Seeking Stability in Space: Anti-Satellite Weapons and the Evolving Space Regime; International Space Policy
Both these volumes depart from the premise that space is the next frontier, and together they amount to a useful primer on the military and civilian uses of space. The Nye-Schear volume addresses the military dimension (satellites and weapons that might threaten them); the contributors are a roster of distinguished experts. The Papp-McIntyre book also takes up military questions but is most useful on the civil side, and, especially, in sorting out the clashing military and civilian interests in the framing of space policy.
Related
The Cold War induced caution in nations that feared uncontrollable escalation. Now that confrontations are less likely to careen out of control, a new season of bellicosity is here. The U.S. military, trapped in a Cold War mindset, has failed to realize this. It is spending far too much on casualty-prone units in all the services, in an age when political opposition to casualties effectively makes these units unavailable for combat. The military should recalibrate its priorities and shift funds to weapons such as high-tech lasers, stealth aircraft, and cruise missiles that can make warfare less lethal for Americans.
More destructive cyberweapons are being created every day, and an increasingly sophisticated technology black market virtually guarantees that they will eventually land in the hands of the United States' enemies. Robust defenses are no longer a luxury, they are a necessity.
The tools and techniques for waging war never stand still, but these are the early days of a revolution in military affairs as momentous as those wrought by the railroad and the airplane. This newest transformation is a consequence of developments in civilian society including the information revolution and postindustrial capitalism. Its satellite imagery and smart bombs will change the forms of combat and armies. Personnel and politics, as always, will be as crucial as technology.

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