
China’s successful shooting down of its old satellite by a ground-based missile marks a major step in the maturing of its offensive capabilities in space, especially when compared to our ‘slow march’ in utilising space for our defence. For example, China launched 24 indigenous satellites during the past five years, compared to our 10. It currently has at least 9 satellites dedicated to military use (besides another 63-odd dual-use satellites) compared to our one experimental satellite for limited defence use.
The reality that space capabilities have been visibly at the root of global military superiority and economic-commercial activities in peace and war for more than two decades seems not to have been noticed by policy planners in India.
China’s policies provide for an integrated approach to civil and military capabilities and their optimum utilisation. Compared to this, our space programme continues to remain almost entirely devoted to civil uses. The Chinese space programme for civil use is managed by China National Space Administration; and space capability building and its use for military purposes is controlled by its Central Military Commission, the highest decision-making body for developing and employing China’s rapidly growing military power.
The Chinese Air Force is responsible for managing the space programme and its utilisation. We have not thought it fit to even have a member of our defence establishment, leave alone an air force representative, on our space commission or ISRO. The ministry of defence has been blatantly ignoring the repeated recommendations of the bipartisan standing committee on defence of Parliament for the past eight years to create space capabilities and air force structures for national defence. But then, unlike the emphasis in China on the balanced development of economy and defence, the five-year plans of our ministry of defence have rarely received funding from across the road.
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