By Wendy Whitman Cobb
ABSTRACT
As the United States Space Force has been debated and ultimately stood up, it has often been linked with various science fiction undertakings, most prominently, Star Trek. For the most part, the science fiction connections are not…
By Brent D. Ziarnick
ABSTRACT
With the establishment of a new U.S. Space Command, the U.S. Space Force, and the space domain itself becoming a growing theater of great power competition, spacepower strategy needs to emerge from the realm of theoretical discussion…
By Kenny Grosselin
ABSTRACT
Communication satellites generally receive short shrift in political histories of the Space Age. This silence, however, underrepresents the strategic role these satellites played during the early years of the U.S. space program (1958-1972). During this period, policy actions…
By David Buehler, Eric Felt, Charles Finley, Peter Garretson, Jaime Stearns, and Andy Williams
ABSTRACT
The U.S. military must undertake the necessary preparations to secure U.S. interests beyond geostationary orbit (GEO). As U.S. space activities expand into deep space, threats to economic…
By Jim Malachowski
ABSTRACT
A new space race is beginning as commercial firms around the world innovate to capitalize on the rich resources in space and the capabilities derived from space. Space is no longer a sanctuary for peaceful exploration. It has…
By Michael R. Dickey
ABSTRACT
The U.S. Space Force was established in the midst of, and as a result of, an increasingly complex and dynamic environment that demands new ways of thinking about designing the national security space enterprise. The precepts upon…
The Editorial Board of the Space Force Journal is very pleased to announce the launch of our inaugural issue, meant to honor the beginning of America’s Space Age on January 31, 1958 with the successful satellite launch of Explorer 1. As the…