Evidence: Alphabetical
- Cox Commission Report has Created a Legacy of Mistrust between U.S. and China on Space Policy
- China won't necessarily challenge U.S. hegemony militarily
- China deterred from attacking U.S. assets in space by its reliance on space assets and fear of escalating conflict with U.S.
- China has transformed itself into a global strategic power other countries want to cooperate with
- China's space program motivated by techno-nationalism
- China has no superpower ambitions to challenge U.S.
- China Plans on Combining Space Weapons with Information Warfare for an "Assassin's Mace" weapon
- China's Pursuit of Space Arms Control seems to be Limited to its Utility in Constraining U.S. Strategic Capabilities
- Cooperative space surveillance is a particularly encouraging avenue for encouraging regime building because it is politically easier to accept
- Conventional ICBMs could be mistaken as nuclear strike by Russia
- Conventional ICBMs would allow U.S. to Attack Foreign Troops from a Distance
- Commercial satellite imagery has already exposed some national security secrets
- Commercial imaging satellites have already proven their intelligence value
- Commercial imagery satellites do not uniquely provide information useful to terrorists
- Commercial imagery already being used by terrorist and insurgent groups
- Commerical space industry and states should voluntarily pool their space awareness data to help form global space traffic management system
- Commercial space industry would benefit from expanded civilian space awareness data
- China fears U.S. is forging space alliance between Japan and India to counter them
- Current International Outer Space Legal Regime does not Provide either Transparency or Provide a Dispute Resolution Mechanism
- Current U.S. Funding for Prompt Global Strike will Allow for Key Technologies Needed in Space-Based Global Strike Weapons
- Cooperation on space security issues could be critical towards achieving "SALT" moment with China
- Cost-benefits logic of deterrence forces escalation to most disproportionate response
- China has demonstrated both directed energy and kinetic energy anti-satellite capability
- Cannot predict the effect of U.S. space programs on soft power leadership
- China's planned moon landing in 2017 will be a major blow to U.S. global image unless it reinvigorates its own space program
- Covert cyber attacks are of interest to our adversaries because of the challenges of attribution
- China may have intended ASAT test to intimidate Taiwan satellite effort
- China using lawfare to improve its military position vis a vis US military power in space
- China's vertical sovereignty argument has no basis in outer space treaty law and has been rejected before
- China lack's the intention to threaten US space assets because of ideological comparability with US
- China's most impressive advancement in space technology is in developing space infrastructure to support tactical operations
- China is deploying more space-based tactical assets, recognizing that the U.S. still has more to lose from a space war than they do
- China's growing use of space for reconnaissance and tactical operations could be shaping their doctrine from a defensive posture to power projection
- Catastrophic risks of space debris from space conflict create a 'mutually assured destruction' constraint on their use
- Countries should either prepare to dominate and control outer space or be prepared to scale back all space operations
- China attempting to dominate outer space, creating a second 'great wall'
