The origins and evolution of the Defense Support Program (part 1)
Infrared for missile warning
by Dwayne A. Day
Monday, August 22, 2022
In January 2020, American forces in the Middle East were on high alert, expecting an attack from Iran in response to an American attack that killed a senior Iranian general. Intelligence information indicated that a missile attack was likely, and so the United States Space Force used its Space Based Infrared Satellites (SBIRS) to monitor Iran’s missile launch sites. Staring sensors on the satellites in geosynchronous and highly elliptical orbits were focused on the launch locations, and when they spotted the infrared signatures of missiles, they were able to precisely track them and predict their targets, providing that information to American forces in Iraq with enough warning time for them to take cover.
SBIRS is just the latest in a long line of American missile warning satellites. It has been in operation for over a decade, taking over most of the space-based warning mission from the earlier Defense Support Program (DSP) satellites. The last DSP satellite was launched in 2007, but the program is still listed among operational systems by the US Space Force. If any DSP satellites remain in operation, they are likely serving in secondary roles or backup reserve to SBIRS.
The origins of DSP
Early warning of potential attack on the United States was one of the primary concerns of the fledgling American military space program. Early efforts concentrated on low orbit shortwave infrared satellites under the name Midas, for Missile Defense Alarm System. Midas evolved into Program 461 and test flights were conducted from 1963 to 1966.
The ultimate nightmare for US generals was that a Soviet FOBS could be launched over the South Pole and strike the United States totally undetected, destroying command and control centers before a response could be made. But even a FOBS launched to the east or west could present a major problem, since it might go undetected by radar until as little as five minutes from impact.
But although the latter tests of Program 461 satellites were successful, there were still questions as to the cost-effectiveness of satellites versus ground-based radars for the early warning mission. Space-based systems offered two advantages. The first was the ability to increase warning time of a Soviet attack. The Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS), consisting of radars located at Clear, Alaska; Thule, Greenland; and Fylingdales, Great Britain, could provide approximately 15 minutes warning time of a ballistic missile attack on the United States. They were backed up by a series of coastal radars intended to warn of submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) attack. A satellite-based system could increase the ICBM warning time from 15 to as much as 27 minutes, as well as double the warning time for many SLBM launches.