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Trump wants to send the military into space - here's how a fight in space would go down

Jun 22, 2018, 21:23 IST

NASA Astronaut Nick Hague, a Flight Engineer, reviews a computer model during his Robotics training in the Systems Engineering Simulator in preparation for his upcoming mission Expedition 57/58 to space this fall aboard the International Space Center, at Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, U.S., May 14, 2018REUTERS/Ruthy Munoz

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  • President Donald Trump is looking at sending the US military into space with a newly invented service, the Space Force.
  • Combat in space is not only likely in a war scenario, but could prove highly devastating for those on earth.
  • Most of the fighting would likely involve missiles taking out satellites, and possibly killer satellites and lasers shooting each other down.
  • But a lot of the fighting would be things the US military already does, so many think it's a dumb idea.

President Donald Trump is ordering the Pentagon to create the first new US military service branch in seven decades to establish "American dominance in space," and while experts quickly knocked the idea as premature - there's no doubt that space is a warfighting domain.

As it stands, the Russia and China both have tested missiles that could bring the US to its knees by crippling its satellites.

Satellites power GPS, which powers most civilian navigation and US military equipment. Satellites also time stamp transactions at US stock exchanges. Commercial satellites also relay internet, telephone, and radio communciations. The US, without its space assets, could suffer societal collapse at the hands of its rivals before a single terrestrial battle is fought.

For this reason, experts assess that space absolutely has become a warfighting domain, and one that may soon see lasers on space ships duking it out in a war above the clouds.

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How a space war would go down

US Navy

"If there was a war between a US and a China, for example, each side would likely try to take away the commanding heights of space from each other," Peter W. Singer, a strategist at non-partisan think tank New America and the author of "Ghost Fleet: A Novel of the Next World War," told Business Insider.

But instead of starships chasing each other in dogfights and "Star Wars" like duels in zero gravity, Singer said that most of a space fight would actually take place on plain old earth, though lasers are on the table.

The US and its adversaries would fire missiles at their adversary's satellites powering navigation and trade, possibly from traditional land launchers or from ships at sea. The US has plans to streamline the launching of satellites, and hopes any future space attacks can be thwarted by quick, cheap launches of constellations of small satellites.

Singer pointed out that the US has observed Russian "killer or kamikaze satellites" maneuvering out in space in ways that suggest they could attack or block US satellites.

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"They also might be using directed energy of some kind to either blind or damage a satellite. That directed energy might be laser, ground based or space based," said Singer.

The real fighting is still on earth

United State Cyber Command U.S. Air Force/Technical Sgt. Cecilio Ricardo

But much of the fighting wouldn't be as flashy as space-fired lasers knocking out killer satellites, instead, it would likely take place in a "cross between space and cyber" warfare, according to Singer.

US and rival cyber warriors would start "trying to go after the communication links between space and earth on the ground. They might be trying to jam or take control of the satellites," he said.

But therein lies the problem.

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Many in Congress have spoken out about the proposed Space Force, calling it premature. The Air Force, in its measured language, seems to hate the idea. Singer called it "absurd" and a "joke." Retired NASA astronaut Mark Kelly, also a a former Navy pilot, combat veteran, and four-time space-flyer called it a "dumb idea."

Basically, all the jobs the space force would do are already being done by the Air Force, and Navy, so making a costly new service this early into the space age could prove foolish.

"Yea space is a clear part of national security," said Singer, "but it's hard to imagine a better waste of time energy and budget."

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