German space commander warns Russian nuclear weapon could destroy 'global commons': 'Nobody would survive'
The commander of German Space Command, Maj. Gen. Michael Traut, said a Russian nuclear weapon detonating in orbit could permanently destroy "global commons."
Speaking at an event Friday night on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, Traut said he was left with "more questions than answers" regarding U.S. intelligence reportedly indicating that Russia is developing an anti-satellite weapon in space with a nuclear component. Traut spelled out the consequences of a worst-case scenario.
"If somebody dares to explode a nuclear weapon in high atmosphere or even space, this would be more or less the end of the usability of that global commons [of orbit]," Traut said, according to Politico, describing the devastating effects of an indiscriminate nuclear blast in space radiating out a satellite-frying electromagnetic pulse across low earth orbit.
"Nobody would survive an action like that – no satellite, either Chinese or Russian and American or European," Traut added. "If somebody calculates rationally, nobody would employ such a weapon in space."
US LAUNCHES MISSILE-DETECTING SATELLITES INTO ORBIT AS CONCERNS ABOUT RUSSIA IN SPACE GROW
Ludwig Möller, the director of the European Space Policy Institute, predicted an economic fallout of trillions of dollars in the banking and energy sectors if Russia were to successfully knock out commercial satellites. While China and India are also fast developing their space technologies, Russia has been conducting military aerospace deals with the sanctioned states of Iran and North Korea while the war continues in Ukraine, according to Politico.
Germany, France and the United Kingdom opened their prospective space commands over the past several years to build credible defense of