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Spies in the Sky: Surveillance Satellites in War and Peace (Springer Praxis Books / Space Exploration)


by Pat Norris

List Price: $34.95
Price: $29.71
You Save: $5.24 (15%)
Available: Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank: 825418
Studio: Praxis
Binding: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 222
Publication Date: October 04, 2007
Publisher: Praxis


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EDITORIAL REVIEWS

Product Description

In ‘Spies in the Sky' Patrick Norris responds to the occasion of the 50th Anniversary of the dawn of the Space Age – the launch of Sputnik 1 – with a review of the most important historical applications of space science for the benefit of the human race during that half century, focusing particularly on the prevention of nuclear war. The author addresses the oft quoted conclusion that the Moon landings and the ‘race to the Moon’ between the two superpowers were a side effect of the Cold War, by describing what he believes was the more important event – the use of satellites by military to prevent the Cold War becoming a ‘hot war’. In developing the story the author casts a spotlight on a little-known aspect of the Space Age, namely the military dimension. Today military satellites represent 25 percent of all satellites in orbit, and they are just as important now in preventing regional nuclear war as they were in preventing global Armageddon more than 30 years ago.

Beginning with a discussion of Sputnik 1, and the impact of its launch, both on the Soviets and on the West, the book continues to show the social, economic and scientific benefits of satellites today in our daily lives some 50 years later. The author introduces the concept of the Cold War nuclear stand off and mutually assured destruction and shows how spy satellites developed, and the problems of using them to verify arms limitation treaties. He identifies the significance of the ABM Treaty and of SALT and demonstrates how satellites were used to underpin such agreements. He then discusses fringe nuclear powers, such as the UK, France and China and the concept of nuclear non-proliferation. He concludes by looking at the regional tensions of today, including Israel and Arabic nations, India and Pakistan and the threat posed by North Korea, and looks ahead to what the future holds.



CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 3.5 based on 2 reviews)

Not as thorough as expected  
Spies in the Sky, Surveillance Satellites in War and Peace.

From the title, I expected a book covering all aspects of spying from space. Instead, the author focuses on the first generation Corona program, based on film return in re-entry capsules. This is normal, because he was working in this project. Still, very little is said about other kinds of surveillance satellites, such as the signal interception, electronic signature intelligence, missile detection, atomic explosion detection, submarines monitoring, etc. No description of the Echelon program, or the Vortex system, for example.

Since the book is not restricted on US satellites, little is said about Soviet counterparts, some about the Zenith, equivalent to the Corona, but not much more. There is not even one word about the Almaz soviet program, which is one of the few examples of human operating spying devices from space, except perhaps the space shuttle.

His style is more narrative than descriptive, making the reading very easy. The subject is well introduced, but some comparison tables would have helped to gather and compare data.

As a conclusion, if this book had been titled :

US spy satellites, the Corona Program, it would have been an excellent book.

P. Haubrechts
August 24, 2008

Good review of topic  
Norris is an englishman who has spent over 40 years in the aerospace industry and time on the U.S. Apollo program. Here he reviews the history and technology of spy satellites. Readers will find a good, fairly clear review of the topic based on secondary, unclassified resources. The first half of the book is heavily historical while the second half devotes more space to strategy and analysis. Easily understandable for undergrads and high schoolers, it reads like an extended article from Aviation Week and Space Technology. English origins are obvious but he succeeds in covering all the international players (U.S., Britain, France, Russia, China, India, etc.) and that is a strength of the work. A little bit repetitive and at least one footnote is not supported. (He cites Rhodes but there is no Rhodes in the biblography. No doubt he meant Richard Rhodes). Still, all-in-all a good overview of a topic where there isn't much available. High school, college and medium-sized or larger public libraries will find this a good purchase.
April 23, 2008


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