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INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
Operation Desert Storm clearly demonstrated that space forces can be significant contributors to enhancing operational forces and accomplishing military
objectives. They provide critical data and information necessary to warn
against ballistic missile attack, to allow instantaneous worldwide communications among forces, to predict weather patterns in regions of national interest,
and to perform precise geographical measurements and position location anywhere in the world. Coupled with advances in technologies and information
processing techniques, space systems are demonstrating their flexibility and diversity in other areas as well, such as contributing to the development of national communication infrastructures in developing countries. The satellites
used to perform these many functions are only part of a larger system that allows the United States to exploit space-based capabilities to enhance its national security; the components of this system include launch vehicles to ensure
access to space, ground stations deployed around the globe to track and control
the satellites, and reliable communication links to ensure the timely flow of
data to and from the orbiting spacecraft. Also included is the large infrastructure of unique skills and technologies tailored to exploit and disseminate the
products of space resources.
Although Operation Desert Storm highlighted the importance of spacepower in
supporting conventional military operations, future joint operations will demand an increasing role for space forces, including the possible exploitation of
civil, commercial, and international space systems. Warfighters, users, and
military planners must also be concerned with the implications for future military operations of facing adversaries who have significant space capabilities or
who have access to space-derived data products. Moreover, the implications of
such future concepts as information warfare need to be addressed. In this dynamic security and budgetary environment, members of the military space
community must determine even more carefully which space forces and oper-
ational arrangements are needed, when they are needed and by whom, and
what the operational implications are of the space force structure that results.
The strategic context in which many of these space systems were first developed, acquired, and justified has been supplanted by an evolving and dynamic
strategic landscape that poses new challenges for military forces in general.
Consequently, space forces must now compete with other military systems and
capabilities in a declining budgetary and force structure environment. It is not
evident that a clear understanding of the virtues and drawbacks of space assets
exists among key decisionmakers in the administration, the Congress, or the
American public. This lack of understanding is complicated by a gap of perspective and experience between those in the military and the aerospace industry tasked to develop, acquire, and operate space-based capabilities (the space
community) and those in the combatant and component commands who plan
and conduct combat operations to which these capabilities might contribute
(the warfighting community). This gap has hampered the efficient communication needed to fully exploit existing capabilities and to remedy deficiencies by
effectively upgrading or replacing associated systems. Other analysts have
noted that if the two communities cannot readily and effectively communicate
with each other, they surely will not be able to communicate with those civilian
leaders in the Pentagon, the White House, and on Capitol Hill responsible for
making informed, fiscally responsible decisions on acquiring capabilitiesthe
all-important connection between space-based capabilities and national objectives.
U.S. military space planners have begun taking a closer look at the operational
implications of the choices they make when designing, acquiring, and operating
their systems. In particular, efforts are under way to close the general schism
between the space and warfighting communities. Still, much effort is needed to
ensure that all decisionmakers are operating from a common frame of reference.
Introduction
tives, and (2) to provide an overview of economic security issues facing military
planners who are already familiar with military space policies, programs, and
trends. Since the completion of the research for this study in 1994, many aspects of the trends discussed in this document have occurred. For example, a
number of Presidential decisions regarding GPS and national space policy have
been promulgated, and efforts toward reorganizing the management of DoD
and intelligence community space programs have been initiated. The implications of these steps are still unfolding as this document goes to print.
The alternative options discussed herein are intended to be plausible but illustrative options that could evolve from the status quo. They are created to help
illuminate the issues and challenges for spacepower in supporting national
security objectives and, thus, are not rigorously evaluated.