Barrett discusses
critical role of new service
November 18, 2020
Secretary of the Air Force
Barbara M. Barrett addressed the American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics during
the first virtual Accelerating Space Commerce,
Exploration, and New Discovery (ASCEND) event,
on the importance of the newest service in the
Department of Defense, Nov. 16.
Throughout her discussion,
Barrett emphasized the vital role the United
States Space Force plays in shaping the future
of international space operations.
“The most important thing
for the Space Force and the Air Force is working
with allies and partners,” Barrett said. “So
we've been teaming up. It's not an exclusively
American mission. It's the world’s mission to
encourage and ensure the future a free and open
access to space, so that elements of space are
not put off-limits to others.”
Instrumental to molding the
first new military service since 1947, Barrett
shared some insight on how the U.S. Air Force
Academy has evolved to help build strong
foundations for the next generation of USSF
officers.
“At the Air Force Academy,
we believe that in the field of Astronautics you
learn space by doing space,” said Barrett. “So
the Air Force Academy Cadets are building
spacecraft. They're building satellites. And,
they're putting them on the X-37B. In May, we
launched an Air Force Academy cadet-built
satellite into space. “
Barrett also noted that
USAFA recently started a Space Operations degree
program, which will further enable building
depth in space expertise.
On current operations,
Secretary Barrett highlighted the role the
service has on lives throughout the world.
“In our everyday life,
we're using space constantly, but we often don't
recognize [it],” said Barrett. “Just think about
the GPS system alone and consider how much we
depend upon the system. It's accessible to
everyone globally and it takes just 8 to 10
people during a single shift to operate it. So,
a total of 40 people operate this extraordinary
system upon which so much of our current economy
depends.”
Continuing her remarks,
Barrett spoke about the vulnerabilities that the
31 satellites currently face and how the USSF is
leading the way to not only keep the GPS
satellite network available but also to maintain
Space as a free and open domain.
“It's broadly used. It's
transformative, but it's fragile. And, space
debris is really a danger to things like our GPS
systems. We've got to minimize their
vulnerability. And, we have to have the
capability to deter others from doing damage to
that system upon which so much depends,” said
Barrett. “So, we are building processes and
doctrine of what is threatening and what is to
be acceptable behavior in space. “
In her closing remarks, the
secretary stressed the vital need of a dedicated
Space Force.
“A final word, I would
simply say we are building the United States
Space Force to protect the free and benevolent
use of that ultimate frontier, the ultimate high
ground—space. Semper Supra,” she concluded.