[Infowarrior] - U.S. Warns of (Terrorist) Threat to Satellites

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Wed Dec 13 14:26:01 EST 2006


Must be a slow news day outside of Iraq.........rf


U.S. Warns of Threat to Satellites
Dec 13 1:58 PM US/Eastern
    
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer

WASHINGTON

http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/12/13/D8M04QT80.html
            

The Bush administration warned Wednesday against threats by terrorist groups
and other nations against U.S. commercial and military satellites, and
discounted the need for a treaty aimed at preventing an arms race in space.

Undersecretary of State Robert G. Joseph also reasserted U.S. policy that it
has a right to use force against hostile nations or terror groups that might
try to attack American satellites or ground installations that support space
programs. President Bush adopted a new U.S. space policy earlier this year.

"We reserve the right to defend ourselves against hostile attacks and
interference with our space assets," Joseph said in prepared remarks to the
George C. Marshall Institute.

Joseph, the senior arms control official at the State Department, said
nations cannot all be counted on to use space purely for peaceful purposes.

"A number of countries are exploring and acquiring capabilities to counter,
attack, and defeat U.S. space systems," Joseph said

He also said terrorists "understand our vulnerabilities and have targeted
our economy in the past, as they did on 9/11." He said terrorists and enemy
states might view the U.S. space program as "a highly lucrative target,"
while sophisticated technologies could improve their ability to interfere
with U.S. space systems and services.

Joseph did not identify terror groups or nations that might have such
motives. An aide to Joseph, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he
was not authorized to discuss the matter, said that information was
classified.

"For our part, we must take all of these threats seriously because space
capabilities are essential" to the U.S. economy and government, Joseph said.
He said the U.S. is more reliant on space than any other country.

"No nation, no state-actor, should be under the illusion that the United
States will tolerate a denial of our right to the use of space for peaceful
purposes," he said.

Wade Boese, a spokesman for the private Arms Control Association, challenged
the adminstration's policy. He said rejecting additional international arms
controls for space runs counter to U.S. security interests "because the
United States has the most to lose from an unregulated space arena."

Boese said he believes the administration wants to avoid negotiations in
order to preserve the possibility of deploying space-based missile defense
systems, such as interceptors.

Joseph listed telecommunications, transportation, electrical power, water
supply, gas and oil storage, transportation systems, emergency services,
banking and finance, and government services as relying heavily on data
transmitted by satellites.

"The United States views the purposeful interference with its space systems
as an infringement on our rights," he said, adding. "If these rights are not
respected, the United States has the same full range of options _ from
diplomatic to military _ to protect its space assets as it has to protect
its other critical assets."

Joseph ruled out negotiating a new international space agreement, saying the
1967 Outer Space Treaty established an effective arms control regime. The
treaty bans the stationing of weapons of mass destruction in outer space and
declares outer space should be used only for peaceful purposes.

A new agreement is not necessary, Joseph said. "We should concentrate on
real threats," he said, citing Iran and North Korea.

"There is no arms race in space and we see no signs of one emerging," he
said.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




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