[Salon] Space Force team mapping service's contributions to Iron Dome missile shield - Breaking Defense



More good news. I would mention the archaic concept of "conflict of interest," but that's so "quaint," just as the Law of Armed Conflict is now in the DOD which heretofore prohibited war crimes (which was even, though seldom, occasionally applied, until they became a badge of honor with a pardon going with them routinely).

"In late January, Trump announced details for the Dome. A land-based missile-interceptor system—like the one Israel has—would not be possible to build for a country the size of the United States. Instead, military commentators coalesced around another plan: build a cloud of “satellite missile interceptors” similar to former President Ronald Reagan’s ill-fated 1980s “Star Wars” proposal.

"In turn, the US Missile Defense Agency asked defense companies on January 31 to pitch space-based sensors and interceptors that could detect and defeat “advanced aerial threats” from low-space orbit. That means the proposed Iron Dome would almost certainly require thousands of satellites for putting interceptor weapons in space.

"The company that currently dominates the market for such equipment? Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

“SpaceX is the only company that currently has the capacity to launch that many things,” Dr. Laura Grego of the Union of Concerned Scientists told Mother Jones. “They’re such a critical resource at this point that…if you’re going to launch a lot of things, SpaceX is going to be in the mix.” 


Space Force team mapping service’s contributions to Iron Dome missile shield

"We are leaning forward establishing this technical IPT to try to pull together all of the systems and start thinking about it from an overarching perspective," Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman said.

240717_DVIDS_saltzman_speech_8238081-scaled-e1721238990255.jpeg

Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman delivers a keynote address on the state of the Space Force during the Air and Space Forces Association 2024 Warfare Symposium in Aurora, Colo., Feb. 13, 2024. (US Air Force photo by Eric Dietrich)

Recommended

Running through potential winners and losers under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s move to shift $50 billion towards different priorities in fiscal 2026.

WASHINGTON — The Space Force has set up a “technical integrated planning team,” or IPT, to put together a picture of its current and potential future contributions to the Trump administration’s Iron Dome for America missile shield, Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman said today.

“I think we have a central role to play,” he told a small group of reporters. “We are leaning forward establishing this technical IPT to try to pull together all of the systems and start thinking about it from an overarching perspective.”

The Space Force already is responsible for missile warning and tracking, currently operating the Space Based Infrared System satellites, and developing their replacements under the multibillion-dollar Next Generation Overhead Persistent Infrared (Next-Gen OPIR) program.

The service also has two new programs aimed specifically at tracking hypersonic missiles underway: the Resilient Missile Warning/Missile Tracking — Medium Earth Orbit program being managed by Space Systems Command and the Space Development Agency’s Tracking Layer constellation that is part of its overarching Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture (PWSA). Pursuit of the PWSA is specifically called for in President Donald Trump’s Jan. 27 executive order laying out his priorities for the Iron Dome for America concept.

Pentagon development and deployment of “proliferated space-based interceptors capable of boost-phase intercept” also is mandated in Trump’s executive order. That, however, has not been something on the Space Force’s agenda until now.

The order gave Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth 60 days to develop the plan to defend the homeland against “ballistic, hypersonic, advanced cruise missiles, and other next-generation aerial attacks from peer, near-peer, and rogue adversaries.”



This archive was generated by a fusion of Pipermail (Mailman edition) and MHonArc.