April 24, 2023 Updated:
April 24, 2023
A Long March 7Y4 rocket carrying the Tianzhou 3 cargo ship launches from the Wenchang Space Launch Center on a mission to deliver supplies to China's Tiangong space station, in China's southern Hainan Province, on Sept. 20, 2021. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)
China’s communist regime
is likely developing cyberweapons capable of hijacking U.S. satellite systems
during a war, according to newly leaked Pentagon documents.
Among the recent trove of
top secret Pentagon files allegedly leaked by an Air National Guardsman this
year is one document that suggests that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP),
which rules China as a single-party state, is “probably developing cyber-attack
capabilities that will threaten Western satellite systems.”
“The [intelligence
community] assesses China is developing cyber-attack capabilities to deny,
exploit, and hijack satellite links and networks as part of its strategy to
control information, which it considers a key warfighting domain,” the document
reads.
The document was
classified as top secret special intelligence and was marked to prohibit its
release to foreign nationals.
The Pentagon didn’t
respond by press time to a request by The Epoch Times for comment regarding the
file.
The document suggests
that the CCP is developing systems capable not only of knocking U.S. satellites
offline but also of actually hijacking and using them toward the regime’s own
ends.
“China’s ability to
infiltrate a core network or mimic a specific command link could allow it to
seize control of a satellite, rendering it ineffective to support communications,
weapons, or intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems,” the
document reads.
China Preparing to Attack US Satellite Systems
The leaked Pentagon
document presents the latest glimpse into the CCP’s long-running attempts to
develop technologies capable of attacking and defeating U.S. satellite-based
infrastructure.
The regime has been
developing a comprehensive arsenal of space and
counterspace capabilities for years. Such capabilities would allow the CCP to
target U.S. communications and GPS infrastructures, as well as its missile
defense systems.
China’s research into such capabilities
includes experiments with directed energy weapons, microsatellites, robotic
explosives, satellite jammers, anti-satellite missiles, grabber satellites, and
a comprehensive suite of cyber warfare tools.
The regime has also been
testing the U.S. ability to defend its satellite.
Speaking to The
Washington Post in December 2021, Gen. David Thompson, the U.S. Space Force’s
first vice chief of space operations, said the CCP was launching attacks on
U.S. space infrastructure “every single day.”
Those reversible
attacks—in which U.S. satellite architecture or cyber systems are compromised
temporarily—are largely understood to be a testing of the waters for an actual
assault in the event of a war between the United States and China.
The United States, its
allies, and its partners are investing heavily to deploy newer, more
distributed satellite systems to mitigate the threat posed by the CCP.
Such systems will replace
the nation’s heavily centralized and vulnerable satellite systems with
satellite constellations consisting of hundreds or even thousands of
satellites.
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