In May 2026, multiple Russian Cosmos satellites maneuvered close to the ICEYE-X36 commercial radar satellite, which supports Ukraine. Public orbit analysis indicated that both parties entered a nearly co-planar orbit, with a lateral distance once reaching approximately 500 meters.
This was not a missile interception, nor was there any public destruction of satellites, yet it brought a real-world issue to the forefront: when commercial satellites already provide communication, reconnaissance, positioning, and timing services for warfare, will they also become military targets?
In a lengthy article, a16z partners Christian Keil and Alex Oliver viewed this incident as a typical fragment of modern space confrontation. Russia had previously publicly stated that commercial space facilities supporting military operations could become "legitimate targets for retaliation." In the Russia-Ukraine war, Starlink provides communications, and ICEYE-type synthetic aperture radar satellites provide imaging. Commercial constellations are no longer just civilian infrastructure but part of the battlefield information chain.
500-Meter Proximity: Commercial Satellites Enter the Military Crosshairs
Dealroom relayed an orbit analysis by Integrity ISR, stating that at least four to five of the Russian Cosmos 2609 to 2614 satellites performed orbital maneuvers between May 14 and 20, 2026. They adjusted their inclination from approximately 97.0 degrees to around 97.8 degrees, consuming about 105 m/s of delta-v, and established a near-co-planar relationship with ICEYE-X36.
ICEYE-X36 is not a traditional military reconnaissance satellite. It belongs to the Finnish and American company ICEYE, uses synthetic aperture radar for imaging, and can continuously observe ground targets under night and cloud cover conditions. Since the Russia-Ukraine war, the value of such commercial remote sensing capabilities for Ukrainian battlefield awareness has risen, thereby entering Russia's threat list.
500 meters doesn't sound very close on the ground, but in low Earth orbit, where two spacecraft travel at several kilometers per second, any unplanned maneuver could lead to collision, interference, or coercion signals. Close-proximity operations themselves can serve multiple purposes: surveillance, simulated attacks, testing reactions, demonstrating capability, or even preparing for future co-orbital anti-satellite actions.
The most challenging aspect of space conflict is that many actions fall between normal operations and military coercion. Satellite proximity does not equal an attack, and malfunctions are not necessarily due to hostile actions. However, in a wartime environment, a single close approach is enough to alter an adversary's risk assessment.
Space is Close, but Extremely Difficult to Access
The uniqueness of space warfare stems first from physical constraints. Low Earth Orbit is only a few hundred kilometers above the Earth's surface, where the International Space Station and many Starlink satellites operate. The key to reaching orbit is not "flying high" but achieving sufficient horizontal velocity so that an object continuously falls but always misses the Earth.
This threshold typically requires a delta-v of about 9.4 km/s. How much mass one can reliably place into orbit determines a nation's capacity to deploy satellites, the amount of fuel, sensors, protection, and redundancy they can carry.
Traditional satellites are often large and expensive because every gram is scarce, and design must be highly optimized. However, such "precious large satellites" become high-value targets in war. The more functions a single satellite carries, the greater the loss if it is blinded, jammed, or destroyed. Insufficient maneuverability and redundancy also make it harder to evade threats.
Orbital space itself is not as spacious as imagined. LEO constellations operate at different altitudes and inclinations, and their orbital planes intersect. Geostationary orbit, while at 36,000 km altitude, is essentially a limited resource line of longitude above the equator for communication satellites. Spectrum is similarly scarce; communication resources like the Ka-band require coordination. Space is vast physically but limited in operational resources.
An even greater nuisance is debris. Kinetic anti-satellite weapons, upon shattering a target, can create thousands of high-speed debris fragments. These fragments do not disappear but continue to orbit, repeatedly crossing relevant areas in the future, threatening other satellites. If collisions trigger more collisions, some orbits may become unusable for extended periods.
The US Has Scale Advantage, But Advantage Does Not Equal Safety
Judging from launch data, the US remains in a leading position. According to statistics from sources like Ill-Defined Space, the US had approximately 192 successful orbital launches in 2025, China about 90 successful out of 93 attempts, and Russia 17. Different agencies have slight variations in their definitions of "success" and "attempt," but the US lead is clear.
This is almost inseparable from SpaceX. In 2025, Falcon 9 launched approximately 165 times. SpaceX is also currently the only company to achieve large-scale reuse of orbital-class boosters. Reusability shifts launch from a scarce, expensive, low-frequency endeavor toward a higher-frequency, more industrialized rhythm. For military space capability, this impacts the speed of replenishment, expansion, generational upgrades, and wartime recovery.
Starlink demonstrates another type of advantage: scale. SpaceX's EU prospectus disclosed on June 5, 2026, shows that as of March 31, 2026, approximately 9,600 Starlink broadband and mobile satellites were operational in orbit. Third-party tracking data from June indicates the active number had exceeded 10,000.
Starlink's use in the Ukraine battlefield proves that commercial constellations can be rapidly transformed into wartime communication infrastructure. Its government version, Starshield, is more directly oriented toward defense needs.
But scale also brings new risks. Adversaries may no longer distinguish between commercial and military, viewing all commercial satellites capable of supporting war as dual-use targets. Russia's close-proximity operations around ICEYE-X36 are a real-world demonstration of this logic.
The US's true vulnerability lies in the fact that if critical missions like high-end reconnaissance, missile warning, and nuclear command communications remain concentrated on a few expensive satellites, even with a large overall satellite count, adversaries might target these few critical nodes. Space superiority cannot be judged solely by "how many satellites" but also by whether the architecture is dispersed, capable of rapid replenishment, whether ground systems are reliable, and whether operations can continue after jamming.
Space Warfare is More Likely to Remain in the Gray Zone
Winning a space war does not mean being the first to destroy more satellites. The real goal is to preserve one's own communication, reconnaissance, positioning, navigation, and timing capabilities, while making the adversary believe that an attack cannot yield decisive gains.
The first layer is launch capability. Whoever can place payloads into orbit faster, cheaper, and on a larger scale possesses wartime recovery capability. Reusable rockets, launch pad capacity, supply chains, and regulatory efficiency all become part of national security capability. Globally active orbital launch pads are few, and launch infrastructure itself becomes a high-value target.
The second layer is satellite manufacturing. Space no longer needs only a few "jewel-grade" satellites but requires large numbers of expendable, replaceable, functionally dispersed constellations. Military satellites need to distribute missions across more platforms so that the loss of a single point does not cripple the system.
The third layer is space domain awareness. In orbit, knowing who is approaching, at what speed, and with what possible intent is more critical than post-event attribution. Satellite jamming, blinding, collision, or internal failure can all manifest as malfunctions, making attribution often difficult. Without sufficient tracking and evidence chains, deterrence is weakened.
The cost of directly shattering satellites is also high. The 1962 US Starfish Prime high-altitude nuclear test detonated a nuclear bomb at about 400 km altitude, creating an artificial radiation belt that lasted for years and damaged or prematurely disabled multiple satellites. By various estimates, affected satellites at the time comprised about one-quarter to one-third of satellites in orbit. Modern orbital asset density is far higher than then, making the consequences of nuclear anti-satellite or large-scale kinetic strikes harder to control.
More realistic space confrontation may long remain within the realms of electronic jamming, GPS spoofing, laser dazzling, cyber attacks, close-proximity maneuvers, spectrum competition, and ground station attacks. China and Russia are developing counter-space capabilities, while the US is promoting more dispersed proliferated military constellations, such as PWSA. The ITU's spectrum and orbital slot rules will also become a field of competition.
The Most Dangerous Thing is Misjudging that Space is Still Peaceful
Space has long been packaged as a realm of peace, science, and commercial expansion, but modern warfare has proven it to be the infrastructure of ground battlefields. Without satellite communications, troops struggle to coordinate. Without remote sensing and navigation, missiles, drones, and artillery lose precision. Without timing systems, finance, power grids, and communication networks are also affected.
The peculiarity of Russia's approach to ICEYE-X36 is that it did not create an explosion but demonstrated the reality of commercial satellites being incorporated into military coercion. Future space warfare may not start with a missile but more likely with an approach, an interference, a spectrum grab, or a difficult-to-attribute failure.
The US's current advantage is real: leading in launch numbers, SpaceX has established a reusable rocket advantage, and Starlink has proven the wartime value of commercial constellations. Blue Origin, Rocket Lab, and Chinese commercial aerospace are catching up, while Russia and China are accumulating co-orbital, electronic warfare, and anti-satellite capabilities. If a few expensive platforms still bear critical missions, the orbital high ground will increasingly resemble a set of tempting targets.
The end goal of space warfare should not be to turn near-Earth orbit into a debris field. A more controllable outcome is to keep orbits usable, allow communications, reconnaissance, and navigation to recover under attack, and make adversaries believe that disrupting order will incur higher costs. Commercial spaceflight has given the US unprecedented scale advantages but also exposed commercial assets to new military risks. The Russian satellite's 500-meter approach is merely the clearest reminder of this stage.









