How many anti-satellite weapons are currently in orbit? (Source: T-Minus Space Daily)
Published on
1-minute read · 131 words
Brandon discusses a red-alert moment: he believes we’ll see unmistakable preparation for a Viasat-scale strike against satellite infrastructure within a year—most likely originating from Russia—unless the industry moves to a permanent “shields up” posture.
Key topics
- Indicators of escalation: Russian airspace incursions, GPS jamming across Eastern Europe, EUCOM commanders’ warnings about deteriorating space norms, and open-source counts of 200+ ASAT weapons on orbit all point to a more aggressive playbook.
- Attack surface & tradecraft: Expect attackers to chase SATCOM and Earth-observation systems through soft edge targets—think unpatched Cisco ASA gear—then stage malware, persist, and maneuver until they reach the “crown jewels.”
- Defender playbook: Brandon pushed for immediate patching and telemetry, zero-trust overlays, secure comms investments (optical links, self-healing/digital twins), and business-continuity drills because civilian operators remain primary targets.
More writing
Related writing
Three pieces tagged the same.
1-minute read
Listening In on the listeners. (Source: The CyberWire Daily Podcast)
Brandon joined Maria Varmazis to discuss space infrastructure.
1-minute read
Mission possible? Navigating tech adoption in the DoD. (Source: CyberWire Special Edition)
Brandon interviewed BMNT founder Pete Newell about “mission acceleration,” why defense innovation is a people problem more than a tech problem, and how to move operator-validated ideas through the Pentagon’s maze.
1-minute read
Steve Blank, national security, and the dilemma of technology disruption. (Part 2 of 2) (Source: CyberWire Special Edition)
Brandon closed his two-part conversation with Steve Blank by focusing on how the Gordian Knot Center maps bureaucratic bottlenecks, mobilizes private capital, and helps the DoD out-innovate pacing threats like China.