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Space Force establishes intelligence unit to put sharper focus on orbital threats

Space Force establishes intelligence unit to put sharper focus on orbital threats_62b709dd23257.png
Space Delta 18 will run the National Space Intelligence Center at Wright Patterson Air Force Base

WASHINGTON — The Space Force on June 24 established a new unit, Space Delta 18, responsible for providing “quality intelligence” to U.S. policy makers about the space domain, Lt. Gen. Stephen Whiting, commander of Space Operations Command, said at a ceremony in Dayton, Ohio.

Space Delta 18 will run the National Space Intelligence Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. Whiting said it’s important for the Space Force to have a unit focused on threat analysis to help inform national defense policy and space systems acquisitions.

Space intelligence analysis was previously under the National Air and Space Intelligence Center. Space Force leaders pushed to have a separate organization co-located with NASIC.

“The question is why do we need to stand up a National Space Intelligence Center and the truth is that we needed a sharper focus on the space threat that is here today,” Maj. Gen. Leah Lauderback, Space Force director of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, said at the ceremony. 

Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines called the standup of the NSIC a “critical step to shape the future of the Space Force, improve acquisitions and drive innovation across the community.”

“NSIC will be well positioned to support U.S. and allied space decision makers at an absolutely critical moment in the history of space development,” Haines said. “The opportunities for our nation in space are extraordinary. Already, it is critical to our communications infrastructure, for early warning systems, for protecting our planet, our environment, for our national security, our intelligence and our prosperity.”

States such as China and Russia are developing, testing and fielding counterspace weapons to monitor and target U.S. and allied satellites, said Haines. “Our capacity to understand what is happening in the space domain is crucial to our ability to operate in space. In the years ahead, the environment will only become more contested.”

She said the NSIC will be relied upon to “produce and analyze scientific and technical intelligence related to space for the entire nation.”

Space Delta 18 will be made up of 345 military and civilian personnel. 

The unit was named in honor of the U.S. Space Force’s role as the 18th member of the intelligence community

Space Delta 18 is made up of two units originally activated in 2008 within the Air Force: The 1st Space Analysis Squadron Mission will produce foundational intelligence on foreign space capabilities. The 2nd Space Analysis Squadron Mission will produce foundational intelligence on foreign threats to space operations.

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