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All the rage (10/28/22)

Good morning, Payload Nation, and welcome to the 212 of you who joined the rocket ship this week. Hope everyone has a great weekend.

In today's newsletter:🛡️ Pentagon strategy 🗣️ Payload’s weekend picks

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Pentagon emphasizes the need for norms

The Pentagon’s long-awaited National Defense Strategy warns that conflict in space could quickly spiral out of control without a clear set of norms and expectations.

Released Thursday, the strategy breaks out space concerns primarily into three buckets:

Dangers of escalation: The risk of accidentally escalating a conflict in space is “particularly high due to unclear norms of behavior and escalation thresholds, complex domain interactions, and new capabilities,” the strategy reads. To combat this, the department will analyze “escalation pathways and thresholds,” including planning for how to respond if an attack disrupts comms or situational awareness in orbit.

The lack of norms of behavior in orbit is a concern on Capitol Hill as well. “We really need space doctrine that is administration-proof, regardless of who is in the White House,” Rep. Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.), the chair of the House Armed Services Strategic Forces Subcommittee, told Payload. “If you look at nuclear deterrence doctrine, that is pretty well developed. Space deterrence doctrine is very immature in comparison.” (Look for more from our interview with Cooper next week.)

Resilience: The document codified the DoD’s increasing reliance on constellations of many cheaper, less capable satellites versus buying expensive, huge platforms, something SDA’s Derek Tournear underscored this week when he highlighted how the size of Starlink’s constellation has offered some protection from a Russian attack in the Ukraine war. “Proliferated LEO” is all the rage these days.

The strategy also touched on the Pentagon’s plans for more responsive launch, saying that the military is “increasing options for reconstitution.”

Clear and present: Dangers of space aren’t a future problem, the strategy says. China and Russia are already using counterspace weapons that could target orbital capabilities critical for both military and civilian life, including GPS, which is necessary for everything from credit card transactions to smart bomb navigation.

NDS vs. NSS: We wrote about the White House’s National Security Strategy, which sets a government-wide blueprint, a few weeks ago. The National Defense Strategy is the Pentagon-specific document to back that up.

+ While we’re here: Unfortunately, it was not a great week for in-space saber rattling. A Russian official warned that Western commercial satellites could be shot down if they’re involved in the war in Ukraine, doubling down on threats made last month. The White House didn’t take that well, promising a military response if Russia targeted US or allied space assets.

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In Other News

  • Roscosmos says Moscow has agreed to continue the ISS partnership through at least 2027.

  • NASA missions contributed $71.2B to the US economy and nearly 340,000 jobs in all 50 states in FY21.

  • Engineered cardiac tissues and a mudslide-observing payload will fly on Northrop Grumman’s ($NOC) NG-18 resupply mission to the ISS.

  • VCs have put $7B of capital to work backing aerospace & defense (A&D) startups through Oct. 13, per PitchBook-compiled data. A&D financing is on a trajectory to pass last year’s record deal value of $7.6B.

  • Amazon is opening a new production facility in Kirkland, WA, to build Kuiper satellites.

Payload's Picks

The BOAT 🐐: Quanta takes a closer look at the BOAT—the brightest of all time—aka the biggest cosmic explosion in history.

Parallax: Catch the latest edition of Rachael’s science newsletter, with everything from marsquakes to Hipparchus, by signing up here:

ParallaxA science newsletter for the space industry

Rocket CEO interviews: Catch Pathfinder #0022 with Stoke CEO Andy Lapsa on Spotify, Apple, or YouTube. And ICYMI, read our full interview with Relativity boss Tim Ellis from this week.

Tua culpa: Check out Payload contributor Andrew Parsonson’s essay on the Ariane 6 delay and who should own up to being at fault for the sizable programmatic slip. Andrew frequently contributes to Payload, but he also writes the fantastic Europe in Space weekly newsletter. We can’t recommend it enough—sign up now so you’re always in the know on all things European spaceflight.

The View from Space

NASA’s InSight Lander observed a seismic wave rippling through the top layer of Martian crust for the first time. Using imagery from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, researchers determined that the marsquake was caused by a meteorite impact.

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