Reps. Rogers and Cooper in Real Clear Defense: 10-Year Anniversary of the Chinese Anti-Satellite (Asat) Missile Test
Washington, DC,
January 12, 2017
January 11, 2017, marks the tenth anniversary of China's test of an anti-satellite (ASAT) missile against their own weather satellite. On that date in 2007, China provocatively demonstrated their ability to attack satellites in a domain long perceived as "sanctuary". This action received strong international condemnation and placed the United States and its Allies on notice that our reliance on space for warfighting and intelligence was now at risk. Further, it showed the broader national security community that space could become a battlefield between major powers, making it a critical domain for both defense and deterrence. It is all too clear to us that the Department is not strategically organized and managed to respond to these threats. The current DOD structure depends far too much on the individual personalities in key positions to make space a priority and lacks a clear focus for continued US national security space leadership. The Department's military space program is conflicted within the services, which have other important priorities for air, naval, and ground forces. The organizations responsible for organizing, training, and equipping our space forces are subsumed within their larger service structures, which can result in space priorities being given a back-seat and without an empowered leader whose focus is space. The situation is not so different than we found in 1986 for US Special Operations Forces, or even in 1947 with the Army Air Corps, both of which experienced major reorganizations and are now the envy of the world. Additionally, as the General Accountability Office (GAO) concluded in a recent study of this topic, the space acquisitions, management, and oversight are significantly fragmented within the DOD. Specifically, eight organizations have space acquisition management responsibilities and eleven organizations have space oversight responsibilities. This fragmentation has repeatedly led to lengthy decision making and poor coordination of space programs. These recent GAO observations are not new; a Congressionally-directed independent space study in 2007 rightly stated "no one's in charge". Change will not be easy, and it will be disruptive; however,history tells us that well-considered and worthwhile change benefits us in the end. We have the world's best military and civilian personnel, alongside the most advanced industry partners, and it is time to put them in a structure to succeed. We look forward to working with our colleagues in Congress and the newly-nominated Secretary of Defense, James Mattis, and his team at the Department of Defense to making lasting changes to DOD's organization and management of space. Let this January 11th anniversary serve as a call for bold action to ensure US space leadership long into the future. Representatives Mike Rogers (R-AL) and Jim Cooper (D-TN) serve as the Chairman and Ranking Member of the Strategic Forces subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee, respectively. |