The Satellites That Watch the World

The Briefing

Your government depends on satellite infrastructure to a degree that has not been registered at the level where decisions are made. The dependency is growing. The infrastructure is increasingly contested. The decisions about who controls it, and on what terms, are being made now - and will shape the next half-century.The Satellites That Watch the World: The Briefing is a concise, decision-focused guide for government and policy leaders. It sets out what is in orbit, who controls it, where the leverage points are, what the rules are (and are not), and what a government serious about the question should do this week, this year, and this decade.

What the briefing covers:

  • What is actually in orbit - and what the four global navigation systems and the new broadband mega-constellations mean for national strategy
  • The four services that run the modern economy: navigation, timing, communication, observation
  • Who controls what - the United States, China, Russia, Europe, and the commercial operators
  • The five races now reshaping the orbital layer, and where each one is going
  • The governance gaps, the diplomatic blockages, and what partial governance now looks like
  • Where the leverage actually sits - and how to measure your country's dependency honestly
  • What to do next week, next year, and next decade - concrete actions, organised by time horizon
Each chapter closes with a takeaway box identifying concrete actions. The briefing ends with a list of questions to put to your officials.This is the companion volume to the full-length The Satellites That Watch the World, written by the same author for readers who have more time. The two editions share the same argument and the same evidence base. The briefing is for the senior reader who needs the structure, the conclusions, and the next steps without the seventeen chapters of context.

mai 2026, env. 74 pages, Anglais
Independently Published
979-8-1985-4737-7

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