Urgent that we look at deterrence in a broader lens. Looking at strategic deterrents of which of course Nuclear Deterrents is a key foundation. The reason we need to look at this more broadly is we are facing new threats. New threats of escalation. New domains that can lead to rapid or inadvertent escalation in competition or conflict with china and russia. New domains such as space, cyber. Adversaries might be able to take more risks and we have Strategic Systems that are vulnerable, for example in space. And that could lead to miscalculation or rapid escalation to Nuclear Weapons use. To deal with these new threats we need to also think about innovation in terms of concepts and technologies. This is why im excited about having our three panelists this morning to discuss those issues and the challenges and opportunities ahead. We will first hear from professor andrew ross who iscurs a professor in the department of International Affairs at texas a m university. He was appointed to Int
, not just connecticut. Which is the most worrisome. None connecticut as well. I think it is important to recognize we did not choose this vector. Our adversary stick. We have to respond. What that demands is the u. S. National security space community, particularly the United States Space Command and a space for us considered new strategies, operational cons concepts and technologies. What this panel is do is provide insights regarding what sort of Technological Solutions might be the most helpful and how this ties back to core mission imperatives, especially in an era where our adversary is not just waiting, but they are accelerating their activities to compound the challenges that we have to face. I am tickled pink to have the folks we have on stage. To my left is dave rockefeller. I go back to way back with everybody. Rock is that director of training operation. Stationed in headquarters United States space for space in colorado. Next to rock is ms. Stacy kubicek, the Vice Presiden
Competition. Ariza senator Kyrsten Sinema chairs the senate commerce, science, and transportation subcommieeearing. [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] the subcommittee is now in der. Welcome everyone to a hearing on the u. S. Senate space and science subcommittee. Thank you to each of our witnesses for the participation today. Thanks to her subcommittee rankg member smith for worng with me on these issues and future capital and Ranking Member cz for their collaboratio a thriving commercial space instry is eentialor continued American Leadership o space innovation which in turn advances medical Economic National Security and scientific interes. The new space economy presents exciting opportunities where visiting living and working space can become reality. I am proud americas leading these global efforts to save advanced tecology that enables Space Exploration including human spaceflight. Im als proud to see my home state of arizona lding the way in commercial space. Ar
political one, that it s compelled by the extraordinary unusual legal circumstances which come with donald trump s candidacy following an insurrection. former u.s. attorney joyce vance weighing in on the decision by maine s secretary of state to remove donald trump from the 2024 republican presidential primary ballot. we re going to go through that decision and what could come next. plus the latest from gaza as israeli forces strike refugee camps where it s believed hamas terrorists are hiding. it comes as the biden administration is putting more pressure on israel to protect civilians. also ahead republican presidential candidate nikki haley trying to clarify her response to the question about the cause of the civil war. we re going to show you what she said. hey, everybody. good morning to you and welcome to way too early on this friday, december 29th. i m yasmin vuceivian in for jonathan lemire. maine is now the second state to remove former president trump off the
Above and beyond, he did nothing. I am finishing the story about the feat of the debtor andreev who left the descent vehicle gondula at an altitude of 25 thousand meters. We want to stop near this mannequin, which is kept in the museum of the Zvezda Research and production enterprise, as a unique exhibit. Here, please, this is this, that means ejection from the ee of the third stage of the soyuz rocket at an altitude of 570 km there. Human of course. An experiment with ejection of a dummy from the third stage of a launch vehicle was carried out back in the late eighties. At that time, many countries developed projects for reusable spacecraft , but only two states of the ussr and the usa managed to launch reusable Space Systems into space. The soviet orbital ship buran made its first and only flight on november 15, 1988. Energy buran was the collapse of the soviet union. Along with the closure of the program , tests to rescue astronauts by ejection from a height of 50 km or more were al