Space Force Capability Structure in North America

Space Force Capability Structure in North America

Multi-domain Offensive and Defensive Operations and High-intensity Networked and Informalized Warfare to Drive Future Force Generation and Capability-building Programs

RELEASE DATE
17-Oct-2022
REGION
North America
Deliverable Type
Market Research
Research Code: K7E7-01-00-00-00
SKU: AE01631-NA-MR_26943
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$2,450.00
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SKU
AE01631-NA-MR_26943

Space Force Capability Structure in North America
Published on: 17-Oct-2022 | SKU: AE01631-NA-MR_26943

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$2,450.00
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The post-Cold War global liberation order—backed by Western leadership—has been challenged by the rise of political multipolarity. Wars in South and West Asia, the financial crisis of 2008, the annexation of Crimea, the COVID-19 pandemic, the Russo-Ukrainian War, and rising tensions across the Taiwan Strait have exposed global economic interdependence and the balance of power.

The development of new axes and mechanisms of cooperation, coupled with the global competition Russia, China, and secondary powers like North Korea and Iran, through the pursuit of force-multiplier technology and asymmetric capabilities have tested Western force projection strategies in Taiwan, Korea, and the Baltics. Growing investments in kinetic physical, and non-kinetic physical capabilities—with the recent use case of GPS jamming capabilities by Russia in the Russo-Ukrainian War—have accentuated the strategic importance of the space domain.

Consolidation within the 5 theaters of battle—land, air, naval, digital, and space—into a singular battlesphere, through human-machine interactions, is expeditiously evolving the military command and control (C2) structure and threat spectrum for military operations. Increased competition within contested spectrum environments, caused by the democratization of the space domain, has disrupted space regimes and defined the NewSpace sector. As national interests in space adopt a more data-driven role, with several exogenous and endogenous factors driving space as a distinct warfighting domain, the convergence and consolidation of technologies, functions, and stakeholders will predicate future military space operations, force generation, and capability-building programs.

Author: Pravin Pradeep

Why is it Increasingly Difficult to Grow?

The Strategic Imperative 8™

The Impact of the Top 3 Strategic Imperatives on Space Force Capability Structure in North America

Growth Opportunities Fuel the Growth Pipeline Engine™

Kinetic Physical and Non-kinetic Physical—Threat Assessment

Electronic and Cyber—Threat Assessment

United States—Technology Capability Assessment

United States—Technology Capability Assessment (continued)

United States—Technology Capability Assessment (continued)

United States—Manufacturing Capability Assessment

United States—Manufacturing Capability Assessment (continued)

United States—Manned Spaceflight and Cislunar Operations

United States—Manned Spaceflight and Cislunar Operations (continued)

United States—Space Launch Capability

United States—Space Launch Capability (continued)

Canada—Technology Capability Assessment

Canada—Technology Capability Assessment (continued)

Canada—Manufacturing Capability Assessment

Canada—Manufacturing Capability Assessment (continued)

Canada—Manned Spaceflight and Cislunar Operations

Growth Drivers

Growth Driver Analysis

Growth Driver Analysis (continued)

Growth Driver Analysis (continued)

Growth Driver Analysis (continued)

Growth Restraints

Growth Restraint Analysis

Growth Restraint Analysis (continued)

Growth Restraint Analysis (continued)

Growth Opportunity 1: Terrestrial Platform Advances

Growth Opportunity 1: Terrestrial Platform Advances (continued)

Growth Opportunity 2: Advanced Cyber & Electronic Warfare Capabilities

Growth Opportunity 2: Advanced Cyber & Electronic Warfare Capabilities (continued)

Growth Opportunity 3: Joint All-Domain Command and Control

Growth Opportunity 3: Joint All-Domain Command and Control (continued)

List of Exhibits

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The post-Cold War global liberation order—backed by Western leadership—has been challenged by the rise of political multipolarity. Wars in South and West Asia, the financial crisis of 2008, the annexation of Crimea, the COVID-19 pandemic, the Russo-Ukrainian War, and rising tensions across the Taiwan Strait have exposed global economic interdependence and the balance of power. The development of new axes and mechanisms of cooperation, coupled with the global competition Russia, China, and secondary powers like North Korea and Iran, through the pursuit of force-multiplier technology and asymmetric capabilities have tested Western force projection strategies in Taiwan, Korea, and the Baltics. Growing investments in kinetic physical, and non-kinetic physical capabilities—with the recent use case of GPS jamming capabilities by Russia in the Russo-Ukrainian War—have accentuated the strategic importance of the space domain. Consolidation within the 5 theaters of battle—land, air, naval, digital, and space—into a singular battlesphere, through human-machine interactions, is expeditiously evolving the military command and control (C2) structure and threat spectrum for military operations. Increased competition within contested spectrum environments, caused by the democratization of the space domain, has disrupted space regimes and defined the NewSpace sector. As national interests in space adopt a more data-driven role, with several exogenous and endogenous factors driving space as a distinct warfighting domain, the convergence and consolidation of technologies, functions, and stakeholders will predicate future military space operations, force generation, and capability-building programs. Author: Pravin Pradeep
More Information
Deliverable Type Market Research
Author Pravin Pradeep
Industries Aerospace, Defence and Security
No Index No
Is Prebook No
Podcast No
WIP Number K7E7-01-00-00-00