US Space Force

Assuntos em discussão: Força Aérea Brasileira, forças aéreas estrangeiras e aviação militar.

Moderadores: Glauber Prestes, Conselho de Moderação

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Re: US Space Force

#16 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Ago 04, 2024 12:10 pm

https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2023-0 ... primer.pdf
CBO - Large Constellations of Low-Altitude Satellites: A Primer

https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_repo ... 313-1.html
https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/p ... 2313-1.pdf
Space Strategic Stability Assessing U.S. Concepts and Approaches

https://www.c4isrnet.com/battlefield-te ... ic-launch/
Missile Defense Agency satellites track first hypersonic launch

LAUNCH at 0314 UTC Jun 29 of Falcon 9 from Vandenberg with the NROL-186 mission for the National Reconnaissance Office, thought to be a second batch of about 20 Starshield satellites
Plano de ação estratégico de dados e IA da Força Espacial dos EUA para o ano fiscal de 2024 (Plano de ação estratégico de dados e IA do USSF para o ano fiscal de 2024).

Identifica o foco do USSF em obter centralidade em dados e IA que lhes permitirá conduzir operações em ambientes desafiadores.

Enfatiza a necessidade de implementar uma abordagem empresarial à gestão e armazenamento de dados, a fim de garantir a disponibilidade de informações fiáveis ​​para operações de inteligência, equilibrando simultaneamente a privacidade, as liberdades civis e a segurança.

Direções de esforço:
1. Melhorar o sistema de gestão de dados e IA.
2. Desenvolver uma cultura orientada por dados e IA.
3. Reotimização de dados, análises avançadas e tecnologias de IA.
4. Fortalecer as parcerias governamentais, académicas, industriais e internacionais.
https://www.spaceforce.mil/Portals/2/Do ... n_Plan.pdf
USSF Data & AI FY 2024 Strategic Action Plan - Space Force

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... satellites
US Prepares Jamming Devices Targeting Russia, China Satellites
Pentagon says the devices will protect forces being threatened
Goal is to field 24 of the new terminals by end of this year




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Re: US Space Force

#17 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Dez 29, 2024 10:49 am



https://spacenews.com/l3harris-rapidly- ... abilities/
L3Harris Rapidly Advances U.S. Hypersonic Missile Tracking and Defense Capabilities
Program successes highlight L3Harris’ ability to quickly deliver missile warning and defense capabilities for the U.S. military.

https://breakingdefense.com/2024/09/sda ... g-network/
SDA demos laser links crucial for future SATCOM, missile tracking network
Tournear said that the optical intersatellite link demonstration was final success in a trifecta of baseline challenges to SDA's plan to network hundreds of military satellites in LEO, as well as to eventually to integrate commercial satellites into the mix.

Pentágono busca modernizar urgentemente a rede de controle de satélites

O Pentágono está fazendo lobby por financiamento adicional para acelerar a implementação do programa de Recursos de Aumento de Comunicações por Satélite (SCAR) da Agência Espacial dos EUA para instalar antenas modernizadas para a obsoleta Rede de Controle de Satélites , SCN ).

🇷🇺🇨🇳Nota-se que isto é necessário devido ao risco crescente de conflito com grandes potências como a China e a Rússia .

O sistema SCN atual inclui 19 antenas parabólicas legadas localizadas em sete locais ao redor do mundo e executa funções de controle, incluindo rastreamento (determinando a localização do satélite) , telemetria (coleta de informações sobre seu desempenho e condição) e controle (sinalização para controlar subsistemas e manobrar satélites, se necessário) .

🔻A implementação do programa SCAR permitirá a substituição de antenas antigas , que só podem ser conectadas a um satélite por vez, por modernas antenas phased array , que permitem a comunicação simultânea com 18 a 20 satélites .

Simplificando, o Pentágono quer substituir as antenas parabólicas (que requerem ajuste constante ao objeto de interesse) por phased arrays que utilizam feixes controlados eletronicamente.

🔻O programa SCAR foi implementado pela Força Espacial dos EUA desde maio de 2022, com aproximadamente US$ 1,4 bilhão alocados para sua implementação. O contrato assinado com a BlueHalo prevê a entrega de até 12 unidades de sistema terrestre BADGER baseadas em uma antena phased array multibanda definida por software até o início da década de 2030.

A solicitação de orçamento para o ano fiscal de 2025 financia duas unidades adicionais a serem implantadas na região Indo-Pacífico em vez de um protótipo, elevando para três o número total de sistemas já financiados. No total, a BlueHalo planeja entregar até seis unidades BADGER até 2028.
https://www.twz.com/space/tracking-grou ... lay-a-part
U.S. To Track Moving Air And Ground Targets Via Space By 2030, But Aircraft Will Still Play A Part
The U.S. Space Force has laid out plans for layered moving-target surveillance capabilities, not only in orbit.





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Re: US Space Force

#18 Mensagem por cabeça de martelo » Qui Mar 20, 2025 1:17 pm

2 West Point grads think it’s time for a military academy for cyber, space, and robotics

Elon Musk called the idea "Starfleet Academy," as two former Army officers think a new academy should bring elite high-tech focused high school students together, close to the brainpower of Silicon Valley.

Does the U.S. military need another service academy? Two former graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point think so.

Michael LaValle, a former infantry soldier who now works in finance and retired Army Lt. Col. DeVan Shannon, who teaches at the Joint Special Operations University, envision a full-size military academy — akin to West Point or the U.S. Air Force Academy — dedicated to the military’s use of space, cyber, and robotics. The two believe those subjects will be vital to the military in the future but are given short shrift at current schools.

The two told Task & Purpose that a new approach to academy education would embrace officers learning simultaneously from the public and private sector, where innovation in space, cyber and robotics is moving rapidly.

“The academies aren’t moving fast enough in these directions or at large enough scale, and finally, they’re not recruiting the kids and the talent that are necessary to succeed,” LaValle told Task & Purpose.

The pair started to think about a whole new academy during business trips to Gaza and Ukraine. LaValle was in Ukraine last week when he spoke to Task & Purpose.

Seeing operations in both spots, LaValle and Shannon said, made two things very apparent: the “incredibly” fast-paced evolution of technology in combat and the greater responsibilities of young people either driving the technological change or filling in military leadership positions.

“Something that DeVan and I have witnessed firsthand at the front lines in Ukraine and Israel is, much younger men and women are becoming generals. They’re becoming colonels,” LaValle said. “We have no education path or training path to create 30 to 40-year-old generals in America. A general in the cyber force or robotics force may end up being much younger than a general in the conventional forces today.”

They even pitched a home for the campus, which they call the “Frontier Academy”: just down the road from Silicon Valley, at the Presidio, a former Army post at the base of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco.

If that location sounds familiar and you’re a sci-fi fan, it might be because the Presidio was the home of Starfleet Academy in the 1990s Star Trek movies, a connection that caught the eye of Elon Musk. The Space X founder called the tech-focused military academy a “cool idea” in a post on X, adding that “Starfleet Academy has a nicer ring to it though.”

But sci-fi nostalgia aside, being next door to Silicon Valley would be a major advantage.

“For example, they can go into the Reserves. A student can graduate [into] the Space Force and maybe work one weekend a month or two weeks a year in their Space Force unit, but they might also be working at Space X or rocket labs,” LaValle said. “Either they’ll find a problem in their unit, and maybe they’ll see an opportunity or learn something in their private sector company, and they can bring them to each other and bridge that private-public sector gap.”

The U.S. Air Force Academy, Naval Academy and Military Academy have all updated their curricula in recent years to offer degrees in cyber, robotics and space but LaValle and Shannon argue that there’s no way for emerging officers to learn simultaneously from the public and private sector, where a lot of the innovation is coming from.

“We’re talking about a concentration of thought leadership of the nation, and that doesn’t exist in these individual courses or disciplines that are being created at the academies,” LaValle said.

There are three traditional military academies in the Department of Defense. Two others — the U.S. Coast Guard Academy and Merchant Marine Academy — produce officers for their services but do not fall under Pentagon control.

Lessons from Ukraine

Shannon recalled meeting a Ukrainian brigade of engineers sitting in a basement with 3D printers, chemicals, computers and soldering equipment, who were adjusting drones, payloads and weapon systems at scale. All of them had worked in the private sector before the war.

“It hit me very fast that this is a completely different way than every other army is doing it, and that if this was in our Army, or any other ‘professional army,’ there would be such resistance, because that’s ‘somebody else’s job,’” Shannon said. “We consistently found with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that the guys on the ground can identify a problem but then the bureaucracy and the system takes two or three years to get to it, and many of [our] colleagues, friends and subordinates died because of that lag.”

The other problem they want to solve is the “type of officer” that the academies can produce.

LaValle said there’s no current flexibility to become a part or full-time officer after graduating from the academies, something that they think is crucial for the U.S. to get ahead and learn from private companies doing space, cyber, robotics work.

“Whereas when we’re looking at space and cyber, that is a whole different leadership set and there’s no connection between the conventional world, where there’s tons of cyber activity going on — if they want to serve, there’s no way to connect it,” Shannon said. “Getting young people, where their minds are very wet at a point that they want to do something, and then connect them to the system and then put them into a Reserve status after graduation, or soon after graduation so there’s a constant interplay, will create a hybrid fusion that currently doesn’t exist.”

Revamping military innovation

The pitch for a fourth service academy comes amid broader discussions about how to revamp military education and innovation pipelines in a similar urgency that the federal government did during the Cold War. The idea is one drop in the bucket for the large-scale innovative shake up that the private sector, think tanks, and former American military leaders have advocated for in order to transform the multi-billion dollar bureaucracy that is the U.S. military for the fast-changing, technological wars of the future.

The most recent large-scale change occurred when President Donald Trump established an entirely new military branch in 2018, the U.S. Space Force. But change-makers want more: Congress has called for setting up a drone corps for instance, but Army leaders have said they prefer that the technology is dispersed throughout its formations. LaValle pointed out that the United States’ two major adversaries, Russia and China, as well as Ukraine and Poland already have drone-focused forces.

The issue at the heart of the Frontier Academy vision to capitalize on the minds of young innovators to help solve military problems is something that other programs, like Hacking 4 Defense, have tried to address. Hacking 4 Defense, H4D, is a class sponsored by the Defense Department and offered at 20 universities, like Stanford University, to work on military and intelligence community problems and come up with commercial solutions

“It’s not a bad idea. It’s half of an idea,” Steve Blank, one of the H4D founders said about the academy pitch. “Let’s say you build this, where do these people go and why will they not just be sucked up like the system already does? Unless you fix the talent assignment process and personnel management in the DoD, we will then create another cadre of misused people.”

Blank said he’s learned from his H4D course that “human beings in their 20s are looking for things that are mission-driven,” and that an unexpected number of students have gone on to work for defense contractors or even become military officers. However, he said, those who grow their technical 21st-century skills while working in the Department of Defense can find better opportunities in the private sector.

“The military incentive system is still ‘we’ll give you $25,000 to stick around for another tour’ when in fact they could be making a quarter million dollars or more a year,” Blank said. “What’s the point?”

Recruiting new cadets

To identify a pipeline of students who would be interested in the Frontier Academy, LaValle and Shannon brainstormed an idea of federal high schools, modeled off of the way Israel recruits high schoolers for unit 8200, its highly classified intelligence corps.

“Israel gathers the most brilliant youth in the nation between the ages of 17 and 21 and they consolidate them in one unit, and then they set them free to innovate and think. That is something that America doesn’t do,” LaValle said. “They [Israel] find these kids when they’re 12 and 13, and every student in the nation aspires to make it into unit 8200 and we have no channel for our youth in the same manner.”

There are of course fundamental differences between the U.S. and Israel — which has a population of 10 million, roughly 3% the size of the U.S., and has mandatory military service for its citizens once they turn 18.

Shannon said there’s a lot of interest among bright young people to attend top schools like the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Caltech but that the U.S. military is missing out on absorbing the talent that chooses to go into these schools over the military.

“What’s extremely important about the Frontier Academy concept is it being an inspirational avenue to bring together some of the most brilliant people from the robotics competitions around the United States, the math elites and things like that, in a way that they’re not being addressed right now,” Shannon said.

Retired Col. Peter Newell, co-founder of H4D and former director of the Army’s Rapid Equipping Force, a now-defunct forward operating innovation cell, wrote an opinion piece last week about the American “struggle” to create a “unified system for cultivating entrepreneurial thinking.” Newell wrote that military and civilian education still “treat innovation and entrepreneurship as abstract concepts rather than mission-critical skills.”

Newell also advocates for working within existing systems, like expanding STEM education funding like the U.S. did during the Cold War; establishing national security innovation and entrepreneurial degrees at civilian universities and a masters degree at the National Defense University; introducing “hacking government challenges” driven by scholarships at high schools and junior colleges; and establishing a new GI-Bill-like fund for veterans and “rising technologists” to attend defense-focused entrepreneurship programs.

Newell also called for senior national security leaders to have mandatory “hands-on” experience for innovation and entrepreneurship training, similar to what LaValle and Shannon envision for the Frontier Academy requiring private-sector work for its students.

Current academies

LaValle originally shared the idea in a LinkedIn Post, asking for feedback on the pitch. LaValle, who is currently the founder of a venture capital firm, said he has no financial interest in the formation of the academy and that it would still be a military academy funded by the federal government.

“It would operate in exactly the same way as our other three academies,” LaValle said. “All of our ideas are for the public sector. It’s possible that there could be private funding that helps it, but this is in the same way that an endowment helps the military academy, an endowment might help the Naval Academy, but there’s no investor component.”

As graduates from the academies themselves, they expect resistance from the three institutions but said that the problem set for future warfare requires a new talent pipeline and way of training future officers.

“The Air Force Academy produces great pilots and people that support pilots. West Point creates great ground fighters and the Naval Academy creates people who understand the nautical domain,” Shannon said. “We don’t have that right now in the cyber and space domain and we definitely don’t understand how robotics and computer programming works all that together.”

The Air Force and Naval Academies officials declined to comment. West Point officials did not respond to inquiries.

But those academies have updated their curricula in recent years, offering new majors and courses which are “dependent completely on the needs of the service,” Naval Academy Superintendent Vice Adm. Yvette Davids told Task & Purpose in December. Naval Academy students can now major in robotics or data science, for example.

At West Point, cadets can take courses on computer science and data or get a major in AI.

At the Air Force Academy, students can take courses in cyber science, space warfighting, and robotics and autonomous systems to name a few.

The pair’s vision also comes from a growing criticism, which they agree with, that the U.S. education system is based on an “industrial model,” a way to produce skilled labor, versus creativity and entrepreneurship that the Frontier Academy could produce.

“There’s education over here, and you get a degree and you do a project, but you didn’t get the leader education. Whereas the academies, you get good, solid general education, but it’s focused on being leaders,” Shannon said. “In the space, cyber, robotics world of the technological future that we’re moving towards, we need those two things to come together.”

LaValle noted that it’s been more than 70 years since the U.S. started a brand-new academy.

“It’s a very rational pace for America for every half century or three-quarter century to create a new academy for the new styles of warfare that are coming,” LaValle said. “This has been our history. We’re not deviating from anything, and the need is crystal clear for a new way to educate our leaders.”

https://taskandpurpose.com/news/new-mil ... ace-cyber/




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Re: US Space Force

#19 Mensagem por Suetham » Sex Mar 21, 2025 3:35 pm

https://www.mitchellaerospacepower.org/ ... AL-WEB.pdf
Ensuring a Spacepower Advantage in Prolonged Competition: Findings and Recommendations from the Space Endurance Workshop

https://www.twz.com/space/putting-missi ... force-boss
Putting Missile Interceptors In Space Critical To Defending U.S. Citizens: Space Force Boss

The large-scale weaponization of space appears to be imminent as competition in orbit heats up between the U.S. and its adversaries.

https://www.airandspaceforces.com/china ... ace-force/
China Practicing ‘Dogfighting in Space,’ US Space Force Says




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Re: US Space Force

#20 Mensagem por Suetham » Sex Mar 28, 2025 2:07 pm

https://spacenews.com/booz-allen-unveil ... e-defense/
Booz Allen unveils ‘Brilliant Swarms’ satellite concept for missile defense




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Re: US Space Force

#21 Mensagem por Suetham » Sex Abr 11, 2025 7:29 am


O satélite de inspeção GSSAP da USSF está se aproximando do TJS-15. Provavelmente, ele tentará se aproximar a uma distância de 10 a 30 km para tirar fotos ou coletar SIGIN.




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Re: US Space Force

#22 Mensagem por Suetham » Sex Mai 16, 2025 9:04 am

https://www.csis.org/analysis/space-thr ... sment-2025
Space Threat Assessment 2025
https://csis-website-prod.s3.amazonaws. ... OVb35jwkU5

Principais conclusões:
-- As armas antiespaciais estão ficando mais avançadas especialmente da China
-- O bloqueio de GPS está ocorrendo com frequência
-- Os detritos espaciais estão aumentando, surpreendentemente têm pouco a ver com constelações operacionais
-- Os EUA revelaram um bloqueador de satélite terrestre que pode revelar mais armas no futuro
-- Os EUA em busca de SBI (interceptadores espaciais) intensificarão a aquisição de ASATs e sistemas alternativos de lançamento de ogivas pelos adversários


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Re: US Space Force

#23 Mensagem por Viktor Reznov » Sex Mai 16, 2025 5:56 pm

Suetham escreveu: Sex Mar 28, 2025 2:07 pm https://spacenews.com/booz-allen-unveil ... e-defense/
Booz Allen unveils ‘Brilliant Swarms’ satellite concept for missile defense
Eles vão logo descobrir que vão precisar de pelo menos o triplo do número estimado de Kinectic Kill Vehicles pra proteger de forma eficiente os EUA e aliados contra mísseis nucleares.

EDIT: esse conceito é basicamente uma reinvenção do programa Brilliant Pebbles da Strategic Defense Initiative da era Reagan.




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Re: US Space Force

#24 Mensagem por Suetham » Sáb Mai 24, 2025 10:36 am

Viktor Reznov escreveu: Sex Mai 16, 2025 5:56 pm
Suetham escreveu: Sex Mar 28, 2025 2:07 pm https://spacenews.com/booz-allen-unveil ... e-defense/
Booz Allen unveils ‘Brilliant Swarms’ satellite concept for missile defense
Eles vão logo descobrir que vão precisar de pelo menos o triplo do número estimado de Kinectic Kill Vehicles pra proteger de forma eficiente os EUA e aliados contra mísseis nucleares.

EDIT: esse conceito é basicamente uma reinvenção do programa Brilliant Pebbles da Strategic Defense Initiative da era Reagan.
2.000 me parece ser um número decente considerando que o que vai ser interceptado será o míssil na fase de ascensão e intermediária antes de lançar sua carga de ogivas no espaço em direção ao alvo.

Considerando apenas a Rússia e China -

Rússia - 330 mísseis ICBMs (204 TEL e 126 silo) + 192 SLBMs = 522 mísseis para interceptar
8 regimentos RS-12M2 Topol-M (RS-SS-27 mod 1) - 78 mísseis com ogiva única (silo)
1 regimento RS-12M Topol (RS-SS-25 Sickle) que está sendo convertido para o RS-24 Yars - 9 mísseis de ogiva única (TEL)
6 regimentos RS-20 (RS-SS-18 Satan) - 40 mísseis com até 10 MIRVs (silo)
7 regimentos Yars-S - 72 mísseis com até 3 MIRVs (TEL)
14 regimentos RS-24 Yars (RS-SS-27 mod 2) - 123 mísseis com até 3 MIRVs (TEL)
2 regimentos ICBM com RS-18 (RS-SS-19 mod 4 Stiletto) equipados com HGV Avangard - 8 mísseis com Avangard (silo)
+
6 Project 667BDRM (Delta IV) com 16 R-29RMU2 Sineva/R-29RMU2
3 Borei Project 955 (Dolgorukiy) com 16 Bulava
3 Borei-A Project 955A com 16 Bulava

China - 140 mísseis ICBMs + 72 SLBMs = 212 mísseis para interceptar
5 brigadas DF-5A/B/C - 18 unidades
2 brigadas DF-31A - 24 unidades
5 brigadas DF-31AG - 56 unidades
1 brigada DF-31 - 6 unidades
4 brigadas DF-41 - 36 unidades
+
6 Type 094 com 12 JL-2/3 de ogiva única - 72 unidades

Obs: estou desconsiderando totalmente a quantidade de ICBMs que serão expandidos na PLARF, o que provavelmente triplicará a força de ICBMs chinesas e também a provável expansão de SLBMs através de mais SSBNs que estarão em serviço na PLAN que ainda são rumores mas com algum fundamento, o que tornaria a China equivalente aos russos e americanos no ataque estratégico nuclear em dado momento no futuro.

Rússia - 330 mísseis ICBMs (204 TEL e 126 silo) + 192 SLBMs = 522 mísseis para interceptar
China - 140 mísseis ICBMs + 72 SLBMs = 212 mísseis para interceptar
Total = 734 mísseis para interceptar

Considerando a disponibilidade de todos os meios, o que nunca será a 100%, independentemente de quanto tentassem atingir essa meta, o total de 2.000 interceptadores no espaço pode ser divididos em até 3x interceptadores para cada míssil lançado.

A questão continua permanecendo se esse sistema irá funcionar, ainda mais considerando os requisitos para a interceptação que ainda continuam absurdamente altos, mesmo para a tecnologia atual.




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Re: US Space Force

#25 Mensagem por Suetham » Sáb Mai 24, 2025 10:41 am

https://breakingdefense.com/2025/05/spa ... ing-china/
Space Force should get a quarter of Pentagon spending, if DoD is serious about countering China

Christopher Stone in this op-ed argues that since China sees Space as the most important domain, the US should give more money to the Space Force.

https://breakingdefense.com/2025/05/spa ... e-targets/
Space Force testing space-based sensors to track airborne targets

Space-based capabilities could put current aerial tracking platforms in question, but top military brass have argued for options "from whatever domain or platform or system that comes [in]."

https://breakingdefense.com/2024/09/spa ... rly-2030s/
Space Force vice wants sats to track aircraft by early 2030s

One of the key challenges for tracking enemy aircraft from space is that airplanes and drones move much faster than tanks, trucks and ships; confounded by the fact that satellites themselves also move around the Earth extremely fast.

https://www.airandspaceforces.com/trump ... e-general/
Trump Announces Plan For Golden Dome, Led By Space Force General

https://spacenews.com/space-force-offic ... ome-costs/
Space Force officials say it’s too early to pin down Golden Dome costs

Booz Allen’s Chris Bogdan: If the Pentagon tries to develop Golden Dome through its traditional procurement system, it will likely fail




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Re: US Space Force

#26 Mensagem por Túlio » Seg Mai 26, 2025 1:24 pm

Achei legal este conceito Brilliant Pebbles, que eu nem conhecia; apenas considerar uma Pk de 100% me parece exagerado, mesmo o vídeo sendo antigo e apenas para dar uma visão básica sobre a ideia:






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Re: US Space Force

#27 Mensagem por Suetham » Seg Mai 26, 2025 3:48 pm

"Golden Dome": Fim da ameaça nuclear aos EUA ou uma inutilidade trilionaria de Trump?

A pretensão do projeto "Golden Dome" é imensa, de um porte verdadeiramente continental. Inspirando-se no sistema Iron Dome Israelense Donald Trump anunciou um complexo sistema de defesa aérea em camadas como jamais foi visto antes. Junto com nossos convidados Sérgio Santana e Rui Botelho vão analizar todas as pistas disponíveis para sabermos se isto é uma revolução ou se teremos apenas a reprise do malfadado Program "Star Wars" do governo Ronald Reagan.
A partir do minuto 19:00, Rui Botelho destaca uma verdade: o desenvolvimento do Golden Dome resultará em uma escalada armamentista. Esse comportamento agressivo por parte dos Estados Unidos busca romper o equilíbrio nuclear estabelecido desde a assinatura do tratado ABM, alinhado à doutrina MAD, que vigora desde o desenvolvimento de armas nucleares por estados em competição.

A China tem adotado uma postura diplomática, declarando que o desenvolvimento do Golden Dome é inaceitável. Contudo, parte dessa postura agressiva dos Estados Unidos pode ser atribuída à recusa chinesa em discutir tratados sobre mísseis nucleares, especialmente considerando que, desde a administração Biden, os americanos tentam incluir a China no New START.

O desenvolvimento americano por si só é uma ação de escalada e vai provocar ainda mais a corrida da militarização do espaço tanto pela Rússia, tanto pela China quanto por outros atores. O Golden Dome é um importante fator desestabilizador contra as tentativas de manter o equilíbrio de poder entre as superpotências nucleares por meio da dissuasão nuclear, que tem funcionado por muitas décadas. Os EUA estão basicamente tentando perturbar e alterar o status quo nuclear entre os EUA e a China (+ Rússia).

Ter a capacidade de destruir os mísseis estratégicos do lado oposto antes mesmo que suas ogivas possam ser lançados é basicamente equivalente a neutralizar as formas mais fundamentais de dissuasão nuclear disponíveis para o lado oposto.

Em resposta, a China claramente deve expandir seu arsenal nuclear, mísseis estratégicos, antimísseis e esforços de desenvolvimento de armas espaciais, juntamente com o desenvolvimento de contramedidas semelhantes ao Golden Dome. Isso visaria restaurar o equilíbrio a um estado de vulnerabilidade mútua, ou seja, um equilíbrio de poder.

Além disso, Pequim certamente se tornará mais agressiva em quaisquer negociações de controle de armas com Washington no futuro, além de potencialmente adotar uma postura mais agressiva e firme em outras áreas, seja política ou militar. Isso não vai ser nada bonito — embora eu duvide seriamente que alguém em Washington consiga compreender isso.

Esse comportamento de tentar alterar o equilíbrio de poder de forças nucleares não é recente, desde os anos 90, os americanos tentam mudar esse equilíbrio.

E como eu disse, o Golden Dome ainda é particularmente desafiador em relação à física e considerando que os americanos querem criar um equivalente FOBS KKV (Starshield) e um FOBS de energia direcionada (DEW).

https://www.sciencenews.org/article/gol ... se-physics
Trump’s ‘Golden Dome’ plan has a major obstacle: Physics

The proposed missile defense system has many scientists expressing skepticism

The United States already maintains a nationwide missile defense system aimed at defending against a small-scale attack from intercontinental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs, launched by a rogue nation such as North Korea. But a February report from the American Physical Society concludes that defense against even a small-scale attack is uncertain. And the system’s capabilities are likely to remain relatively limited within the next 15 years, the report argues. The Golden Dome initiative aims to protect the country from more capable adversaries such as Russia and China — a more difficult task.




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