The world’s media went into overdrive on Wednesday after the chairman of the US House Intelligence Committee warned of a “serious national security threat” that multiple sources then identified as Russia’s ambition to deploy a nuclear anti-satellite system in space. But how realistic is this scenario, and how seriously should it be taken? Some say that the US intel leak is what is most worrying.
It all began on Wednesday morning when Mike Turner, the Republican chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, sent a letter to fellow members of Congress inviting them to a confidential briefing where he would share “information concerning a serious national security threat”. The information, Turner wrote, related to a “destabilising foreign military capability”.
After the briefing, which took place in one of Congress’s classified spaces, Turner issued a statement saying the menace was so serious that President Joe Biden ought to declassify any and all information linked to it so that “Congress, the Administration and our allies can openly discuss the actions necessary to respond”.
Within hours, US broadcaster ABC News broke the news that the threat was related to Russia and its plans to deploy nuclear arms in space. “This would not be to drop a nuclear weapon onto Earth but rather to possibly use against satellites,” the outlet wrote, citing two unnamed sources.
The story quickly snowballed, prompting the House Speaker, Republican Mike Johnson, to urge for calm. “There is no need for public alarm,” he told the reporters who had gathered in the Capitol. “We just want to assure everyone: Steady hands are at the wheel, we’re working on it.” He declined to give more details due to the information still being classified, but by then, most US media had already established the Russia link, and that it was related to the country’s plans to deploy an anti-satellite weapon in space.
White House national security spokesman John Kirby publicly confirmed the intelligence on Thursday. “First, this is not an active capability that’s been deployed, and though Russia’s pursuit of this particular capability is troubling, there is no immediate threat to anyone’s safety,” he said. “We’re not talking about a weapon that can be used to attack human beings or cause physical destruction here on Earth.’’
Kirby said that the process of reviewing and declassifying aspects of the Russian capability was under way when Turner “regrettably” released his statement. “We make decisions about how and when to publicly disclose intelligence in a careful, deliberate and strategic way, in a way that we choose … We’re not going to be knocked off that process, regardless of what, in this particular case, has found its way into the public domain.”
No immediate threat
Fraser Jackson, FRANCE 24’s correspondent in Washington, noted the numerous sources stressing that the new weapon did not pose an immediate threat to the US or its interests. “This is not something that has been launched – but is something that Russia is looking into,” he said.
He also said that the shared intelligence did not appear to be new, and that at least one member of the intelligence committee had acknowledged that he had known about it for at least two years.
Jackson said some were now speculating whether Turned had leaked the information “because he was offended that the Biden administration hadn’t told him personally about it sooner”.
A concept, not a reality
Dr. Paul Dorfman, chairman of the independent non-profit Nuclear Consulting Group and a former adviser to the UK ministry of defence on the dismantling of British nuclear submarines, said he found it “problematic” that classified US information had been leaked this way, and that he did not believe that Russia actually has those capabilities yet.
“Turner has essentially leaked what is considered highly sensitive information. In that sense, he might endanger the provenance of that intelligence source,” he said.
As for the Russian space plans, he underscored that they were not yet a reality. “It’s an idea, a concept, and it has not happened,” he said. “And it’s about a sort of a nuclear capability to knock out early warning defence satellites. So it’s not a question of firing nuke missiles from space.”
Early warning satellites are used to detect ballistic missile launches in time to be able to counter them.
‘A space fantasy’
Dorfman also questioned why Russia would choose to use nuclear capabilities to attack these systems.
“You don’t need a nuclear weapon to blow up a satellite in orbit, because satellites in orbit are hugely delicate. Conventional weapons would be able to do that quite nicely,” he said.
“And it seems impractical, and would be illegal according to non-proliferation treaties,” he added, referring to the 1967 Outer Space Treaty which explicitly prohibits the launch of any objects carrying nuclear a
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