“Our space systems underpin a wide range of services, providing vital national, military, civil, scientific and economic benefits to the global community,” STRATCOM Commander and US Navy Admiral Cecil Haney stated in the release.
According to the release, the agreement seeks to enhance each nation’s awareness within the space domain and increase the safety of their spaceflight operations.
“Space situational awareness, which requires cooperation in order to be effective, is one of many approaches used to ensure we continue benefitting from this critical domain,” Haney added.
Nine nations have previously signed separate agreements with STRATCOM: the United Kingdom, South Korea, France, Canada, Italy, Japan, Israel, Germany and Australia, the release noted.
In addition, two intergovernmental organizations, the European Space Agency and the European Organization for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites, as well as more than 50 commercial satellite providers, are already participating in data-sharing agreements with STRATCOM.