US Space Force

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P44
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US Space Force

#1 Mensagem por P44 » Sex Set 24, 2021 8:58 am

Acho que ainda não existe tópico especifico e como a secção "espaço" está mais vocacionado para o "uso civil", deixo aqui, se a moderação entender mudar...

Apresentados os novos uniformes e insignias da USSF


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Triste sina ter nascido português 👎
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Suetham
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Re: US Space Force

#2 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Out 23, 2022 4:03 pm





Editado pela última vez por Suetham em Dom Out 23, 2022 4:13 pm, em um total de 1 vez.
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Re: US Space Force

#3 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Out 23, 2022 4:03 pm

https://www.heritage.org/military-stren ... conclusion
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The Space Force as “Weak.” The Space Force was formally established on December 20, 2019, as a result of an earlier proposal by President Trump and legislation passed by Congress. The 2021 Index provided an overview of the new service, explaining its mission, capabilities, and challenges, but did not offer an assessment. With an additional year to gain more insight, the 2022 Index scored the USSF as “weak” in all measured areas, not because of lack of expertise but because the capacity of the service falls far short of the demands being placed on it. The service has done quite well in transitioning missions from the other services without interruption in support, but it does not have enough assets to track and manage the explosive growth in commercial and competitor-country systems that are being placed into orbit. The majority of its platforms have exceeded their planned life spans, and modernization efforts to replace them are slow and incremental. The force also lacks defensive and offensive counter-space capabilities. Consequently, the U.S. Space Force retains its score of “weak” overall.

:arrow: Geral: https://defesabrasil.com/forum/viewtopi ... 7#p5620737




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Re: US Space Force

#4 Mensagem por Guilherme » Seg Out 24, 2022 2:26 pm





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Re: US Space Force

#5 Mensagem por tonymanson » Qua Out 26, 2022 11:45 pm

Obrigado por compartilhar :)




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Re: US Space Force

#6 Mensagem por Suetham » Qua Nov 02, 2022 11:46 am

:arrow: https://spacenews.com/space-force-to-se ... e-to-ours/
Space Force to seek budget boost beyond 2023, China’s capabilities are ‘close to ours’

:arrow: https://spacenews.com/space-force-brief ... attention/
Space Force briefing on military space race catches Jeff Bezos’ attention




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Re: US Space Force

#7 Mensagem por Suetham » Ter Abr 04, 2023 9:22 pm

O Pentágono começou a se preparar para batalhas militares com Rússia e China no espaço

O Pentágono está preocupado com o desenvolvimento de armas a laser e mísseis na China e na Rússia e planeja fortalecer a infraestrutura americana no espaço, segundo o The Wall Street Journal.

Segundo a publicação, para isso, o departamento militar dos Estados Unidos pode aumentar o orçamento da Força Espacial dos EUA para um recorde de US$ 30 bilhões, quase US$ 4 bilhões a mais que no ano passado.

A principal ameaça no Pentágono é o programa espacial chinês, porque os militares dos EUA acreditam que Pequim pode lançar mísseis e satélites que irão interferir ou destruir os veículos americanos.

A Força Espacial dos Estados Unidos (USSF) foi criada em 2019 como o sexto ramo das forças armadas, desempenhando funções antes atribuídas à Força Aérea. O principal objetivo de um ramo autônomo das forças armadas é planejar, equipar e proteger os interesses dos EUA no espaço.
@Slavyangrad




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Re: US Space Force

#8 Mensagem por cabeça de martelo » Qua Abr 05, 2023 9:59 am

Estes uniformes... [024]

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"Lá nos confins da Península Ibérica, existe um povo que não governa nem se deixa governar ”, Caio Júlio César, líder Militar Romano".

O insulto é a arma dos fracos...

https://i.postimg.cc/QdsVdRtD/exwqs.jpg
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Re: US Space Force

#9 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Ago 27, 2023 9:45 am

https://www.space.com/space-force-1st-t ... g-squadron
US Space Force creates 1st unit dedicated to targeting adversary satellites







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Re: US Space Force

#10 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Jan 28, 2024 1:04 pm

https://asia.nikkei.com/Politics/Defens ... a-in-check
U.S. Space Force chief urges universal rules to keep China in check

https://spacenews.com/pentagon-agencies ... atellites/
Pentagon agencies team up in upcoming launch of hypersonic tracking satellites

https://spacenews.com/spacex-launches-u ... vy-rocket/
SpaceX launches U.S. military spaceplane on Falcon Heavy rocket

https://www.space.com/atlas-v-rocket-si ... rce-launch
Atlas V rocket launch of Space Force's 'watchdog' satellite Silent Barker delayed due to storm

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/09/27/spacex- ... hield.html
SpaceX wins first Pentagon contract for Starshield, its satellite network for military use

https://www.reuters.com/technology/spac ... 023-09-25/
US exploring potential space force hotline with China


https://www.airandspaceforces.com/sda-y ... rth-orbit/




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Re: US Space Force

#11 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Fev 04, 2024 11:33 am

https://olhardigital.com.br/2024/02/01/ ... relatorio/
EUA querem usar Starship em missões militares “sensíveis e perigosas”, diz relatório




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Re: US Space Force

#12 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Fev 04, 2024 12:14 pm





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Re: US Space Force

#13 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Fev 11, 2024 8:12 am


https://www.defensenews.com/battlefield ... atellites/
Space Development Agency to buy 54 missile-tracking satellites




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Re: US Space Force

#14 Mensagem por Suetham » Dom Mar 17, 2024 11:47 am



https://www.reuters.com/technology/spac ... 024-03-16/
Exclusive: Musk's SpaceX is building spy satellite network for US intelligence agency, sources say




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Re: US Space Force

#15 Mensagem por Suetham » Sáb Jun 15, 2024 1:28 pm

https://ioc.exchange/@muskfiles/112522370451697720
Starlink satellites, launched by SpaceX, are primarily known for their commercial and military communication purposes. However, SpaceX's recent $1.8 billion contract to develop a constellation of spy satellites and its agreements with the Space Development Agency (SDA) suggest that the company's ambitions with Starlink and Starshield extend further.

The concept of large satellite constellations in low Earth orbit (LEO) has its roots in the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). This Cold War-era program aimed to eliminate the threat of nuclear weapons by intercepting intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). Satellites positioned closer to Earth in LEO can swiftly target and track objects on the ground, providing both low-latency communication and high-resolution sensing capabilities. They also hold the potential for offensive actions, such as deploying interceptors to shoot down rockets or ICBMs during their vulnerable boost phase.

The idea of Brilliant Pebbles, an SDI initiative, was to deploy small, space-based interceptors to neutralize ICBMs. Although the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (ABMT) eventually precluded their full development, the concept morphed into early commercial LEO constellations in the 1990s, such as Teledesic. Supporters of SDI actively supported these efforts. The idea was to let commercial markets drive the foundational tech development for these constellations with the expectation that it could serve an eventual dual-use military purpose once the political will was reconstituted. A future military payoff incentivized companies to build these LEO constellations even if commercial Internet alone didn't make full sense from a business profitability perspective. Unfortunately they all went bankrupt after launch costs failed to lower sufficiently and the political barriers for SDI refused to resolve.

But now after the ABMT and all other blocking treaties have been abandoned, SpaceX appears to be following a similar path with its Starshield program. Gwynne Shotwell, SpaceX's President/COO, has publicly confirmed that offensive capabilities could be supported by the company if requested by the U.S. government. This aligns with the growing interest among Republicans and the Heritage Foundation in weaponizing space, contrasting with the Biden administration's more cautious approach.

Elon Musk's political shift towards the Republican party may be influenced by these strategic developments. From a personal exchange with Elon on this topic a few years ago, he was cagey discussing SDI but eventually suggested it could support "just war". SDI's purported ability to solve the nuclear threat also supports his efforts to "preserve human consciousness" by eliminating the threat of nuclear weapons.

Others believe -- mainly on the political left -- that Brilliant Pebbles is a classic fallacy that attracts those who believe there is a technological solution to everything without understanding the value of diplomacy and the fundamental interdependence of humanity. It is thought unlikely to be reliable and will inevitably lead to an arms race where either side shortens the time to launch nukes (by pre-launching / staging them in orbit or otherwise).

One of the founders of SpaceX, Michael D. Griffin has been driving SDI forward for decades after serving as it's Deputy for Technology and designing the first space-based interceptors. Griffin helped SpaceX grow from it's founding in multiple key ways under the presumed premise that this military SDI dream would be realized eventually. Griffin was one of the first advocates for reusable rockets and now Falcon 9 (and soon Starship) is a big part of making the costs of SDI viable according to Congressional reports. Over the last 7 years, there has been a concerted effort to build the capability. Competing entities like Kuiper and Rocket Lab are also vying for a share of this emerging market, but SpaceX remains the only game in town so far.

While Russia must resort to threatening to place nukes in orbit, China has the economic capability to compete directly, by promoting domestic launch cost reduction and deploying multiple Starlink competitor constellations such as G60.

At SpaceX, Terence O'Shaughnessy (who goes by "Shags") runs the Special Programs that include Starshield. As a four-star general, his background is in homeland missile defense for Northern Command. He is an ideal person to guide and align the commercial side of Starlink with the more strategic national security objectives of LEO constellations.

Further reading, https://thehill.com/opinion/technology/ ... ace-force/

[Interceptors are cheap]. "A rocket pod of 100 interceptors at a cost of approximately $60,000 per micro-missile" (note General Hyten quoted here now works for Kuiper)
https://spacenews.com/pentagon-embracin ... ry-satcom/
Pentagon embracing SpaceX’s Starshield for future military satcom
DoD currently buys Starlink’s commercial internet service but in the future it also plans to acquire more than 100 ‘Starshield’ satellites that would be government-owned




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