The Ministry of Defence in the United Kingdom has unveiled its space defence policy, which presents the ominous prospect of a âexo-atmospheric nuclear attack.â Nevertheless, the text provides few real ideas for dealing with such a scenario.

The United Kingdomâs âDefence Space Strategy,â published on Tuesday, depicts space as a prospective future battleground, loaded with threats spanning from cyber strikes and anti-satellite blinding lasers to a âExo-atmospheric Nuclear Attack.â
According to the source, such a strike, probably conducted from a satellite in orbit, would indeed be a âpermanent kill event.â It does not, however, go into detail about the possibility of such a strike, if Britainâs rivals have such capacities, and what the phrase âpermanent kill eventâ implies.
Similarly, the paper makes no mention of how to deal with such a situation, apart from promising to âunderstand, design, and field technologies to protect and defend UK interestsâ in the case of a space-based conflict.
Alternatively, it outlines how the UK intends to engage in space-based reconnaissance, including spending upwards of ÂŁ5 billion ($6.8 billion) on âSkynetâ surveillance satellites and increasing its participation in the US-led âOlympic Defenderâ space defence programme.
The research arrives four months after Prime Minister Boris Johnson launched the UKâs National Space Strategy, which âcements the UKâs ambition to become Europeâs leading provider of commercial small satellite launches by 2030,â according to the administration. Johnson lauded the strategyâs announcement as a breakthrough toward a âgalactic Britain,â but critics condemned him of using âclassic blusterâ to divert attention away from domestic difficulties.
The recent assessment labels Russia and China as âinternational threats,â referencing both countriesâ recent anti-satellite missile tests. The report singled out Russia in particular for leaving trails of space junk behind following an experiment the year before. Comparable tests, however, have been conducted by the US since the 1980s and by India in 2019, with neither being acknowledged in the MoDâs assessment.
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