'Need to Reshape India's Space Policy Amid Increased Threat Perception from China, Pak'
'Need to Reshape India's Space Policy Amid Increased Threat Perception from China, Pak'
Lt Gen Taranjit Singh, DGPP, Indian Army, said India should tap the advanced technology of space to meet its national security challenges.

New Delhi: Describing Pakistan as China's "proxy space power", a top Indian Army general on Tuesday said there was an urgent need to reshape India's space policy in view of the enhanced threat perceptions from the two neighbouring countries.

Lt Gen Taranjit Singh, DGPP, Indian Army, while delivering the spotlight speech on the second day of the 5th ORF Kalpana Chawla Annual Space Policy Dialogue, said India should tap the advanced technology of space to meet its national security challenges.

The potential of space technology should be used for not only military logistics, but also for weapons, missiles deployments in a vast geography like ours, he was quoted as saying by an Observer Research Foundation release.

Singh told the participants of the dialogue that in view of the enhanced threat perceptions from both China and Pakistan, there was an urgent need to restructure and reshape the nation's space policy.

The restructuring was needed in view of the changed security concerns because of the activities of both China and Pakistan, Singh said.

"Pakistan is the proxy space power of China," he said, adding that the recent meeting of Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan with Chinese President Xi Jinping, during the Border and Road Initiative (BRI) conference in Beijing, had reiterated this point.

He said that China had integrated its space programme with its security and military requirements and it had enhanced the PLA's capabilities.

Singh said the launch of niche quantum satellite by China for communication had given it edge and so there was a need for fast developing such niche satellites by India too.

He also said China's ASAT capability had enhanced India's fears over its space assets.

Earlier, Sivathanu Pillai, Distinguished Fellow, ISRO, also felt protecting and sustaining space assets had become a big challenge not only for India, but also for other space nations.

He felt this could be done only through space control and servicing the 1,700 active satellites in space to prolong its life.

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