Posted on Oct 31, 2023
The US Space Force and saying the quiet parts out loud - Breaking Defense
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The Space Force is coming up on its fourth birthday, and has made significant progress in establishing itself as part of the national security community. But there is always more to be done. In this new op-ed, former House Armed Services Committee staffer Sarah Mineiro lays out three areas the Space Force needs to be more explicit in supporting.
The US Space Force and saying the quiet parts out loud - Breaking Defense
Posted from breakingdefense.com
Edited 1 y ago
Posted 1 y ago
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Posted 1 y ago
A monumental task, a bit different than when establishing the other branches.
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Posted 1 y ago
Everyone knows the Infantry will always be needed to go finish the job.
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Edited 1 y ago
Posted 1 y ago
That is some serious verbal gymnastics, obviously written by a "Policy Wonk" that they spoke of early in the article. While those kinds of people are sometimes necessary, their verbal gymnastics often create more policy issues than they help.
Space Force will be able to do much of what is in this article at some point, but many of the functions mentioned are already covered by various branches of the military already. Cyber is worked on by all branches, but space based is still under the Air Force. Ground stuff will take some money in reception gear that is deployable, so that's a lead time/mission reliant task. It can be done, but allowing contractor access to deployed military assets is a risk, so R&D within the military industrial complex will have to kick into overdrive to achieve success.
Space Force will be able to do much of what is in this article at some point, but many of the functions mentioned are already covered by various branches of the military already. Cyber is worked on by all branches, but space based is still under the Air Force. Ground stuff will take some money in reception gear that is deployable, so that's a lead time/mission reliant task. It can be done, but allowing contractor access to deployed military assets is a risk, so R&D within the military industrial complex will have to kick into overdrive to achieve success.
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