China deploys swarm of satellites to monitor military exercises in Australia

Authored by abc.net.au and submitted by Tall_Fix9575

Hundreds of Chinese satellites are currently passing over Australia collecting intelligence on military training activities involving the United States and other regional partners.

Key points: Three Chinese geostationary orbit satellites manoeuvred into position over northern Australia to monitor July's "Talisman Sabre" war games

Three Chinese geostationary orbit satellites manoeuvred into position over northern Australia to monitor July's "Talisman Sabre" war games Hundreds of smaller satellites are surveilling "Exercise Malabar", which involves warships from the US, India and Japan

Hundreds of smaller satellites are surveilling "Exercise Malabar", which involves warships from the US, India and Japan Experts say Beijing has extraordinary capability to gather intelligence on Australian military operations

Commercial space data obtained by the ABC details the full scale of Beijing's surveillance on the recently completed "Exercise Talisman Sabre", as well as the "Exercise Malabar" naval drills now being held off Sydney.

In July, Canberra-based defence company EOS Space Systems tracked three Chinese geostationary orbit satellites manoeuvring into position below the equator to monitor the Talisman Sabre war games across northern Australia.

China's Shiyan 12-01 satellite was detected drifting westerly over the northern Australia region, while the Shijian-17 and Shijian-23 satellites were tracked drifting easterly to observe multiple areas where exercises were being conducted.

Since Exercise Malabar began on August 10, hundreds of much smaller low-orbit satellites (LEOs) have also been tracked completing thousands of flights at much lower altitudes over the Australian continent, focusing on the activity of warships around Sydney Harbour.

"We've been collecting optical surveillance data on Earth observing Chinese satellites during the Talisman Sabre and Malabar exercises and what that's showing is quite a lot of activity surveying the ground during those events," James Bennett from EOS Space Systems said.

"We've seen over 300 satellites surveying ground-based activities and the number of overflights is over 3,000 since the start of the Malabar exercise centred around the Sydney Harbour bay area," Dr Bennett added.

Exercise Malabar involves joint naval exercises between Australia and warships from the United States, India and Japan.

Chinese satellites have been surveilling Exercise Malabar. ( Supplied: Department of Defence )

Space is considered an increasingly important domain for modern war-fighting operations across the globe, with Australia's recent Defence Strategic Review categorising it as a key element of a more integrated force.

The data on China's recent space activity was collected using telescopes stationed outside Canberra and at Learmonth in Western Australia, which was then analysed by EOS staff to precisely identify the satellites and their flight paths.

Dr Bennett said the large number of geostationary and low-orbit Chinese satellites currently above Australia is providing Beijing with extremely detailed and "persistent observation" of what is occurring on the mainland and offshore.

"They can glean military intelligence on what the capabilities and equipment are, as well as processes of ground military activities; they can use this to drive a fair bit of intelligence on military operations in Australia."

The Defence Department has declined to give details on how it was monitoring and mitigating any risks posed by the substantial Chinese satellite activity over Australia during what it describes as "well-publicised, complex war-fighting exercises".

"The ADF takes prudent measures to safeguard the information security of Australian and participating forces," a defence spokesperson told the ABC.

"Defence tracks satellite movements as part of broader space domain awareness efforts."

James Brown, the chief executive of the Space Industry Association of Australia, said the numbers of Chinese satellites dedicated to tracking the military exercises is in line with Beijing's growing presence in space.

"We've seen an extraordinary amount of Chinese intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance satellites being launched in recent years and Australia is a target for all that activity; space is becoming a critical domain for any future conflict and any potential conflict," he said.

"They have hundreds of military and intelligence satellites which are not only collecting on Australia and its allies but in some cases dazzling Australian and allied satellites and manoeuvring closely to other satellites.

"Australia by contrast doesn't own any military satellites and certainly doesn't have any capability to collect the sort of imagery that China's been collecting over Sydney Harbour this week."

In June, Labor announced it would scrap a Morrison government program to develop new Australian satellites to gather data on natural disasters, agriculture and marine surveillance, as it searches for budget savings.

"The irony being that whilst China has had 300 satellites focused on collecting observation data Australia this week, our own government just cut the program that would've given us our first four able to do the same thing," Mr Brown said.

calls1 on August 20th, 2023 at 13:11 UTC »

I hope they are 🤷‍♂️

This is just regular behaviour. Who wouldn’t be trying to get some intel on the military exercises of rival powers.

I say I hope not because I hope for the sake of China. But frankly if they were so incompetent they weren’t keeping an eye on this that’d be scary and destabilising. You don’t want China to be totally uninformed of the measures to combat them or else they have room to misinterpret and miscalculate the strength of their rivals and attack when correct information shows them they should not.

JFHermes on August 20th, 2023 at 12:58 UTC »

We're performing military exercises developed with China being the enemy combatant. China is watching what we do to learn how prepared we are. We're watching China watch to understand how much we think they know and how we can potentially counter them in the future.

Seems like a bit of a 'so what'? kind of situation.

Tall_Fix9575 on August 20th, 2023 at 06:09 UTC »

SS: Malabar exercise, which has become a brand for QUAD, is now being monitored by Chinese satellites. Australia in particular feels annoyed by this as Australia doesn't have any military satellites to monitor China or at least threaten China with their own satellites.

It seems like China is also trying to send a message to USA by saying that they don't care about the newly formed Space force battalion to monitor adversary satellites.