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Army crafting a new space policy, moving out on counterspace

Brig. Gen. Donald Brooks, Deputy Commanding General for Operations, U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command, and Col. Rich Martin, deputy commander, Marine Corps Forces Space Command (right), address 2025 Space and Missile Defense Symposium attendees. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Ray Robinson III)

By Theresa Hitchens

The US Army is working on a new space policy to serve as the “umbrella” for a new Army space strategy and doctrine, as well as the foundation for future requirements and acquisitions, according to a senior service official.

The rewrite of what is known as Army Regulation 900.1[PDF] is necessary in the face of the changed operational environment in space stemming from advancing adversary threats, Brig. Gen. Donald Brooks, deputy commanding general for operations at Space and Missile Defense Command (SMDC), told Breaking Defense in an interview on Tuesday.

“The last one was written in 2011. And a lot of things have changed over the last 14, almost 15 years,” he said, noting that the previous Army space strategy also was crafted in 2011.

Read more at Breaking Defense

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