Press Release

Civilian Satellites Used to Help Plan Attacks in Afghanistan, Reports Aviation Week & Space Technology

By SpaceRef Editor
April 5, 2002
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The U. S. military has
begun to use pictures from advanced new NASA civilian satellites to
help plan attacks on Al Qaeda fighters in Afghanistan and to prepare
for future military strikes possibly against Iraq, Aviation Week &
Space Technology reports in its April 8 issue.

U. S. Navy sources also told AW&ST that NASA civilian satellite
data are also likely helping to support U. S. intelligence operations
in the Middle East in connection with the Israeli/Palestinian crisis.

The increased NASA role in military space operations in the war on
terror could raise concerns in Congress, however, about whether the
space agency is staying within its civilian charter, AW&ST said.

Pictures of Afghanistan from the NASA SeaWiFS and Terra satellites
are enabling greater precision for safer military helicopter
operations and better information for determination of whether laser
or satellite guided weapons should be called in against specific
targets, Capt. Robert L. Clark of the Navy Space & Naval Warfare
Systems Command told AW&ST.

The greater use of NASA imaging spacecraft and increased
dependence of the U. S. military on commercial communications
satellites, are part of a special report on overall U. S. military
space operations in the April 8 issue of AW&ST. “The U. S. military
space community is undergoing revolutionary changes, while
simultaneously demonstrating the relevance of space resources in the
war on terror,” Aviation Week said.

Top U. S. military officers told AW&ST that the 1993 “Blackhawk
Down” tragedy in Somalia, that cost the lives of more than a dozen U.
S. soldiers, proved to be “a wake-up call” for far better military
satellite communications and the better integration of such
capabilities with U. S. forces.

The magazine said that sweeping changes in how the U. S. uses its
military satellites are also underway in response to findings made by
a commission headed by Donald Rumsfeld just before he became Secretary
of Defense.

Military space systems involve dozens of different spacecraft that
provide navigation, intelligence, weather, communications and other
services to troops on the ground. The Air Force Space Command alone
previously spent $2 billion per year on satellite operations–but is
now spending $8 billion per year.

One serious issue, however, is that the leadership in both the Air
Force and Navy is top heavy with jet fighter pilots who have never had
much interest in space. This is a problem because space systems are
increasingly the lifeblood of overall U. S. military operations on the
ground.

With nearly 50 products and services and an audience of millions
of professionals and enthusiasts, the Aviation Week division of The
McGraw-Hill Companies is the largest multimedia information and
services provider to the global aviation and aerospace industry. The
cornerstone of the Aviation Week portfolio is Aviation Week & Space
Technology, the world’s leading aviation and aerospace industry
magazine, covering technology, business and operations in the
commercial, military and space markets for more than 104,000 paid
subscribers in 130 countries. The group’s web portal,
www.AviationNow.com, offers the industry’s most reliable news,
information and features.

Founded in 1888, The McGraw-Hill Companies is a global information
services provider meeting worldwide needs in the financial services,
education and business information markets through leading brands such
as Standard & Poor’s, BusinessWeek and McGraw-Hill Education. The
Corporation has more than 350 offices in 33 countries. Sales in 2001
were $4.6 billion. Additional information is available at
http://www.mcgraw-hill.com.

EDITORS NOTE: Senior Editor Craig Covault is available for
additional information and interviews.

SpaceRef staff editor.