- WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
U.S. Air Force quietly has put into service a new weapon designed to jam
enemy satellite communications, a significant step toward U.S. control
of space.
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- The so-called Counter Communications System was declared
operational late last month at Peterson Air Force Base in Colorado Springs,
the Air Force Space Command said Friday in e-mailed replies to questions
from Reuters.
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- The ground-based jammer uses electromagnetic radio frequency
energy to knock out transmissions on a temporary and reversible basis,
without frying components, the command said. "A reversible effect
ensures that during the time of need, the adversary's space-based capability
to threaten our forces is diminished," said Capt. Angie Blair, a spokeswoman.
"Following the time of need, the space-based capabilities used by
the adversary can return to its original state."
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- The device appears to have been put into service considerably
earlier than had been projected by the Air Force as recently as February.
At that time, a long-range planning document, dubbed the Transformation
Flight Plan, said such a system would let the United States by 2010 "deny
and disrupt an adversary's space-based communications and early warning"
of attack. U.S. military control of space is one of four missions spelled
out under a national space policy adopted by former president Bill Clinton
in 1996.
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- The goal is to make sure U.S. forces have unhindered
access to space and space-based services and to deny an enemy any similar
benefits. The U.S. military has experimented with a range of "antisatellite"
(ASAT) weapons, including lasers, to knock out enemy craft by destroying
them or damaging their sensors.
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- Theresa Hitchens, vice president of the private Center
for Defense Information in Washington, welcomed the new system on the ground
it would not create debris that could threaten global use of space and
would not destroy satellites, only jam them temporarily. "Unfortunately,
it seems we are not going to limit our quest for 'space control' to benign
systems," she said, citing the danger of a space arms race.
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- The deployment was disclosed without fanfare late last
month at a technical conference of the American Institute of Aeronautics
and Astronautics in San Diego, California. The system is operated by the
76th Space Control Squadron, a unit created in 2001 to explore technologies
for controlling space, Brig. Gen. Larry James, vice commander of the Space
and Missile Systems Command told the conference.
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- The Air Force Space Command, in its e-mailed replies,
said the system was built from off-the-shelf commercial equipment, and
made up an antenna, transmitters and receivers that can be loaded into
a trailer and moved from place to place. Three such systems had been delivered
since late last year, the command said. The program's budget for fiscal
2005 totaled $6.2 million, according to the Congressional Research Service.
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- The primary integrator was Northrop Grumman Corp.'s Mission
Systems business unit in Redondo Beach, California, said Joe Davidson,
a Space and Missile Center spokesman. Citing "operational security"
concerns, military officials declined to discuss how the jammer worked
but equated it with traditional Air Force electronic warfare weapons that
have been used since World War 2 to deceive, disrupt, deny, degrade or
destroy targets.
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