Recently, global moves have accelerated to harden, replenish and expand space-based surveillance. Major developments include classified NRO launches, US efforts for rapid reconstitution and missile-tracking constellations, Japan’s dual-use imagery programme, and growing concern over jamming, spoofing and co-orbital threats.
What is the current issue
Space-based sensors, navigation and communications are now central to military and civil operations. Adversary counter-space activities can degrade or deny these services. States are responding with resilient, proliferated architectures and rapid-reconstitution measures to maintain deterrence and operational continuity.
Why this matters
- Security: Satellite surveillance and missile-tracking affect warning, targeting and deterrence.
- Governance: Space acquisitions and doctrines shape defence procurement and inter-agency roles.
- Economy & society: Civil services—navigation, disaster response, communications—depend on protected space assets.
- International relations: Space capabilities influence alliances, export controls and norms on responsible behaviour.
Evolution of space-based surveillance capabilities
- High-fidelity tracking: The US Senate directed acquisition of at least 45 HBTSS satellites to improve real-time hypersonic and ballistic tracking.
- Tactical ISR and classified payloads: Recent classified NRO launches support national-level imagery and signals collection.
- Dual-use constellations: Japan plans ~30 satellites for civil and military imagery; commercial launches already support this effort.
- Resilient navigation: Procurement of GPS IIIF satellites with enhanced anti-jamming capability addresses denial of PNT (positioning, navigation, timing).
Emerging counter-space threats and actors
- Jamming and spoofing: Ground-based and space-capable electronic attack affect signals and navigation.
- Co-orbital and inspection satellites: Satellites that approach others can inspect, grapple or interfere with operations.
- Direct-ascent ASATs and debris: Kinetic attacks create debris that endangers all operators.
- Key actors: China, Russia and Iran have demonstrated or developed jamming, electronic warfare and co-orbital capabilities.
Strategic responses by major powers
United States
- Rapid reconstitution: DARPA issued an RFI seeking concepts to replace or replenish space capabilities quickly after attack or failure.
- Proliferated, layered architectures: PWSA and HBTSS aim to distribute functions across many satellites rather than single large platforms.
- Acquisition reform: Space Force is restructuring acquisition authorities, migrating SDA and Space RCO functions to Portfolio Acquisition Executives to unify mission accountability.
- Operational hardening: Procurement of anti-jam GPS satellites and expansion of space sensors to improve missile warning and tracking.
Japan
- Dual-use constellations: A national push for commercial and military imagery satellites to improve situational awareness in the region.
- International partnerships: Use of global launch services and commercial suppliers to accelerate deployment.
Technological and institutional advances
- Small-sat constellations: Shift from large, single satellites to proliferated constellations for resilience.
- Sensor diversity: Multispectral imagery, space-based radar, and dedicated missile-tracking sensors increase coverage and fusion options.
- Anti-jamming and cybersecurity: Navigation and comms satellites are being fitted with anti-jam electronics and stronger cyber defences.
- Acquisition and governance: New procurement frameworks aim to shorten timelines, align suppliers and centralise mission authorities.
| Counter-space threat | Operational impact | Defensive responses |
|---|---|---|
| Jamming / spoofing | Loss or corruption of PNT and comms | Anti-jam receivers, alternative PNT, signal authentication |
| Co-orbital interference | Physical proximity risks, potential servicing or grappling | Space situational awareness (SSA), manoeuvre planning, protective escorts |
| Kinetic ASATs | Platform loss and debris generation | Proliferation of cheap satellites, rapid reconstitution, diplomatic measures |
Implications and challenges for India
- Operational vulnerability: India’s PNT, satellite communications and ISR are exposed to jamming and spoofing in a contested region.
- Real-time tracking gap: India lacks a fully mature space-based tracking layer for hypersonic and advanced ballistic threats comparable to HBTSS-style architectures.
- Technology and industrial gaps: Indigenous anti-jam payloads, rapid-procurement paths and mass-produced small-sat capabilities need scaling.
- Dependency risks: Reliance on foreign components and launch services can slow reconstitution after disruption.
- Debris and SSA: Increased debris risk heightens the need for national SSA and international data-sharing.
Way forward for India
- Accelerate indigenous constellations: Prioritise proliferated ISR and PNT satellites with modular, replaceable payloads.
- Invest in anti-jam and cyber-hardened systems: Fund R&D for resilient receivers, authenticated signals and onboard cyber defences.
- Build rapid reconstitution capability: Streamline procurement, create surge manufacturing capacity and pre-authorised launch slots.
- Enhance SSA and counter-space sensing: Expand ground and space sensors, and integrate data across civilian and defence agencies.
- Policy and institutional reform: Define a national space security doctrine, clarify roles for ISRO, DRDO, armed forces and private sector, and establish a unified acquisition authority for mission areas.
- International cooperation: Pursue bilateral and multilateral partnerships for technology sharing, norms on responsible behaviour, and joint situational awareness.
- Private sector mobilisation: Incentivise Indian firms to build satellite buses, payloads and launch capability to reduce foreign dependence.
Model Questions
- Discuss the evolution of space-based surveillance capabilities and the emerging threats to national security in this domain, citing recent global developments. [GS-III: Science & Technology]
- Analyse the strategic responses of the United States and Japan to rising counter-space threats. What implications do these developments hold for India’s space security strategy? [GS-III: Internal & External Security]
- Examine institutional and technological advancements being pursued by leading spacefaring nations to secure space assets and enhance real-time intelligence gathering. [GS-III: Science & Technology]
- Despite limited specific updates on India, evaluate potential new space-based surveillance challenges India might face and suggest a comprehensive approach to address them. [GS-III: Internal & External Security]
Cover high-fidelity tracking (HBTSS), classified national reconnaissance launches, dual-use and commercial constellations, and GPS anti-jam advances. Explain threats: jamming, spoofing, co-orbital interference, kinetic ASATs, and debris. Assess operational impacts on warning, targeting and PNT, and the need for SSA and resilient architectures.
Describe US measures: rapid reconstitution RFI, acquisition reform, HBTSS and GPS IIIF procurements. Describe Japan’s dual-use constellation and commercial launches. Discuss implications for India: capability gaps in tracking and anti-jam, procurement and industrial needs, opportunities for partnerships and risks from regional counter-space actors.
Note procurement of anti-jam satellites, shift to proliferated small-sat constellations, sensor diversity for missile warning, and DARPA’s rapid-reconstitution concepts. Explain acquisition restructuring to centralise portfolio authorities and how these measures reduce single-point failures and shorten replacement timelines.
Identify likely challenges: PNT denial, ISR degradation, hypersonic tracking gaps, debris and dependence on foreign suppliers. Recommend actions: expand indigenous constellations, anti-jam and cyber-defence R&D, rapid reconstitution capacity, improved SSA, institutional doctrine, and international partnerships for norms and shared sensing.
