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MILITARY COMMUNICATIONS
Rethinking the Space Environment in a Globalized World
by Myland Pride for SatCom Frontier
McLean, VA (SPX) Jul 18, 2016


illustration only

Globalization has made the world a smaller place, with people, goods and services crossing borders with ease unimagined by earlier generations. Much of this globalization is enabled by space-based capabilities, and specifically satellite communications capabilities.

Once the domain of only a few technologically advanced nations, there are now more than 70 nations operating earth-orbiting satellites. More importantly, space has also become the domain of a range of commercial companies involved in spacecraft launch and operations, with some space entrepreneurs even planning missions to distant asteroids and planets.

The question many nations face, especially the United States, is where to draw the line between operating government-owned satellites for specific missions, and relying on commercial resources for other space-based activities. Certain missions, such as nuclear command and control, are clearly in the best interest of the U.S. government to "own." However, there is little commercial satellite operators can't do in other many space mission areas.

For example, there is a growing recognition that the way we conduct space situational awareness needs to be different in the future. The DoD needs to put greater reliance on commercial capability to do some of the work for commercial and civil agencies. Companies like AGI with their Commercial Space Operations Center (ComSpOC), the Shafer Corporation, and others are pushing the boundaries of what commercial can do in the Space Situational Awareness arena.

Satellite flight and ground operations are also ripe for commercialization. Commercial operators are already capable of providing space flight and ground services to the U.S. and other governments. Companies often conduct operations with more-experienced personnel and less expensive CONOPS. This would provide the opportunity to re-purpose resources for higher priority missions; improve network reliability, diversity, and resiliency; and promote technology insertion more affordably.

Intelsat alone flies 75 satellites using a network of 450 antennas globally with about 100 people-including all bus and payload operations and engineering - but less than ten of these per shift are satellite controllers.

And of course there is Satellite Communications. The U.S. government has relied on commercial space increasingly since Desert Storm across different mission areas, but none more than commercial satellite communications. The U.S. government leased commercial capacity because it did not have enough military satellite bandwidth to support multiple missions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

There are many reasons for governments to rely more heavily on commercial space capabilities, but three are key:

+ Greater reliance on commercial can enable military advantage in space less expensively, so that cost savings can be invested in more sensitive military space capability. In short, the cost of manpower, and the training, infrastructure and benefits that enable it, is increasingly a precious resource that needs to be managed more efficiently. Relying on commercial for capabilities they can clearly provide can free up precious resources to do other missions.

+ With greater commercialization comes greater access to commercial acquisition timelines and technology insertion. Emerging technology becomes available such as spot beams and High Throughput Satellites, inherent and modern protection capability and much more capacity.

+ Finally, commercial capability can be an important addition to promote resiliency across many mission areas within the U.S. and other governments. There is a growing recognition that U.S. government space assets need to operate in a highly contested or degraded space environment. Commercial companies can provide near-term diversification, disaggregation, and proliferation. And with some investment, can provide higher levels of protection. And commercial operators are willing to make desired investments in capabilities.

The commercialization debate has been on-going for decades. What is different today is that the cost of doing business the same way has become fiscally untenable. Technology in the commercial sector is improving at a rapid pace. And we realize the threat to government space assets is real and advancing.

To meet those threats, DoD leaders are refocusing on the value industry brings to the mission. We understand the problem. We understand the benefits of solving it. We have proven solutions.

All the building blocks are in place for a new partnership in space. All that is needed now is action.


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