Russia & China Propose New treaty To Ban Arms In Space

Pictured: Anti-Satellite weaponry, dude.
Russia and China have proposed a new treaty to ban the use of weapons in space, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Tuesday, amid concerns of growing anti-satellite missile rivalry.
“Without preventing an arms race in space, international security will be wanting,” Lavrov told a conference on disarmament in Geneva.
“The task of preventing an arms race in space is on the conference’s agenda. It’s time… to start serious practical work in this field,” he said.
The new treaty would prohibit the deployment of weapons of any kind in space, and the use or threat of force against space objects, he added.
Concerns over a new arms race in space have been growing since China tested an anti-satellite missile in January last year, sparking diplomatic concern.
The United States also has its own anti-satellite programme ranging from laser cannon to satellite destroying missiles.
The Outer Space Treaty of 1967 bans the build up or stockage of military weapons — including nuclear arms or weapons of mass destruction — in orbit and their installation on the moon, but not the shooting down of satellites.
“Weapons deployment in space by one state will inevitably result in a chain reaction. And this, in turn, is fraught with a new spiral in the arms race both in space and on the earth,” Lavrov said.
The United States has had no declared anti-satellite program since 1985 when it destroyed one of its own satellites in space with a missile launched by a fighter jet.
However, the US Missile Defense Agency asked last year for 10 million dollars to study the feasibility of a “test bed” to develop space-based missile defences.
(AP)





