Issue 137

Intelligence suspects Russia is developing Starlink ASAT

By Dr. Larissa Beavers PBS News reports two NATO intelligence services suspect that Russia is developing an anti-satellite weapon specifically designed to disrupt or disable SpaceX’s Starlink satellite constellation, a system that has become critical to both civilian connectivity and modern military operations. The…

By Dr. Larissa Beavers

PBS News reports two NATO intelligence services suspect that Russia is developing an anti-satellite weapon specifically designed to disrupt or disable SpaceX’s Starlink satellite constellation, a system that has become critical to both civilian connectivity and modern military operations. The reporting highlights growing concern that commercial space systems are now treated as legitimate military targets, blurring the line between civilian and defense infrastructure in orbit. If deployed, such a capability would mark a significant escalation in counterspace threats and further reinforce space as a contested operational domain. The development also raises alarms about debris creation, escalation dynamics, and the resilience of space-enabled command and control.

Impact to Space Operations:

  • Targeted counterspace threat: PBS news reports Russia is suspected of developing an ASAT capability aimed at Starlink.
  • Commercial systems no longer neutral: Military-supporting constellations are treated as legitimate targets.
  • Debris risk: Kinetic or area-effect attacks in LEO could create widespread, long-lasting debris threatening satellites beyond the intended target.
  • LEO degradation: NATO reports suggest debris-producing attacks could disrupt orbital operations for years.
  • Operational impact: Starlink disruption would affect military C2, ISR dissemination, and logistics.
  • Escalation risk: Attacks on commercial satellites blur proportional response thresholds.
  • Resilience pressure: Operators may accelerate redundancy, reconstitution, and hardening.
  • Traffic management strain: Contested LEO complicates collision avoidance and maneuvering & possibly small enough making it difficult to track.
  • Norm erosion: Such weapons further undermine international space norms.
  • Experimental: Some analysts doubt it could work without significant risks to the space domain and Russian space assets.


WION – Russia’s New Space Weapon

Editor’s Comment: The wartime utility of such a weapon is questionable. While undoubtedly catastrophic to several orbital planes and the LEO orbital regime in general, the release of debris clouds would have unpredictable results in terms of timeliness and effect. These tactics would also endanger non-targeted satellites, some of which belong to Russia and other nations such as China. Then again, it is Russia, so you never know.