Space Force shifting resources to intelligence and cybersecurity

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by Sandra Erwin — September 19, 2022

U.S. Space Force Maj. Gen. Douglas Schiess was appointed Combined Force Space Component Command commander Aug. 22, 2022. Credit: U.S. Space Force

Maj. Gen. Schiess: ‘We are preparing and posturing for the fight’

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — The U.S. Space Operations Command is assigning cybersecurity and intelligence specialists to work side-by-side with satellite operators so they’re better prepared to protect U.S. systems from electronic and physical threats, said Maj. Gen. Douglas Schiess.

“We are preparing and posturing for the fight,” Schiess said Sept. 19 at the Air, Space & Cyber conference. 

Schiess is vice commander of the Space Force’s Space Operations Command and also oversees U.S. Space Command’s combined forces component at Vandenberg Space Force Base, California.

Space Operations Command, based at Peterson Space Force Bae, Colorado, has several squadrons of cyber specialists that support military units that operate communications, surveillance and navigation satellites. More will be added over the coming year to ensure all satellite units have adequate cyber defenses, said Schiess.

The Space Force is following a directive from Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall to harden space systems against cyber attacks that rivals like China would attempt during a conflict. 

“I’ve said from my first days on the job that my priorities were China, China, and China … and I’d like to think that the message is starting to resonate,” Kendall said on Monday in a keynote address at the conference.

Schiess said one of the most recent actions was to assign a cyber squadron exclusively to work with the operators of the Space Based Infrared System (SBIRS) satellites that provide critical early warning of missile launches. 

“They are right there in the same building with our space and missile warning operators,” said Schiess. “We’re going to continue to do that.”

In response to Pentagon concerns about Chinese and Russian anti-satellite weapons, the Space Force also is adding intelligence detachments to satellite operations units to ensure operators get accurate information about possible threats, 

“That shortens the amount of time it takes operators to get intelligence from days to minutes,” said Schiess. 

“Obviously, as you heard from the Secretary and others today, our near peer competitors are continuing to modernize their forces,” he added. “We have to continue to have intel-led operations so that we can make decisions faster to be able to get ahead of those near peer competitors.”

Schiess said a priority going forward is to modernize the Space Force’s training and testing infrastructure so guardians can rehearse missions in a combat-like environment, and the survivability of satellites can be more accurately tested.

The Space Force established a separate Space Training and Readiness Command at Peterson to focus on training and testing. “They plan to stand up a national space training and testing center,” said Schiess. “And we at Space Operations Command are probably the biggest proponents to help them be able to do that.”

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