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   KEYWORDS : EARLY WARNING SATELLITES
News Resources Bibliography
Russia Left with No Satellite Surveillance -- Staff  -- Kommersant  -- May 03, 2006

The RF Defense Ministry has been left with no spy satellite in orbit. The last anchor of Russia's surveillance, US-PU satellite of electronic intelligence, moved down from the orbit at night from Friday to Saturday, as the service life of that satellite, which took off from Baikonur May 2004, came to a natural end.

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Collective-defense ban seen keeping Japan out of missile first-alert loop -- Staff  -- Japan Times  -- June 10, 2005

The U.S. is showing reluctance to provide Japan with a system that would give it missile-launch data directly from a U.S. early-warning satellite, complicating Japan's plans to deploy Aegis missile defense cruisers.

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The Wrong Deterrence: The Threat of Loose Nukes Is One of Our Own Making -- Bruce Blair  -- Washington Post  -- September 19, 2004

Bruce Blair surveys the dangers from Russian terrorists acquiring "loose nukes" or other nuclear material and he argues for a more comprehensive plan to reduce the risks. He also introduces a new threat, that cyber-terrorists might hack into Russia's ailing nuclear early warning network and fool it in thinking an attack had taken place.

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US and Russia nukes: still on cold war, hair-trigger alert -- Scott Peterson  -- Christian Science Monitor  -- May 06, 2004

The risk of a Russian accidental nuclear launch is increasing due to their deteriorating early warning network. A U.S.-Russian program to improve joint early warning capabilities has stalled due to financial and legal issues.

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Shooting Stars: U.S. Military Takes First Step Towards Weapons in Space -- Marc Lallanilla  -- ABC News  -- March 30, 2004

The US Defense Budget for 2005 contains a program that some analysts say could "cross the Rubicon into space weaponization". The program in question, the Near Field Infrared Experiment (NFIRE) satellite, is primarily designed to track ballistic missiles from space for missile defense but it will also contain a smaller "kill vehicle" that can be used to attack missiles or enemy satellites.

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Nunn Urges U.S., Russia to Ease Hair-Trigger Nuclear Alerts -- Walter Pincus  -- Washington Post  -- May 21, 2003

The United States and Russia could take thousands of strategic nuclear warheads off hair-trigger alert by introducing an early warning system of sensors that monitor each other's land-based intercontinental missiles, according to former senator Sam Nunn, who once was chairman of the Armed Services Committee.

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A Broken Network -- Maria Gousseva  -- Pravda  -- January 28, 2003

Russian astronomers express concern over Russia's aged space tracking network and their inability to detect and track small asteroids.

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Russia, US Discuss Problems of Warning of Missile Attacks -- Staff  -- Itar-Tass  -- December 11, 2002

U.S. and Russian officials are meeting to discuss the need for sharing missile early warning data.

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Lagging Satellites Jeopardize Midcourse Missile Defense System -- Staff  -- Global Security Newswire  -- December 02, 2002

Two planned U.S. Defense Department satellites are behind schedule and over budget, jeopardizing White House plans for a ground-based missile defense system.

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How small asteroids could trigger nuclear war -- Margaret Munro  -- National Post  -- November 22, 2002

A leading space scientist is warning that small asteroids from space that detonate like bombs as they crash into Earth's atmosphere might accidentally set off a nuclear war.

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