Cover image for Neither Star Wars nor Sanctuary : Constraining the Military Uses of Space.
Neither Star Wars nor Sanctuary : Constraining the Military Uses of Space.
Title:
Neither Star Wars nor Sanctuary : Constraining the Military Uses of Space.
Author:
O'Hanlon, Michael E.
ISBN:
9780815796473
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (192 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Title Page -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Introduction -- 2. A Brief Primer on Space and Satellites -- 3. Current Threats and Technology Trends -- 4. A Future Taiwan Strait Conflict -- 5. Arms Control in Space -- 6. Preserving U.S. Dominance While Slowing the Weaponization of Space -- Notes -- Index.
Abstract:
Space has been militarized for over four decades. Should it now be weaponized? This incisive and insightful book argues that it should not. Since the cold war, space has come to harbor many tools of the tactical warfighter. Satellites have long been used to provide strategic communication, early warning of missile launch, and arms control verification. The U.S. armed forces increasingly use space assets to locate and strike targets on the battlefield. To date, though, no country deploys destructive weapons in space, for use against space or Earth targets, and no country possesses ground-based weapons designed explicitly to damage objects in space. The line between nonweaponization and weaponization is blurry, to be sure—but it has not yet been crossed. In Ne ither Star Wars nor Sanctuary, Michael E. O'Hanlon makes a forceful case for keeping it this way. The United States, with military space budgets of around 20 billion a year, enjoys a remarkably favorable military advantage in space. Pursuing a policy of space weaponization solely in order to maximize its own military capabilities would needlessly jeopardize this situation by likely hastening development of space weapons in numerous countries. It would also reaffirm the prevalent international image of the United States as a global cowboy of sorts, too quick to reach for the gun. O'Hanlon therefore asserts that U.S. military space policy should focus on delaying any movement toward weaponization, without foreclosing the option of developing space weapons in the future, if necessary. Extreme positions that would either hasten to weaponize space or permanently rule this out are not consistent with technological realities and U.S. security interests.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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