"Russia has the ability for an adequate response to the countries that orbit their weapons,'' Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said during an official visit to China in late August 2005. ``Both Americans and Russians are actively using space for military purposes. However, they have been observing certain limits so far, deploying only communications, targeting, intelligence and other (defense-related) spacecraft. These are not weapons. But the deployment of weapons in space will have unpredictable consequences.''
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/opinion/14302555.htm
That was basically the view I shared when I enquired of
a_majoor as to whether he advocated the
militarization, i.e., weaponization of space. The political and social position maintained in Canada for the past 30 odd years is that the weaponization of space is a policy that should not be supported. Until the current government announces otherwise, it is a position that has not changed and my stance was reflected in the same.
I was caught off guard by prior statements in this thread. My personal distaste for nuclear weapons notwithstanding (this a technology that I wish mankind could un invent), the idea of arming space with certain weapons was a chilling proposal due primarily to the unforeseen. It is the unknown factor that I found to be disturbing, i.e., accidents or poor communication from a lack of information leading to catastrophic mistakes, etc.
Space systems in any form are not my area of expertise. I (like many) have had opinions that were shaped more so on ideology than facts. This topic has kept me up for the past few nights researching and I have to say; I am more than a bit fatigued by this, but somehow, I've remained open-minded. I have read enough essays, articles and reports, from both sides of this debate (including a very long manifesto published by the Chinese government stating their position on the matter) to have arrived at a more reasoned position on this subject. Two resources proved to be particularily advantageous:
This one clarified the current realities of the militarization of space and the redundancy of the argument; a position that has found support on this thread, it's worth a look.
http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4244
This was the essay (more like a small novel, have at least :30 on hand for this one) that swung me into the favourable camp.
http://www.gwu.edu/~spi/spaceforum/Dolmanpaper%5B1%5D.pdf
After reading these, I arrived at a supporting position on the future of the military in space. The types of weapons systems will be determined in due course and I have to be optimistic; just as the policy of
MAD led to the overall success of the
Cold War, one has to believe that a secure presence in space utilizing a defensive posture will also lead to further future stability.
BMD as is currently proposed doesn't interest me beyond a theatre defense role, due primarily to lack of efficiency vs. overall expendure of resources and funds. I'd prefer to see the pursuit of an initial response technology that eliminated the threatened missile system in it's launch phase. The advantages of a system that could remain in stationary orbit over the threat (as in
NK for example) are evident when compared to regional
BMD.
NKs current and future abilities notwithstanding, there is no reason to not pursue peaceful alternatives to reducing
NKs adversarial position in concert with the development of such technologies.
I'm still not in favour of nuclear weapons however, in any strategic form, but that isn't limited to space; I'd just simply prefer that these things were made obsolete as soon as possible. I'm very much in favour of conventional warfare, it's just that until someone invents
"nuke-away"; radiation and fallout are experiences I would prefer to continue to live without.
Bear in mind, this is just one
"hippies" opinion.