.mil censor$ commerc. satellite imagery

Khoder bin Hakkin hakkin at sarin.com
Tue Oct 16 05:25:35 PDT 2001


             http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGA01DJ9VSC.html

Military Buys Exclusive Rights to Commercial Satellite's Pictures of War
                                  Zone
               By John J. LumpkinAssociated Press Writer
                         Published: Oct 16, 2001
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S. military is paying for the exclusive rights
to commercial satellite imagery of Afghanistan even though its own
satellites are thought to take far better pictures.

This could serve two purposes: to provide an extra eye on Afghanistan,
and to prevent anyone else from peeking at the war zone.

The images of the Ikonos satellite, among the best available to the
public, will add to those collected by military satellites and
airplanes, Joan Mears, a spokeswoman for the National Imagery and
Mapping Agency, said.

Mears declined to discuss how much the government is paying for the
pictures, only saying that the agency has paid for exclusive access to
the area involved in Operation Enduring Freedom, the military code name
for the strikes in Afghanistan.

The agency's contract with Denver-based Space Imaging Inc. began Oct. 7
and is believed to be in the multimillion-dollar range.

A Space Imaging executive said the U.S. government had recently signed a
large contract with his company, not only buying exclusive rights to the
imagery but paying for all the time that the satellite is over the
target area.

This serves to prevent anyone else from using Ikonos to take pictures of
the war zone. It also prevents Space Imaging from selling the pictures
to anyone else, which the company does with most of its imagery.

Mark Brender, executive director of government affairs and corporate
communications for Space Imaging, declined to reveal the amount of the
contract but said "it was a wonderful business transaction."

Top-of-the-line Ikonos pictures have one-meter resolution, meaning the
satellite can distinguish features on the ground one meter in size or
larger.

"You can count the cars in a parking lot, tell which are pickups and
sedans, and tell what color they are," Brender said.

Ikonos pictures can cost buyers up to $200 per square kilometer of
imagery, he said. Quick turnaround costs an extra $3,000, he said.

The resolution achieved by U.S. military satellites is kept secret, but
it is probably about 10 times better than Ikonos can provide, said
Steven Aftergood, a government secrecy analyst and intelligence expert
with the Federation of American Scientists, a Washington-based watchdog
group. He estimated military satellites can take pictures that
distinguish objects as small as 10 centimeters in size.

But buying Ikonos imagery will still serve some military purpose,
Aftergood said. U.S. military satellites and reconnaissance aircraft
cannot be over the war zone at every instant, and Ikonos could serve as
a backup. The satellite could also be used to take images where less
resolution is needed, freeing up military satellites for more detailed
work in the hunt for Osama bin Laden.

Buying exclusive rights to the pictures will keep the public - and the
Taliban and bin Laden - from knowing where the U.S. military is looking.
If a series of pictures of the airfield at Kandahar suddenly showed up
on Space Imaging's Web site, that could provide a clue to U.S. military
plans.

But the government is also denying the public the use of an important
tool for oversight of its activities, Aftergood said, noting the media
frequently buys satellite pictures of areas of news interest.

"At the moment, we're essentially dependent on the Pentagon as a sole
source for battle information and damage assessment," he said. "This
commercial imagery would provide one independent channel for assessing
the conduct of the war."

In Afghanistan, groups could also use such imagery to track the
movements of refugees and better plan food supplies for them, Aftergood
said.





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