What are space nukes raising tensions between Moscow and Washington?

What are space nukes raising tensions between Moscow and Washington?

US News

In this pool photograph distributed by Russian state agency Sputnik, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin talks to students and Chelyabinsk Region industry workers at the Stankomash plant in Chelyabinsk on February 16, 2024.

Alexander Ryumin | Afp | Getty Images

A fresh spat between Washington and Moscow has raised alarm about the potential risk of a space-based nuclear satellite attack which could cause chaos to critical communications systems on Earth.

Russia denied U.S. claims that it was developing a space-based anti-satellite nuclear weapon, with President Vladimir Putin saying Tuesday that the Kremlin was “categorically against” the deployment of nuclear weapons in space, and accusing the White House of scaring lawmakers into passing a new aid package for Ukraine.

It comes after a Reuters report emerged earlier Tuesday, citing one source, that said the U.S. believes Moscow is developing a space nuke whose detonation could knock out the satellites underpinning critical U.S. infrastructure, including military communications and mobile phone services. CNBC could not independently verify the report.

Alarm bells around Russia’s nuclear advancements were first raised last week when U.S. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Turner warned of a “serious national security threat” related to Russian capabilities in space.

President Joe Biden later said Moscow appears to be developing an anti-satellite weapon but noted that it posed no urgent “nuclear threat” to the U.S. people, and said that he hoped Russia would not deploy it. However, one source familiar with the matter told Bloomberg that such a capability could be launched into orbit as soon as this year.

It’s an indiscriminate weapon. Detonation would be omnidirectional.

Kari Bingen

director of the aerospace security project and senior fellow in the international security program at the Centre for Strategic International Studies.

Analysts told CNBC that the deployment of such a weapon could cause “indiscriminate” damage, reaping havoc on the systems on which people rely for everyday services such as payments, GPS navigation and even the weather.

“Space is integral to our daily lives, whether we realize it or not,” said Kari Bingen, director of the aerospace security project and senior fellow in the international security program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

What are space nukes and what disruption could they cause?

A satellite dish is backdropped against the full moon in Bogota on November 27, 2023.

Juan Barreto | Afp | Getty Images

As of April 2023, there were nearly 7,800 operational satellites in Earth’s orbit, according to the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs, supporting everything from phone and internet networks to televisions, financial services, agricultural systems and space surveillance.

Satellites are also critical to military operations, helping to collect intelligence and detect missile launches as well as enabling navigation and communications. Starlink, the Elon Musk-owned satellite network, for instance, provided Ukrainian forces with uninterrupted communication on the battlefield at the start of the war — though concerns have since arisen that Russia is co-opting such services in occupied areas.

The precise nature of any Russian-made anti-satellite system is currently unclear. However, analysts told Reuters they believe it is likely to use nuclear energy to blind, jam or fry the electronics inside satellites — rather than being a nuclear warhead designed to shoot them down.

The potential impact of an anti-satellite attack would also depend on the altitude of the targeted device and its proximity to other satellites. Analysts told Bloomberg that damage to a satellite in low Earth orbit — the standard position of most commercial satellites — could fry other satellites for hundreds of miles.

“All of it depends on where a detonation would be and what satellites are in that vicinity,” Bingen said.

How likely is an anti-satellite attack?

It is incredibly hard to defend against. There is no silver bullet solution.

Kari Bingen

director of the aerospace security project and senior fellow in the international security program at the Centre for Strategic International Studies.

Read more CNBC politics coverage

Still, Bingen said she believes the use of such a tool would remain a “weapon of last resort” for Russia.

“It would be crossing a nuclear threshold, so that’s still an incredibly grave decision. I would have to believe it would be more along the lines of a weapon of last resort,” she said.

The next military frontier

Space is often positioned as the next geopolitical frontier, presenting a new domain for military combat and international disputes.

Space defense spending jumped to an estimated $54 billion in 2022, up from $45 billion the year prior, according to the latest figures from the U.S. nonprofit Space Foundation. The U.S. was seen to lead that charge, though the report acknowledged that official figures for Russia and China were harder to obtain.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told CNBC on Saturday that the military alliance had long been aware of the “challenges and threats” of space, and noted that it was ready to defend any space-based attack.

A 2021 revision to NATO’s space policy said that an attack to, from or within space would present a “clear challenge” to the alliance and could lead to the invocation of its Article 5 mutual defense clause.

“NATO is prepared to defend all allies against any threat in any domain,” he told CNBC’s Silvia Amaro on Saturday at the Munich Security Conference.

NATO head says the U.S. won't withdraw from alliance: It makes them 'stronger'

Read original source here.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Teddy Sears on Oliver and Josh’s Relationship (Exclusive)
Over 2,000 Palo Alto Networks Devices Hacked in Ongoing Attack Campaign
Business spending on AI surged 500% this year to $13.8 billion, says Menlo Ventures
Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 Gets Lowest Price Ever in New Black Friday Sale
Judy Garland’s Daughter Lorna Luft Reviews ‘Wicked’