WRITE for ATol ADVERTISE MEDIA KIT GET ATol BY EMAIL ABOUT ATol CONTACT US
Asia Time Online - Daily News
             
Asia Times Chinese
AT Chinese



    Greater China
     Jun 6, 2008
Page 1 of 2
China takes on the US - in space
By Alan Boyd

SYDNEY - Chinese military experts believe a confrontation in space, probably with the United States, is inevitable. What they haven't said is whether they expect to win.

Two disarmament officials with the People's Liberation Army (PLA) this week accused Washington in an assessment of the global weapons buildup of fueling an arms race aimed at controlling "the commanding heights".

"In the not too distant future, outer space will certainly become a stage for struggle between countries," charged Xu Nengwu, of China's National Defense Science and Technology University.

Simialry, Lieutenant General Ma Xiaotian, deputy chief of staff of

 

the PLA, speaking at the annual Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore at the weekend, was less than subtle. He did not mention the US at all (other than including Hurricane Katrina in the list of recent natural disasters), but did identify "expansion of military alliance" and "development and expansion of missile defense system" among the major security challenges the region faces.

The PLA has issued similar gloomy predictions before, usually accompanied by demands for a negotiated disarmament treaty, that were seen as an admission China lacked the ability to compete - and might be using as a cover for its own lagging research efforts.

But since they successfully shot down an obsolete weather satellite with a missile in an outer orbit in January 2007, the Chinese armed forces have been operating from a position of relative strength.

So powerful was the impact from the four-stage rocket, which was traveling at nearly 29,000 kilometers an hour when it struck the satellite, that it scattered debris halfway around the globe. A definite footprint of strategic intent.

No surprise then, that the Pentagon responded in February this year by shooting down one of its own wayward satellites over the Pacific Ocean with a rocket, thus shattering a 1980s undertaking not to conduct antisatellite (ASAT) tests.

Thirty-two countries are known to have a missile capability, including Asian foes India and Pakistan, South and North Korea, Israel, Syria, Taiwan, Iran, Vietnam, Egypt and Saudi Arabia, as well as Russia, China and the US. Any could technically wage a military campaign in space, even if it were limited to ground-to-air strikes.

Most of these countries are signatories to the Outer Space Treaty, an agreement approved by the United Nations in 1967 after tortuous negotiations between the US and the Soviet Union - though China is one of the few nations to fully accede to its provisions.

The Chinese have noted, with support from some peace organizations, that the treaty is a Cold War relic fashioned in an era when the concept of futuristic Star Wars armed orbiters was the preserve of science fiction writers.

Core commitments are that signatories will not place "nuclear or any other weapons of mass destruction", military installations or fortifications in orbit around the Earth or on any celestial body, undertake testing of weapons there or conduct military maneuvers.

Conventional weapons based in space are totally legal. And there is no prohibition on the firing of ground-based missiles into space, as both the US and Soviet Union were developing intercontinental missiles and peaceful space programs when the treaty was signed.

Similarly, there is wide scope for interpreting "weapons of mass destruction"; as US defense officials have pointed out, practically anything that could be propelled into space could be used to ram a satellite without violating the treaty.

China has been at the forefront of efforts to expand the accord; yet even its version, introduced in the UN as a draft treaty in 2002, falls far short of the moratorium being sought by disarmament groups.

Backed by an eclectic group that included Russia (which superseded the Soviet Union as a treaty signatory), Zimbabwe, Syria, Belarus and Vietnam, the draft proposed the deployment of all space-based weapons. Again, the ground missiles were overlooked.

Perhaps Beijing is only being realistic: there is a legitimate argument for developing missiles for satellite launches and wider space programs. But the powerful conservative bloc in the US sees a more sinister motivation at work.

"Even as it tries to rally multinational coalitions and public opinion to oppose 'the weaponization of space', Beijing quietly continues to develop its own space-based weapons and tactics to destroy American military assets," Heritage Foundation vice president for foreign policy and defense studies, Larry M Wortzel, railed in a commentary.

"China's strategy here is to blunt American military superiority by limiting and ultimately neutralizing its existing space-based defense assets, and to forestall deployment of new technology that many experts believe would provide the best protection from ballistic missile attack."

Last month, Chinese President Hu Jintao sided with Russia in its long-running campaign to block the deployment of a US missile defense system covering much of East Asia that would partly operate from bases in Eastern Europe.

Some analysts believe Beijing is worried the deployment of American space-based interceptors would block missiles the PLA has been upgrading to target what it calls the renegade island of Taiwan and US Pacific bases.

Certainly, the Chinese military apparatus hasn't been sitting on its haunches while its diplomats have been getting all worked up over the Americans. Security analysts say it has poured cash into an electronic warfare capability designed to jam satellite transmissions, developed laser-based weapons and improved its heavy-lift rockets.

The Technology Research Academy has been working on an advanced ASAT weapon called a "piggyback satellite" that would attach itself to an enemy satellite, space station or space-based laser and jam communications or blow up the target.

A generation of mini satellites is being developed that would be so small they would be difficult to detect from the ground. They are said to be defensive, but would still be capable of surveillance, reconnaissance, communications and - theoretically - the destruction of other satellites.

Three mobile space launch vehicles, the KT-1, KT-2 and KT-2A, have been designed to launch the "nano-sats". Pentagon officials say the KT-2 and KT-2A will also be capable of targeting geosynchronous and polar orbits used by US military satellites.

American strategists seized on 2003 comments by Captain Shen Zhongchang of the Chinese Navy Research Institute that he envisioned a weaker military force - presumably China - being able to defeat a superior one by attacking its space-based communications and surveillance systems.

"The mastery of outer space will be a requisite for military victory, with outer space becoming the new commanding heights for combat," Shen is quoted as saying in the US Defense Department's annual report to Congress on the Chinese military capability.

China's antisatellite test last year was probably designed more for political effect than military gain: after all, it has already sent astronauts into space and has a robust intercontinental ballistic missile program. It is likely Beijing was sending a signal to Washington that it could cripple low-level satellites if the US overstepped the mark on the issue of Taiwan's sovereignty, for instance.

There is no doubting the technical gap that still exists between 

Continued 1 2  


How the Pentagon shapes the world
(May 31, '08)

Asian arms race gathers speed
(Feb 14, '08)


1.
And the winner is ... the Israel lobby

2. When the nukes start dropping ...

3. Prince Charles, defender of Islam

4. Bush 'plans Iran air strike by August'

5. Cheap talk, pricey banks

6. A paralyzing rise in money supply

7. Cheney builds an explosive case

8. Crisis deepens in Myanmar

(24 hours to 11:59 pm ET, June 4, 2008)

 
 



All material on this website is copyright and may not be republished in any form without written permission.
© Copyright 1999 - 2008 Asia Times Online (Holdings), Ltd.
Head Office: Unit B, 16/F, Li Dong Building, No. 9 Li Yuen Street East, Central, Hong Kong
Thailand Bureau: 11/13 Petchkasem Road, Hua Hin, Prachuab Kirikhan, Thailand 77110