BOSTON -- The U.S. Air Force launched an experimental
satellite in December intended to lead toward the operational use of small satellites
that can be launched on short notice and checked out quickly once on orbit, but
has yet to begin using the primary sensors on that satellite more than two months
after the launch, according to the service official overseeing the effort.
Neal Peck,
TacSat-2 program manager at the Air Force Research Laboratory's Space Vehicles
Directorate in Albuquerque, N.M., said in a March 6 interview that the Air Force
had not begun using the imager and signals intelligence payload aboard TacSat-2
because it had not received clearance to do so from the Office of the U.S.
Secretary of Defense (OSD). The issue was sensitive, in part, Peck said, because
the Air Force wanted to make sure there are no misperceptions that the satellite
is being used for spying purposes.
However,
Air Force Maj. Patrick Ryder, a spokesman for OSD, said March 9 that OSD has
worked through the policy issues regarding TacSat-2, and that the only thing
standing in the way of using those sensors is a technical issue regarding the satellite's
downlinks.
Program
officials had been in contact with officials in the OSD regarding the policy
issues for two years prior to the Dec. 16 launch of TacSat-2, Peck said during the
March 6 telephone interview.
TacSat-2 is
the first of a series of small, experimental military spacecraft that are intended
to allow troops in the field to directly control a spacecraft to meet their own
needs.
The imager
on TacSat-2 is capable of taking color pictures that can distinguish objects as
small as 1 meter in diameter. The signals intelligence payload is designed to
demonstrate the ability to detect radio-wave emissions, and could be used in
concert with a patrol aircraft to demonstrate the ability to locate enemy
targets.
The
spacecraft's imager has been used to take a few pictures for calibration purposes,
but that data was not disseminated; the signals intelligence payload has not been
used at all, according to another Defense Department official.
The Air
Force's ability to begin using the main sensors on TacSat-2 got caught up in a debate between the tactical and intelligence
communities, that Defense Department official said, noting that intelligence
community officials believe that the space collection mission has historically been
their purview, and should be governed under Title 50 of the U.S. code, the official
said. Section 403 of Title 50, U.S. Code, gives authority to the Director of National
Intelligence for the tasking, processing and dissemination of data from intelligence
assets.
The
intelligence community's privacy concerns regarding TacSat-2's sensors are strongest
regarding their use over the United States, the Defense Department official
said.
While
officials from the office of the undersecretary of defense for intelligence have
been in contact for a long time with officials from the undersecretary of defense
for acquisition, technology and logistics' office for advanced systems and concepts
regarding approval for the operation of the main instruments on TacSat-2,
several factors caused the issue to remain on the back burner, the Defense Department
official said.
TacSat-2 was originally expected to
follow TacSat-1, which featured similar but less-capable instruments, the
Defense Department official said. TacSat-1 could have blazed a bureaucratic
trail with intelligence officials, who might have been more willing to sign off
on the use of the less capable instruments, and then more comfortable doing so
when TacSat-2 was launched, the Defense Department official said.
However,
the launch of TacSat-1 has been delayed more than three years due to issues
with the Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) Falcon 1 rocket that is scheduled
to launch the small satellite. TacSat-1 was initially expected
to launch in early 2004, with TacSat-2 slated for later that same year.
In addition
to not gaining an early comfort level with TacSat-1, the repeated launch delays
on both satellites may have caused officials within OSD and the intelligence
community to pay less attention to the TacSats, and could have put the approval
process needed to allow them to operate their main sensors on the backburner,
according to the Defense Department official.
Intelligence
community officials involved in the discussions have expressed concern that the
Air Force lacks the experience that has been developed over the years within
the intelligence community to safeguard privacy, the Defense Department
official said.
The other 11 payloads on TacSat-2 have
not aroused concern, and have been allowed to operate, because they include experiments
intended to yield improvements in areas like data processing and transmission,
solar arrays and spacecraft guidance, the Defense Department official said.
The TacSats
are designed with a limited operational lifetime in order to save costs. TacSat
was designed to have a lifetime on orbit of six to eight months, which could
have put pressure on officials to resolve the approval issue quickly to avoid losing
out on time to experiment with the satellite during Pentagon exercises in the spring
and summer, the Defense Department official said.