ASAT Mission Shakti | Anti-Satellite Weapons – UPSC Notes

ASAT Mission Shakti UPSC Notes | Anti-Satellite Weapons | Legacy IAS Bangalore
Science & Technology · Space · Security · UPSC GS-III

Anti-Satellite Weapons (ASAT)
& Mission Shakti 🛰️

Complete UPSC Notes — What ASAT is, types, India's 2019 test, Kessler Syndrome, Russia's nuclear ASAT threat (2024), UN resolutions, space debris, international law. Updated April 2026.

Mission Shakti 2019 4th ASAT Nation Kessler Syndrome Russia Nuclear ASAT 2024 Outer Space Treaty PAROS — UN Resolution
📚 Legacy IAS — Civil Services Coaching, Bangalore  ·  Updated: April 2026
Section 01

🔥10-Second Revision

🛰️ What is ASAT?

Anti-Satellite (ASAT) weapons are designed to destroy or disable satellites in orbit. Can be kinetic (physical collision), non-kinetic (lasers, cyber, jamming), or directed energy. Can be launched from ground, air, or space.

🇮🇳 Mission Shakti — March 27, 2019

India destroyed its own Microsat-R satellite at 283 km LEO using the PDV Mk-II missile. India became the 4th country with ASAT capability (after USA, Russia, China). Entire programme was indigenous.

⚠️ The Big Risk: Kessler Syndrome

ASAT tests create space debris. Enough debris → cascade of collisions → more debris → entire orbital zone becomes unusable. Called Kessler Syndrome. Russia's November 2021 ASAT test created debris that threatened the ISS.

🆕 Russia Nuclear ASAT (2024–25)

USA intelligence (Feb 2024) revealed Russia is developing a nuclear-armed ASAT. If detonated in orbit, could render LEO unusable for years. Russia vetoed UN Security Council resolution on this (April 2024). Most serious ASAT threat today.

📌 Prelims One-liner: India became the 4th country globally with ASAT capability on 27 March 2019 (Mission Shakti). Satellite destroyed at 283 km LEO. Weapon used: PDV Mk-II. Joint DRDO + ISRO programme. Do NOT confuse: Mission Shakti (2019) = ASAT | Mission Divyastra (March 2024) = Agni-V MIRV.
Section 02

🎬How ASAT Works — Live Visual

EARTH LEO (160–2000 km) — Main ASAT Target Zone MEO DRDO PDV Mk-II Launch Microsat-R 283 km altitude 💥 Debris field ISS (threatened by Russian 2021 ASAT debris) MISSION SHAKTI (March 27, 2019) 📍 Launched from: Abdul Kalam Island 🎯 Target: Microsat-R at 283 km LEO 🚀 Weapon: PDV Mk-II (DRDO) 🏆 Result: India = 4th ASAT nation
Section 03

⚔️Types of ASAT Weapons

💥

1. Kinetic Kill (Direct Ascent)

A missile is launched from the ground (or air/sea) and physically collides with the satellite at high speed. The impact destroys the satellite through kinetic energy alone — no warhead needed. Creates significant space debris. India's Mission Shakti used this method. Russia's 2021 test (Kosmos 1408 destroyed) and China's 2007 test also used kinetic kill. Most common and proven ASAT method.

📡

2. Non-Kinetic (Electronic / Cyber)

No physical destruction — satellites are disabled through: Jamming (overwhelming satellite signals with noise), Spoofing (sending false GPS signals), Cyber attacks (hacking ground control), Directed energy (high-powered lasers blinding sensors). No debris created — hard to attribute, plausibly deniable. Russia routinely jams GPS signals affecting civil aviation. China reportedly tested satellite jamming from GEO (2024).

🛸

3. Co-Orbital (Satellite-to-Satellite)

A weapon satellite is placed in orbit alongside the target satellite and then destroys it — through physical ramming, robotic arm grappling, or explosive detonation. Harder to detect as a weapon since it looks like any other satellite. Russia's Luch satellite has been observed manoeuvring near other satellites. China has satellites capable of rendezvous and proximity operations (RPO). The most dangerous future ASAT threat.

🔆

4. Directed Energy Weapons (DEW)

Use high-powered lasers, microwave beams, or particle beams to damage satellite sensors, solar panels, or electronics. No debris created. Can be used from ground, aircraft, or space. Russia's A-60 airborne laser (Sokol Eshelon) and China's ground-based laser programmes are active. The future battlefield — deniable, reversible (blinding), or permanent (melting).

💡 Classification also by launch platform: Ground-based ASAT (most common — India, China, Russia, USA) | Air-launched ASAT (USA's Bold Orion, Russia's MiG-31 mounted ASAT) | Sea-based (USA's Standard Missile-3 shot down USA-193 in 2008) | Space-based co-orbital (Russia's Luch, China's RPO satellites)
Section 04

🌍Countries with ASAT Capability — Full Table

CountryFirst Test / YearWeapon / ProgrammeKey Fact
🇺🇸 USA1959 (Bold Orion)Bold Orion ALBM (air-launched); SM-3 (sea); ASAT missile (1985)USA shot down its own dead satellite USA-193 in Feb 2008 (Operation Burnt Frost) using SM-3 sea-based missile. Announced voluntary moratorium on destructive ASAT tests in January 2022. Leading effort to ban nuclear ASATs.
🇷🇺 Russia (USSR)1968 (Istrebitel Sputnikov)Nudol (PL-19) direct-ascent; co-orbital; Luch proximity satellite; alleged nuclear ASATNovember 2021: Destroyed Kosmos 1408 — created 1,500+ debris pieces threatening ISS. Feb 2024: USA intelligence revealed Russia developing nuclear-armed ASAT. Russia vetoed UN resolution on this.
🇨🇳 China2007 (SC-19)SC-19 / DN-series direct-ascent; co-orbital RPO satellites; ground-based laser2007 test at 865 km altitude created worst ever single debris event (~3,000 trackable pieces). China now has 300+ J-20s suggesting air-launched capability too. Rapidly expanding RPO and co-orbital ASAT programmes. Launched experimental satellite to GEO potentially for jamming tests (2024).
🇮🇳 India2019 (Mission Shakti)PDV Mk-II (Prithvi Defence Vehicle, Mark-II) — ground-based direct-ascent kinetic killTest at 283 km LEO minimised debris. PM Modi announced it personally on national TV. 4th nation globally. India voluntarily kept test at low altitude to limit debris. No repeat test since 2019.
Section 05 — Most Important

🇮🇳Mission Shakti — Complete Deep Dive

🎯 Mission Shakti — 27 March 2019

27 Mar
Date (2019)
283 km
Target altitude (LEO)
4th
Country globally with ASAT
PDV MK-II
Weapon used (DRDO)

What happened: On March 27, 2019, DRDO launched the Prithvi Defence Vehicle Mark-II (PDV Mk-II) from Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam Island (Wheeler Island), Odisha. The missile intercepted and destroyed India's own defunct Microsat-R satellite — a satellite that ISRO had launched just 2 months earlier in January 2019 specifically for this test — at an altitude of approximately 283 km in Low Earth Orbit. PM Modi made a personal televised announcement calling India a "Space Power."

Why this altitude? India deliberately chose a very low LEO altitude so that debris would decay and re-enter Earth's atmosphere quickly (within weeks) rather than persist for years. This distinguished India's test from China's 2007 test at 865 km, which created debris that will persist for decades. However, NASA Chief Jim Bridenstine criticised even this test, saying it increased collision risk for the ISS by 44% for 10 days.

Technology used: The PDV Mk-II is derived from India's Ballistic Missile Defence (BMD) programme — the same technology used to intercept enemy ballistic missiles was adapted to intercept satellites. This "dual-use" makes it cost-effective. The test validated India's long-range kill vehicle technology, tracking systems, and precision guidance capability.

SignificanceExplanation
Strategic DeterrenceIndia can now credibly threaten enemy satellites — China's military navigation (BeiDou) and Pakistan's intelligence satellites can be targeted. Changes adversary calculations.
Space Power StatusJoins the exclusive club of USA, Russia, China. Makes India relevant in any future space arms control negotiations — you need to be a player to have a seat at the table.
BMD ValidationThe PDV Mk-II used in Mission Shakti is the same system India uses for Ballistic Missile Defence. The ASAT test simultaneously validated BMD capabilities.
Atmanirbharta in Space DefenceEntire programme was indigenous — DRDO + ISRO. No foreign technology. Demonstrates India can protect its growing space assets (navigation, communication, intelligence satellites) independently.
Fourth Dimension of WarfareSpace is now the "fourth dimension" after land, sea, and air. Mission Shakti gave India offensive and defensive capability in this domain — essential for modern multi-domain warfare.
Diplomatic SignalIndia's test came 12 years after China's (2007) and 34 years after USA's ASAT test (1985). Timing was deliberate — sent a signal to adversaries without triggering international sanctions.
Section 06

🌀Kessler Syndrome — The Debris Catastrophe

🌀 What is Kessler Syndrome?

Proposed by NASA scientist Donald Kessler in 1978: if the density of objects in LEO becomes high enough, collisions between objects create debris, which then causes more collisions, creating more debris — a self-sustaining cascade. Eventually, entire orbital bands become unusable for satellites, space stations, and launches — potentially for centuries. Also called the "Kessler Cascade" — the greatest long-term threat to all space activities.

⚠️ Current Debris Situation

As of 2025, there are ~27,000+ trackable objects in orbit. Only ~10,000 are active satellites. The rest is debris. From ASAT tests alone: USA, Russia, China, and India have collectively created 6,851 catalogued pieces of trackable debris, of which 2,920 pieces are still in orbit (Secure World Foundation, 2025 report).

🛸 Russia's 2021 ASAT Test — Worst Case Study

On November 15, 2021, Russia destroyed its own defunct Kosmos 1408 satellite at ~480 km LEO — creating 1,500+ trackable debris pieces and thousands of smaller ones. The ISS had to conduct emergency manoeuvres. Astronauts sheltered in emergency capsules. At 480 km, debris will persist for years. International outrage followed — many called it reckless and dangerous.

⚡ Nuclear ASAT: The Worst Possible

A nuclear weapon detonated in space would be far worse than kinetic ASAT tests. The EMP (electromagnetic pulse) would fry electronics in satellites across vast orbital bands. High-energy particles would remain trapped in the Van Allen belts for months or years. US Secretary of Defense Space Policy warned Congress that detonation "could render LEO unusable for some period of time" — potentially years. One bomb could destroy a quarter of all operational satellites.

🌐 Why Debris Affects Everyone

Space debris doesn't respect national boundaries. A debris cloud from an ASAT test will orbit the entire Earth repeatedly, threatening all nations' satellites — including the ISS with international crew, developing countries' communication satellites, weather satellites, and GPS infrastructure. One satellite collision can create hundreds of new debris pieces, each capable of destroying more satellites (Kessler Cascade). This is why space is called a global commons.

Section 07

⚖️International Law & ASAT

📜 Key International Legal Framework

Outer Space Treaty (OST) 1967
Signed by 130+ nations (including Russia). Bans nuclear weapons and WMDs in space (Article IV). Does NOT ban conventional ASAT weapons. Space shall be used for "peaceful purposes." Does not define "peaceful" — remains contested. Russia's nuclear ASAT would violate Article IV.
Liability Convention 1972
Countries are liable for damage caused by their space objects — including debris. However, it applies to accidental damage, not deliberate combat/attacks. Practical enforcement is difficult. China paid no compensation after 2007 test despite immense debris creation.
PAROS Resolution (UN)
Prevention of Arms Race in Outer Space — a non-binding UN General Assembly resolution calling for arms control in space. Annually debated but never produced a binding treaty. India, China, and Russia opposed the 2022 moratorium resolution on destructive ASAT tests. USA and Japan's 2024 UNSC resolution vetoed by Russia.
USA Moratorium (Jan 2022)
USA voluntarily announced it will not conduct destructive direct-ascent ASAT tests. Called on other nations to follow. As of 2025, Russia, China, and India have NOT joined this moratorium.
April 2024 UNSC Resolution
USA and Japan proposed UNSC Resolution S/2024/302 — calling on all nations not to place nuclear weapons or other WMDs in orbit and not to develop nuclear ASATs. Russia vetoed it. 65 states supported. Shows deep polarisation on space arms control.
Section 08 — Must Know

🆕Current Affairs — 2024, 2025 & 2026

Feb 2024Russia's Nuclear ASAT — USA Intel Alert

USA intelligence confirmed Russia is developing a nuclear-armed anti-satellite weapon (Feb 15, 2024 — Jake Sullivan briefing). Russia's Kosmos 2553 (launched Feb 2022) was revealed in December 2024 to carry a dummy nuclear warhead — testing components for a nuclear ASAT system. Russia denied it. Putin called the claim politically motivated.

Apr 2024Russia Vetoes UNSC Resolution

USA and Japan proposed UNSC Resolution S/2024/302 — calling on nations to commit to not deploying nuclear weapons or WMDs in space. Russia vetoed it, while China abstained. 65 states supported the resolution. Highlighted the deep international division on space arms control — UNSC structure means one veto can block global consensus.

2025Global ASAT Debris Count (Secure World Foundation)

The 2025 Global Counterspace Capabilities Report found USA, Russia, China, and India collectively created 6,851 catalogued debris pieces from ASAT tests — of which 2,920 pieces still in orbit. Russia's GPS jamming now affecting civilian aviation. China reportedly tested space-based satellite jamming from GEO. 12 countries developing counterspace capabilities.

2025UN PAROS Discussions Continue

The UN's "Open-Ended Working Group" (OEWG) and First Committee continued PAROS discussions in 2025. Despite wide agreement on the need to prevent space conflict, no binding treaty achieved. Geopolitical tensions (Russia-Ukraine war, US-China rivalry) making space arms control nearly impossible despite diplomatic efforts.

Dec 2024Kosmos 2553's Nuclear Role Confirmed

December 5, 2024: Research revealed that Russia's Kosmos 2553 satellite (launched Feb 2022) carried a dummy nuclear warhead to test components for a nuclear-armed ASAT. This confirmed US intelligence from February 2024. If a real nuclear ASAT is deployed and detonated, it could destroy 25%+ of all operational satellites and render LEO unusable.

2022USA Voluntary ASAT Moratorium

USA announced in January 2022 it would no longer conduct destructive direct-ascent ASAT missile tests — a unilateral moratorium. Called on other nations to follow. As of April 2026, Russia, China, and India have not formally joined. India's stance: Mission Shakti was a one-time demonstration; India has not tested again since 2019.

Nov 2021Russia Destroys Kosmos 1408

Russia destroyed its own defunct satellite Kosmos 1408 at 480 km LEO on November 15, 2021 — creating 1,500+ trackable debris pieces and forcing ISS astronauts to shelter in emergency capsules. Triggered global outrage. Context: Russia demonstrated it can threaten low-orbit military satellites used by US/NATO. Seen as a response to Russia's exclusion from the ISS programme.

IndiaNo Repeat Test — Strategic Restraint

Despite Mission Shakti's success, India has deliberately not conducted a second ASAT test. India also did not sign the 2022 ASAT moratorium but has shown restraint. In 2025, India focused on building the Defence Space Agency (DSA) and its space warfare doctrinal framework rather than further kinetic ASAT tests — balancing capability with diplomatic prudence.

🆕 Most Important 2024 Current Affairs for UPSC: Russia's alleged nuclear ASAT development (Feb 2024), Russia's UNSC veto of the US-Japan space weapons resolution (April 2024), and the confirmation that Kosmos 2553 tested nuclear ASAT components (Dec 2024). These three events together signal the most dangerous escalation in space weaponisation since the Cold War.
Section 09

🧾Previous Year Questions (PYQs)

UPSC Prelims — GS Paper I2019
With reference to Mission Shakti, consider the following statements:
1. It was a joint programme of DRDO and ISRO.
2. India became the third country to demonstrate ASAT capability after USA and Russia.
3. The missile used was PDV Mk-II, developed by DRDO.
Which is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2   (b) 1 and 3   (c) 2 and 3   (d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (b) 1 and 3. Statement 1 ✔ — Joint DRDO + ISRO. Statement 2 ✗ — India became the FOURTH country (after USA, Russia, and China — China tested in 2007). Statement 3 ✔ — PDV Mk-II (Prithvi Defence Vehicle Mark-II). This is one of the most favourite UPSC tricks — students forget China tested ASAT in 2007.
UPSC Mains — GS Paper III2022
Discuss the significance of anti-satellite (ASAT) weapons in modern warfare. What are the implications of ASAT development for international space security?
Structure: (1) Significance — destroys enemy space assets (GPS, intelligence, communication) blinding military; deterrence; force multiplier; fourth dimension. (2) Mission Shakti — India's test, 4th nation, PDV Mk-II, 283 km, PM Modi announcement. (3) Implications — space debris/Kessler Syndrome, arms race in space, threat to civilian satellites (weather, GPS, banking), nuclear ASAT risk (Russia 2024), undermines Outer Space Treaty. (4) Way forward — PAROS treaty, USA moratorium, UN resolution, Code of Conduct for Space.
UPSC Prelims — GS Paper I2020
The term "Kessler Syndrome" often seen in the news, is related to:
(a) Spread of a biological virus in space
(b) Cascading space debris collisions rendering orbits unusable
(c) Solar flares affecting satellite communications
(d) A theory of gravitational collapse of large stars
Answer: (b). Kessler Syndrome = cascading collision of space debris creating a self-sustaining chain of new debris, eventually making orbits unusable. Proposed by Donald Kessler (NASA) in 1978. A key concern with ASAT weapons that create debris. Not related to biology, solar flares, or stellar physics.
Section 10

📝Prelims Practice MCQs

Q1Which of the following correctly describes the weapon used in India's Mission Shakti (2019)?
(a) Agni-V ballistic missile with MIRV warhead
(b) PDV Mk-II (Prithvi Defence Vehicle Mark-II) — kinetic kill interceptor
(c) BrahMos cruise missile with proximity warhead
(d) S-400 SAM system adapted for space intercept
PDV Mk-II (Prithvi Defence Vehicle, Mark-II) — a kinetic kill vehicle derived from India's Ballistic Missile Defence programme. It physically collided with and destroyed the Microsat-R satellite at 283 km altitude through kinetic energy — no explosive warhead. Developed entirely indigenously by DRDO.
Q2Which of the following statements about Russia's ASAT activities in 2021–2024 is CORRECT?
(a) Russia signed the US voluntary moratorium on destructive ASAT tests in 2022
(b) Russia destroyed its own Kosmos 1408 satellite in 2021, creating debris that threatened the ISS
(c) Both: Russia destroyed Kosmos 1408 (2021) AND developed nuclear ASAT (revealed Feb 2024); Russia vetoed the UNSC resolution on space WMDs (April 2024)
(d) Russia's nuclear ASAT was already deployed in orbit by 2024
All three events are factual and important: Nov 2021 — Kosmos 1408 destroyed (1,500+ debris, ISS threatened). Feb 2024 — US intelligence revealed Russia developing nuclear ASAT. Apr 2024 — Russia vetoed UNSC resolution. Russia has NOT signed any moratorium. Nuclear ASAT not yet deployed in orbit as of 2025 — only tested components (Kosmos 2553 with dummy warhead).
Q3Which of the following countries first successfully demonstrated ASAT capability chronologically?
(a) China (2007), USA (1959), Russia (1968), India (2019)
(b) USA (1959/1985), Russia/USSR (1968), China (2007), India (2019)
(c) Russia (1960), USA (1963), China (2001), India (2019)
(d) USA (1985), Russia (1990), China (2010), India (2019)
Correct order: USA first (Bold Orion test 1959; operational ASAT 1985) → USSR/Russia second (Istrebitel Sputnikov interceptor operational 1968) → China third (SC-19 ASAT test January 2007, destroying Fengyun-1C at 865 km) → India fourth (Mission Shakti, March 27, 2019, 283 km). Remember: India = 4th, NOT 3rd. China (2007) came before India.
Q4The Outer Space Treaty of 1967 in the context of ASAT weapons:
(a) Completely bans all ASAT weapons including conventional kinetic kill systems
(b) Has no provisions relevant to ASAT weapons
(c) Bans nuclear weapons and WMDs in orbit but does NOT explicitly ban conventional ASAT weapons
(d) Allows ASAT weapons only for defensive purposes, not offensive use
The Outer Space Treaty (1967) Article IV bans the placement of nuclear weapons and WMDs in orbit or on celestial bodies. However, it does NOT ban conventional ASAT weapons — which is why India, China, Russia, and the USA can legally conduct kinetic kill tests (though the debris implications remain a concern). Russia's proposed nuclear ASAT would violate the OST directly.
Q5Which of the following correctly explains "non-kinetic" ASAT methods?
(a) Launching a missile that physically collides with a satellite
(b) Sending a co-orbital satellite to ram a target satellite
(c) Jamming satellite signals, cyber attacks on ground control, or using lasers to blind sensors — without physical destruction
(d) Detonating a nuclear weapon near a satellite cluster
Non-kinetic ASAT = no physical collision. Methods include: signal jamming (overwhelming satellite's transmissions), GPS spoofing (sending false signals), cyber attacks on ground stations controlling the satellite, directed energy (lasers to blind optical sensors or damage solar panels), and microwave weapons. Key advantage: creates no space debris and is harder to attribute. Russia routinely jams GPS signals affecting civil aviation.
Section 11

🧩Mains Answer Framework

150-Word Answer
250-Word Answer
Introduction

Anti-Satellite (ASAT) weapons — designed to destroy or disable satellites in orbit — have emerged as a critical dimension of modern warfare, with space increasingly the "fourth domain" after land, sea, and air. India joined this strategic arena on March 27, 2019, when Mission Shakti destroyed the Microsat-R satellite at 283 km LEO using the PDV Mk-II interceptor, making India the fourth ASAT-capable nation.

Body

ASAT weapons range from kinetic kill (physical collision), non-kinetic (jamming, cyber, directed energy), and co-orbital interceptors. Mission Shakti demonstrated India's deterrence capability — ability to target adversary satellites (GPS, intelligence, communication) — and validated BMD technology. However, the implications are severe: ASAT tests create space debris risking Kessler Syndrome (cascading collisions rendering orbits unusable), threatening all nations' satellites. Russia's development of a nuclear ASAT (revealed February 2024) represents the gravest escalation — a single detonation could render LEO unusable for years. Russia vetoed the UNSC resolution on space WMDs in April 2024.

Conclusion

The international community urgently needs a binding treaty through PAROS. India must balance its ASAT capability with diplomatic engagement — advocating for responsible space behaviour, supporting the Outer Space Treaty framework, and establishing a comprehensive Code of Conduct for space to preserve space as a global commons.

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Introduction

Space, once the domain of scientific exploration, has increasingly become a contested theatre of military competition. Anti-Satellite (ASAT) weapons — systems designed to destroy or disable satellites in orbit — sit at the heart of this militarisation. India's landmark Mission Shakti (March 27, 2019) marked India's entry into this exclusive strategic club, with profound implications for national security, space safety, and international relations.

Mission Shakti

India's DRDO launched the PDV Mk-II (Prithvi Defence Vehicle Mark-II) from Abdul Kalam Island, Odisha, destroying the Microsat-R satellite at 283 km LEO — making India the fourth nation with demonstrated ASAT capability after USA, Russia (1968), and China (2007). The test was entirely indigenous, validated India's BMD technology in a space context, and sent a credible deterrence signal to adversaries who rely on satellites for military navigation (China's BeiDou) and intelligence. India strategically chose a low altitude to minimise debris persistence.

Types and Implications

ASAT weapons range from kinetic kill (India, China, Russia, USA tested), non-kinetic (jamming, cyber, directed energy — used routinely), and co-orbital interceptors (Russia's Luch satellite). The fundamental danger is space debris: Russia's 2021 destruction of Kosmos 1408 at 480 km created 1,500+ pieces threatening the ISS. Enough debris triggers Kessler Syndrome — a cascading collision cascade rendering entire orbital bands unusable for decades. The gravest new threat is Russia's nuclear ASAT programme, confirmed by US intelligence in February 2024; if detonated, it could destroy 25%+ of operational satellites and render LEO unusable for years. Russia vetoed the UNSC resolution (April 2024) attempting to prohibit space WMDs.

Legal Framework & Way Forward

The Outer Space Treaty (1967) bans nuclear weapons in space but not conventional ASATs — a critical gap. PAROS (Prevention of Arms Race in Outer Space) remains aspirational without binding commitments. USA's voluntary 2022 moratorium on destructive ASAT tests was a positive step, but China, Russia, and India have not joined. India must lead by example — promoting binding space debris mitigation norms, supporting a comprehensive Code of Conduct for Space, and leveraging its ASAT capability as diplomatic currency in multilateral negotiations rather than escalating through further tests.

Conclusion

Mission Shakti demonstrated that India is a credible space power capable of protecting its space assets. But space as a global commons demands more than deterrence — it requires collective security frameworks. India's challenge is to simultaneously maintain its ASAT deterrence, protect against the nuclear ASAT threat, and champion the international norms that keep space from becoming the next arms race frontier.

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Section 12

🧠Memory Tricks & Quick Facts

🔑 Lock These In for Prelims Day

OrderUSA → Russia → China → India (chronological). "URCI" — Uncle Ram Calls India. USA (1959/85), Russia/USSR (1968), China (2007), India (2019 = 4th). NOT 3rd!
Mission Shakti27 March 2019 | 283 km LEO | PDV Mk-II | Microsat-R destroyed | launched from Abdul Kalam Island, Odisha | Joint DRDO + ISRO.
Shakti ≠ DivyastraMission Shakti (2019) = ASAT (destroys satellite). Mission Divyastra (March 11, 2024) = Agni-V MIRV (nuclear delivery). Different events, different years — favourite UPSC trap!
KesslerProposed by Donald Kessler (NASA, 1978). Debris → collisions → more debris → cascade → orbits unusable. Also called "Kessler Cascade". Russia's 2021 test = worst recent example.
OST 1967Outer Space Treaty bans nuclear weapons in space (Article IV). Does NOT ban conventional ASAT. "Peaceful purposes" clause — contested definition. Russia's nuclear ASAT would violate OST directly.
Russia 2024Russia developing nuclear-armed ASAT (revealed Feb 2024). Kosmos 2553 (launched Feb 2022) had dummy nuclear warhead for tests (revealed Dec 2024). Russia vetoed UNSC resolution (Apr 2024). Most dangerous current ASAT development.
FactAnswer
India's ASAT test nameMission Shakti
Date of Mission Shakti27 March 2019
Altitude of test283 km (Low Earth Orbit)
Weapon usedPDV Mk-II (Prithvi Defence Vehicle)
Satellite destroyedMicrosat-R
Launch locationAbdul Kalam Island (Wheeler Island), Odisha
India's rank among ASAT nations4th (after USA, Russia, China)
Organising agenciesDRDO + ISRO (joint programme)
Russia's 2021 ASAT test targetKosmos 1408 — created 1,500+ debris pieces
Russia nuclear ASAT — revealedFebruary 2024 (US intelligence, Jake Sullivan briefing)
UNSC resolution vetoed by RussiaApril 2024 — S/2024/302 (USA-Japan proposal)
Treaty banning nuclear weapons in spaceOuter Space Treaty 1967, Article IV
USA voluntary moratorium on ASAT testsJanuary 2022
Kessler Syndrome proposed byDonald Kessler, NASA, 1978
ASAT debris from all tests (2025)6,851 catalogued pieces; 2,920 still in orbit
Section 13

FAQs — Quick Reference

Why is India's ASAT test at 283 km considered responsible, unlike China's 2007 test?
The altitude determines how long debris persists in orbit. At 283 km (India's test), atmospheric drag is significant — debris decays and re-enters Earth's atmosphere within weeks to a few months. At 865 km (China's 2007 test), debris can remain in orbit for decades because atmospheric drag is negligible. China's 2007 test created ~3,000 trackable pieces that will persist until the 2030s-2040s, threatening all satellites in that orbital band. India deliberately chose low altitude precisely to demonstrate responsible behaviour — but NASA still noted a temporary 44% increased collision risk for the ISS.
What would Russia's nuclear ASAT actually do if detonated?
A nuclear detonation in space would cause: (1) Massive EMP (Electromagnetic Pulse) that fries electronics in satellites within its range — potentially disabling hundreds of satellites across orbital bands. (2) Energetic charged particles trapped in the Van Allen radiation belts for months to years — creating a persistent radiation belt that degrades satellite electronics over time. (3) Catastrophic debris from destroyed satellites triggering Kessler Cascade. US Secretary of Defense Space Policy testified that detonation "could render LEO unusable for some period of time." A single bomb could disable or destroy 25%+ of all operational satellites — taking down GPS, internet, weather, banking infrastructure, and military communications globally. This is why it's called an "indiscriminate weapon."
How does Mission Shakti help India strategically against China and Pakistan?
China relies on its BeiDou GPS system for military navigation — precision missile guidance, troop coordination, and naval positioning along the LAC. Pakistan relies on its satellites for intelligence and surveillance. India's ASAT capability means: in a conflict, India could threaten or neutralise these satellite-dependent capabilities, degrading the adversary's military effectiveness. This is a force multiplier — India doesn't need more jets or tanks, it can "blind" the adversary. The deterrence value is also significant: adversaries know they cannot rely exclusively on space-based systems when facing India. This shifts the strategic calculus significantly, especially for China's precision military doctrine.
What is PAROS and why has it failed to produce a binding treaty?
PAROS = Prevention of Arms Race in Outer Space — an annual UN General Assembly resolution calling for negotiations on space arms control. It has been debated since the 1980s but has never produced a legally binding treaty for several reasons: (1) Great power competition — USA, Russia, and China all have competing space military interests they don't want constrained. (2) Verification challenges — how do you verify whether a satellite is a weapon? Many military satellites are "dual-use." (3) UNSC veto power — Russia or China can veto any binding Security Council resolution. (4) Definitions — no international consensus on what constitutes a "space weapon." The 2024 UNSC resolution specifically targeting nuclear ASATs was vetoed by Russia — demonstrating why even narrow, specific proposals fail.
What is India's current Space Defence posture after Mission Shakti?
Since Mission Shakti in 2019, India has: (1) Established the Defence Space Agency (DSA) under the Integrated Defence Staff — responsible for space-related defence activities, including offensive and defensive operations. (2) Created the Defence Space Research Organisation (DSRO) for developing space warfare technologies. (3) Worked on developing counter-space capabilities beyond ASAT — including electronic warfare against satellites, cyber capabilities, and hardening its own satellites against attack. (4) Deliberately NOT conducted a second ASAT test — maintaining capability while exercising diplomatic restraint. India's approach is "responsible space power" — demonstrate capability, restrain deployment, and engage in diplomatic norms-building.
Section 14

🏁Conclusion

Space — The New Battlefield and the Last Global Commons

Mission Shakti was not just a missile test — it was India's declaration that it intends to remain a credible power in the era of space warfare. By becoming the fourth ASAT nation, India gained a seat at the table in any future space arms control negotiations, protected its growing space assets from adversary threats, and validated a decade of BMD technology investment in a single, strategically calibrated demonstration.

But the world India entered in 2019 has grown more dangerous since. Russia's alleged nuclear ASAT programme represents a qualitative escalation that no existing treaty adequately addresses. A nuclear detonation in space would be a civilisational catastrophe — destroying the satellite infrastructure that underpins GPS, banking, weather forecasting, internet, and military command across every nation on Earth. The debris would linger in the Van Allen belts for years, threatening satellites that developing nations and wealthy ones alike depend on equally.

India's challenge is to hold both truths simultaneously: ASAT capability is a strategic necessity in a world where adversaries weaponise space, and yet space is a global commons that no nation has the right to render unusable for others. This means maintaining deterrence while championing the Outer Space Treaty framework, pushing for a comprehensive Code of Conduct for Space Activities, supporting the PAROS process, and — most urgently — joining the call for a binding moratorium on nuclear weapons in space before Russia's Kosmos programme goes from dummy warheads to live deployment.

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