analysis on China’s space threats by Andrew Erickson, a professor of strategy at the U.S. Naval War College—Hammett suspects that the data relayed to his team since the prototype launch likely came from a Chinese SISO, which refers to a sensor and radar network used for space object surveillance and identification.
China’s Desire to Dominate Space
In 2021, China was noted to have launched an Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM). What set it aside from the Russian, U.S., or any other variant was that the projectile’s function changed during flight from an ICBM to a glide vehicle.
The communique, published by the State Council Information Office, noted that the Chinese regime said that this endeavor would “start a new journey toward space power.”
The paper said that China planned to launch at least 40 satellites in 2022.
“China’s ISR satellites are capable of providing electro-optical and synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery as well as electronic and signals intelligence data,” the report continued.
On April 5, 2023, Gen. B. Chance Saltzman, who headed up the space operations for the Space Force, said that China and Russia were capable of attacking satellites.
He further noted these satellites posed a threat to the United States and allied Forces in the Indo-Pacific.
“We have begun to see the space piece integrated into some of that [military training drills], not as much early on, but more recently.”
In the context of his observations, he cited a need for the U.S. Space Force to protect its soldiers from a Chinese “space-enabled attack.”