Evidence: Alphabetical
- U.S. space program contributes to American soft power in slow and unpredictable ways
- U.S. has active plans to develop and weaponize space through ASATs and missile defense
- U.S. space strategy should mimic maritime strategy's emphasis on cooperative security and increasing awareness
- U.S. efforts to dominate outer space hurt our soft power leadership
- U.S. should not take lightly damage to its soft power from its efforts to dominate outer space
- U.S. and South Korea looking to expand areas of cooperation in space
- U.S. and India expanding cooperation on space exploration
- U.S. needs to earn the international communities trust before it can begin weaponizing space
- U.S.-China space cooperation key to fostering cooperation between other Asian space powers
- U.S. may need Chinese assistance to fill gap before new U.S. manned vehicle is online
- U.S. should offer China pledge of non-interference to improve relations
- U.S. space policy should seek to encourage cooperation between Asian space powers
- U.S. should focus on commercial and scientific space programs to burnish its soft power
- U.S. military space capability will gain from a focus on commercial space
- U.S. could best preserve its soft power by focusing on civil and commercial space dominance and acceptance of its military presence will follow
- U.S. space assets are critical component of our war-fighting capabilities
- US national space policy places emphasis on preserving freedom of action in space
- US would benefit from pursuing an international agreement that focused on limiting debris causing activities
- US should oppose use and deployment of kinetic space weapons because of the threat they pose to freedom of action in space
- U.S. could best meets its national security goals in outer space by working within international law framework to craft treaty banning debris causing activities
- U.S. space power is a critical component of its soft power leadership
- U.S. should welcome confidence building measures as a way of de-escalating conflicts
- US intelligence collection capacity is limited when it comes to analyzing emerging space threats like China
- US should pursue a cooperative international space surveillance fusion center
- US should share surveillance data with China as a confidence building measure
- U.S. pre-eminence of outer space is already destabilizing
- U.S. deployment of space weapons would damage U.S. soft power on other issues
- U.S. should only attempt to control space during wartime to maximize soft power
- U.S. can no longer reliably defend forward-deployed bases -- long range strike option is needed
- US Operation Burnt Frost was the equivalent of a low-altitude ASAT test
- US could use its KE-ASAT capability to protect its Navy from Chinese space reconnaissance
- Unlikely BMD systems will ever be effective in real combat situations
- US has developed sophisticated electronic jamming and spoofing methods to disable satellites
- US has most to gain from treaty banning anti satellite weapons teasing because of its outsized dependence on space assets
- U.S. and China should pursue exoatmospheric ban on ASAT testing
- U.S. domination of outer space would extend Pax Americana to the benefit of the entire world
