Litcius/Paper detail

Mutually assured surveillance at risk: Anti-satellite weapons and cold war arms control

Aaron Bateman

2022Journal of Strategic Studies19 citationsDOI

Abstract

In the early 1970s, Moscow and Washington had established a satellite verification regime to monitor arms control treaty compliance. Satellites had become a primary source of transparency and stability in superpower relations. Yet by the end of the 1970s, both the United States and the USSR were developing anti-satellite (ASAT) weapons that could destroy observation satellites. This article uses recently declassified archival documents to show that Jimmy Carter pushed for ASAT limits due to his broader arms control agenda, whereas Ronald Reagan rejected ASAT arms control primarily because of its potential impact on the Strategic Defense Initiative.

Topics & Concepts

Arms controlSuperpowerPolitical scienceCold warTransparency (behavior)SatelliteTreatyLawInternational tradeEngineeringPoliticsBusinessAerospace engineeringSpace exploration and regulationNuclear Issues and DefenseIntelligence, Security, War Strategy