ORLANDO, Fla.—As the Space Force nears its fifth birthday, Chief of Space Operations Gen. B. Chance Saltzman emphasized Guardians’ unique role as warfighters and defined what he called “six core truths” about the Space Force and its warfighting operational purpose.
“Guardians are warfighters, not simply force providers,” Saltzman said during the Spacepower 2024 conference, but that role is not well understood across the nation nor even among the services. “This is another one of those things that older services take for granted. Can you imagine telling a Marine that they’re not a warfighter, that the Marine Corps is just a force provider? Absolutely not.”
Yet questions about the nature of the Space Force have persisted since its creation five years ago, on Dec. 20, 2019. While some argue the Space Force should focus solely on operational support for other services, Saltzman has consistently emphasized the need for the Space Force to think and operate like the warfighters needed to ensure the U.S. military retains its strategic advantages in space—and to counter adversaries’ efforts to degrade or deny those advantages.
Saltzman cited six “core truths” about the Space Force:
- Space Force capabilities are critical to the joint force
- The Space Force must defend its capabilities for the Joint Force to project power
- The Space Force must protect the Joint Force from space-enabled targeting
- Space is a warfighting domain
- The Space Force is responsible for organizing, training, equipping, and operating space capabilities
- Guardians are uniquely trained for warfighting in, from, and to space.
“We still have a lot of educating [to do],” Saltzman said. “Even within our service, there are people who don’t fully understand.”
Yet signs of progress are encouraging: Saltzman cited U.S. Indo-Pacific Command boss Adm. Samuel Paparo’s views on space as an example.
“He will right out say, if we can’t have space superiority, I won’t be able to achieve my objectives in the western Pacific,” Saltzman said of Paparo. “That’s your U.S. Navy, regional combatant commander, saying how important space superiority is for the joint force.”
Paparo’s reliance on space in the Indo-Pacific is signficant. China’s ambitions in the region and its growing space capabilities pose a threat—and USSF is determined to counter those advances.
“Our best PR comes from China and Russia,” Saltzman said. “Every time somebody says, ‘Well, how much do we really need to invest,’ one of those countries does something incredibly irresponsible in space, and they say, ‘OK, we get it.’”
Yet there are hurdles to gaining the recognition the Space Force craves.
“We have to deny the adversary the use of their space-enabled targeting, so we have to do responsible counterspace campaigning,” Saltzman said. “And that’s where I think we’re in the biggest back-and-forth in continuing education. What precisely do we need? What technologies are available and have proven themselves, that allow us to do the kind of counterspace activities that we need? And I think there’s a negotiation going on. There’s education going on.”
Military space leaders have grown more and more comfortable talking about counterspace requirements, a major change from only a few years ago when even the mention of offensive space weapons would get officials “kind of berated by their senior leadership,” Saltzman said.
But officials have begun to be a little more daring. Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and JROC Chair Adm. Christopher Grady referenced space weapons in a recent interview with Defense Scoop, saying, “We know that hypersonics allow us to defeat adversary hypersonics; and then, we also know that hypersonics allow us to leverage hypersonic aircraft and spacecraft missions in those two domains.”
Bolder discussion of offensive space is necessary, advocates say, so the Space Force can better deter adversaries—and doing so can also help define the service as a warfighting organization.
“It’s our job to make sure that we think through the spectrum of operations, the spectrum of needs that are necessary, and we produce capabilities,” Saltzman said. “So while we’ve held it close to the vest before, some of that was just kind of hand-wringing, it wasn’t really something we needed to protect.
“… We have to be able to deny first-mover advantage by being resilient. That’s a warfighting capability. And we have to conduct counterspace operations to deny an adversary the ability to target our forces with space-enabled targeting. Those are offensive and defensive capabilities.”
Creating doubt and mystery also has a certain warfighting value. The Space Force does not need to show its entire hand, Saltzman said.
“You’re not going to get that from any warfighting organization: ‘Let me tell you precisely how I intend to attack an adversary’ so that they can respond in a way to counter,” he added. The Space Force’s job is like any military service: to field capabilities so they can be used to achieve intended effects; and the more credibility it has, the more wary its adversaries will be.