Stark wrote:How many ASAT interception have they made again?
By placing things into a stable orbit, they have demonstrated defacto capability, in much the same sense if you build a SAM system capable of engaging high and very fast targets, you gain defacto ABM capability.
Remember, satellites have zero to limited manouverability, so you just need to be precise enough in your launch capabilities to put a chunk of debris into an orbit that intersects the satellite's orbit at such and such time. Even if the satellite can be directed into a higher orbit to avoid your crude ASAT kill mechanism by Space Command, you've effectively partially mission killed it, by forcing it into a non-optimal orbit for it's purpose, and expended a not insignificant fraction of it's onboard propellant to evade your kill mechanism.
How many launch sites? How mobile?
Right now, with their present level of rocketry, which is largely liquid fuelled, I would say one or two sites. But the Iranians have been working on solids for military purposes. Once they successfully launch an all solid missile, you're looking at basically any road strong enough to take a fully loaded TEL.
Of course all this cut n paste is irrelevant because drones aren't solely dependent on satlinks
Ah, but they are, along with a shitload of other things which need high bandwidth over long distances.
Even now, with just a bunch of dumb and stupid Predators and Reapers flying around Iraq and Afghanistan, we're straining our satellite capabilities to the limit in terms of communications bandwidth; which is also being strained by OTHER things; such as the need for planning, C3I etc purposes for normal military operations
How many will Iran take out on day one?
I've already detailed how Iran doesn't have to take out a huge number.
Taking out a number of satellites that you could measure on one hand would seriously cripple US C3I and Reconnaisance assets in the Persion Gulf Theater for a non-trivial amount of time, until replacements could be launched, or manouvered in from other orbits.
He'll, since people are talking about putative dronefleets (which you dismiss), even if god declared drones had to use satellites, anyone going drone mad would build more. Uh oh.
The Obama administration just killed proposals for a new series of communications satellites that would have used high powered lasers to carry far, far, more bandwidth than the older ones put up in the 1980s and 1990s.