... it seems - that there was now a public acceptance of the legitimacy of military space. So where are the world’s military space programmes now? The big military space spender is the United States (€21.6bn); followed far behind by China (€2.5 billion...
... 2019. Featuring high-level briefings from senior leadership across industry, government and allied partner states, Military Space USA will provide a holistic overview of developments in the 4th domain, including how organisational efforts such...
... foresee the changing nature of military space? In military terms, if the UK is going to be an industrialised space-faring nation, it will be essential to have a coordinated approach to space across all of our military, and we’ll have to be prepared...
... and remote sensing. Current limits to the role of the military in space are the subject of the McGill University project ‘Manual on International Law Applicable to Military Uses of Outer Space’ (MILAMOS). This project is based on the belief that...
... and latent economic power to be deployed for the use of America’s most threatening potential adversaries. Military space technologies, once the purview of only the United States in the 1990s, have proliferated for decades and ...
... in the near future, and naturally this has a knock-on effect for space warfare (the diagram at the foot of page 62 illustrates the complexity of the military space infrastructure and the difficulties in defending it from multiple avenues of attack...