Home Europe US And France Team Up In Orbit To Counter China’s Space Buildup

US And France Team Up In Orbit To Counter China’s Space Buildup

This would mark the Pentagon's third known orbital mission with an ally, following a successful joint manoeuvre with France late last year and a more recent one with the UK earlier this month.
A general view of the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 21, 2025. REUTERS/Kent Nishimura/File Photo

The United States and France are escalating their joint efforts in space to counter China‘s expanding military capabilities, a senior U.S. general disclosed to Reuters.

This push involves planning a second coordinated mission of joint satellite manoeuvre in orbit, aiming to significantly sharpen allied spying and operational capabilities.

This would mark the Pentagon’s third known orbital mission with an ally, following a successful joint manoeuver with France late last year and a more recent one with the UK earlier this month.

Space is an increasingly contested military domain, as a soaring number of satellites crucial for communications, missile warning and battlefield intelligence face threats from the world’s top space powers. China, Russia and the U.S. have demonstrated anti-satellite weapons and launched maneuverable spacecraft, raising worries that an attack during conflict could disrupt GPS navigation or sever channels of communication relied upon by forces on Earth.

Maneuvering spacecraft with sharper precision and marshalling international alliances have become key fronts in what officials regard as a new global space race, with the U.S. and its allies facing intense rivalry from China and Russia.

“We are planning an effort with France right now,” Lieutenant General Douglas Schiess, commander of a U.S. Space Force component that works with Space Command to conduct secretive military space operations, told Reuters in an interview. He did not elaborate.

France is Europe’s largest government spender on space. Further operations with other nations could follow, he said, adding, “I can see us doing more.”

Western military space officials, including ones from Europe as well as the U.S. and Canada, have been issuing warnings about the increase of threats in space to a range of satellites, from military assets to commercial satellite constellations like SpaceX’s Starlink that collectively are used by hundreds of millions globally.

French Space Command declined to comment on any plans. Of the first operation, it said it is training with the United States to strengthen cooperation, learn how to coordinate action and to “demonstrate our strategic solidarity.”

French Space Command “needs to prepare for military space operations in a real-life scenario,” the unit said.

When asked about the initial operation in a recent Reuters interview in Paris, the unit’s commander, Major General Vincent Chusseau, declined to discuss details but said “we consider it a success.”

That initial exercise, known as a rendezvous and proximity operation, involved a U.S. and a French military satellite approaching each other near a “strategic competitor’s” spacecraft, U.S. Space Command commander Stephen Whiting revealed in April. Schiess declined to identify the third nearby satellite in his interview with Reuters last week.

In a second operation conducted between September 4 and September 12, a U.S. Space Command-operated satellite moved to check whether a British military communications satellite called SKYNET 5A was operating in orbit as intended, according to the UK.

Both satellites were in geostationary orbit – at an altitude of nearly 36,000 kilometers above the Earth – and involved both satellites traveling at around three kilometers per second, the UK said.

While the two countries did not identify which U.S. satellite was involved in the operation with Britain, a commercial provider of space situational awareness software, called Comspoc, said it observed a highly maneuverable U.S. surveillance satellite called USA 271 move close to the UK’s SKYNET 5A between September 5 and September 11.

When the operation was announced last week, the head of UK Space Command, Major General Paul Tedman, said the operation was a first of its kind for his unit and “represents a significant increase in operational capability.” He added: “We are now, with our allies, conducting advanced orbital operations to protect and defend our shared national and military interests in space.”

(With inputs from Reuters)

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