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The Integrated Space Cell was the nodal agency within the Government of India which oversees the security of its space-based military and civilian hardware systems. It was to be jointly operated by all the three services of the Indian Armed Forces, the civilian Defence Research and Development Organisation, and the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). This agency was Superseded by Defence Space Agency.


The Integrated Space Cell has been set up to utilize more effectively the country's space-based assets for military purposes and to look into threats to these assets. It functions under the Integrated Defense Services headquarters of the Indian Ministry of Defense. This command will leverage space technology including satellites. Unlike an aerospace command, where the air force controls most of its activities, the Integrated Space Cell envisages cooperation and coordination between the three services as well as civilian agencies dealing with space. The armed forces are increasingly dependent on satellites for communication, aircraft and missile guidance, reconnaissance, and surveillance. Satellites are also essential for civilian purposes such as weather forecasting, disaster management, and communications. This has made it important to work out measures to protect India's space-based assets.


Formation

The formation of an Integrated Space Cell was announced on 10 June 2010 by the former Defence Minister A. K. Antony who said it was being established because of "the growing threat" to India's space assets. "Offensive counter-space systems like anti-satellite weaponry, new classes of heavy-lift and small boosters, and an improved array of military space systems have emerged in our neighborhood" stressing that these need to be countered. Announcing its setting up, Antony said while India remains committed to non-weaponization of space, the emergence of offensive counter-space systems and anti-satellite weaponry posed new threats that had to be countered. The defense minister's announcement comes about 16 months after India's then-chief of air staff, Air Chief Marshal Shashi Tyagi, told the media that India was "in the process of setting up an aerospace command to exploit outer space by integrating its capabilities". The Integrated Space Cell has apparently been operational for six months before its formal announcement by Defence Minister Shri. A. K. Antony.


The announcement came less than a month after China used a medium-range ballistic missile to shoot down one of its own aging satellites, a Chinese Feng Yun 1C polar orbit weather satellite that it had launched into orbit in 1999. With that, China displayed to the world that it had the technology to knock out a satellite in space, expertise that only two other countries - Russia and the United States of America have. On 27 March 2019 India also demonstrated this technology by knocking one of its own satellites, making it the fourth nation after U.S, Russia, and China to do so. But there are broader reasons behind its formation, especially with the Indian Armed Forces relying more on space-based assets for communication, reconnaissance, and surveillance.


On 27 March 2019, Indian prime minister Narendra Modi announced the successful launch of India's first ASAT. The interceptor was able to strike a test satellite at a 300-kilometer (186 mi) altitude in low earth orbit (LEO), thus successfully testing its ASAT missile. The interceptor was launched at around 05:40 UTC at the Integrated Test Range (ITR) in Chandipur, Odisha, and hit its target Microsat-R after 168 seconds. The operation was named Mission Shakti. The missile system was developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO)—a research wing of the Indian defense services. With this test, India became the fourth nation with anti-satellite missile capabilities. India stated that this capability is a deterrent and is not directed against any nation.




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