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THE ULTIMATE HIGH GROUND: SPACE AND THE COLD WAR GERALD M. STEINBERG BAR ILAN UNIVERSITY RAMAT GAN, ISRAEL
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RAND’S “PROJECT 1947” WORLD CIRCLING SPACESHIP
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MILITARY USES OF SPACE 1) Imaging and Reconnaissance Satellites 2) Communication Satellites 3) Navigation satellites (GPS) 4) Space-based weapons 5) Anti-satellites 1) Imaging and Reconnaissance Satellites 2) Communication Satellites 3) Navigation satellites (GPS) 4) Space-based weapons 5) Anti-satellites
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RECONNAISSANCE SATELLITES DURING THE COLD WAR
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Corona (Keyhole) achievements: Catalog of Soviet air defense and antiballistic missile sites Nuclear weapons-related facilities and submarine bases Military installations in China and Eastern Europe Images of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, and Dimona Helped NASA develop a safe means of recovering manned spacecraft Imaging systems basis for cameras carried on Lunar Orbiters (1966-67).
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SPACE IMAGING AND THE “MISSILE GAP” 13 attempts failed; Discoverer 14 - Aug. 18, 1960 Photos of Soviet Plesetsk base: "It proved conclusively that the Soviets ICBM (intercontinental ballistic missile) arsenal did not number in the hundreds, as was widely feared, but rather amounted to somewhere between 25 and 50."
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SATELLITES REPLACED U-2
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Moscow and Severodinsk Shipyard
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American reconnaissance satellite photo showing the Missile Assembly Building at the Soviet Launch Complex J. This building was where the massive Soviet moon rocket was assembled. (credit: Dwayne A. Day)
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Soviet Imaging and Reconsats Generic Cosmos series – 1962 - ? Used also to monitor China, Middle East conflicts, other crisis regions Zenith – (also designated as Cosmos) – included ELINT RORSAT - Radar-equipped Ocean Reconnaissance SATellite
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IMAGING SATELLITES: GREATEST “SECRETS” OF THE COLD WAR No mention in official statements for many years Highly classified in CIA, NSA, NRO, & NIMA US officials would find open sources when necessary First publication in 1981 due to security breech Later US declassification did not help stability, particularly in the Middle East
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1963-1969: Evolution of tacit agreement on anti-satellites
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ROLE OF SATELLITE IMAGING IN STRATEGIC STABILITY AND TREATY VERIFICATION 1972 SALT/ABM TREATIES CONFIRMED PRINCIPLE OF “NON-INTERFERENCE WITH NATIONAL TECHINCAL MEANS OF VERIFICATION”
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CAPABILITIES OF OTHER COUNTRIES China EU/NATO- Germany / France / UK / Spain IndiaIsraelJapanIran? South Korea Egypt ?
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U.S. PDD 23 (1994) CHANGING IN LICENSING PROCEDURES REFLECTED DOMINANCE OF COMMERCIAL ISSUES. SECURITY DIMENSION SECONDARY LIMITED AND STRENGTHENED IN SUBSEQUENT POLICY STATEMENTS AND LICENSING PROCEDURES (2003)
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DUAL-USE ULTRA-HIGH RESOLUTION IMAGING SATELLITES
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Ikonos 2/15/2001 Coordinates:31 30 N, 34 35 E. 2 Meter JERUSALEM
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VATICAN -- QUICKBIRD
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Largest UHR imaging market is military/security sector (over 90%) Sales campaigns for UHR satellite systems and services emphasize military/security market
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US--IKONOS, Quickbird, OrbImage France/EU: SPOT 5 2.5 m (Pan); Helios Israel- EROS Canada - Radarsat 2 Russia RESURS India – IRS Japan – ALOS Others POTENTIAL SUPPLIERS
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EROS IMAGE OF SEOUL
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Natanz - Digital Global
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Kalaye Electric - Near Teheran
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YONGBYON, N. KOREA DECLASSIFIED U.S. IMAGE
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NO-DONG LAUNCH SITE IKONOS 1 M IMAGE
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IKONOS IMAGE OF NODONG LAUNCH SITE (2)
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FAS IMAGES OF CHINESE AIR FORCE BASE
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QUICKBIRD IMAGE OF FALLUJA -- 2004
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GOOGLE EARTH
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TRANSPARENCY CAN BE USED TO MONITOR ARMS CONTROL AGREEMENTS IN STABLE REGIONTRANSPARENCY CAN BE USED TO MONITOR ARMS CONTROL AGREEMENTS IN STABLE REGION OR OR CAN PROVIDE INTELLIGENCE INFORMATION FOR A FIRST STRIKE AND OTHER AGGRESSIVE ACTION IN UNSTABLE REGIONSCAN PROVIDE INTELLIGENCE INFORMATION FOR A FIRST STRIKE AND OTHER AGGRESSIVE ACTION IN UNSTABLE REGIONS COLD WAR LESSONS: TRANSPARENCY = STABILITY?
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