Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Military Space: The next phase of ‘responsive’ launch


Plus: The twilight of Pegasus and Atlas
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By Sandra Erwin


Welcome to this week's edition of SpaceNews' Military Space, your source for the latest developments at the intersection of space and national security. In this week's edition: Victus Haze moves responsive space beyond launch. Also, it's a time of transition for Pegasus and Atlas rockets.


If someone forwarded you this edition, sign up to receive it in your inbox every Tuesday. We welcome your suggestions. You can hit reply or DM me on Signal @SandraErwin.43.

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Raytheon said last week it has completed a preliminary design review of a 3-meter telescope for the Lazuli Space Observatory, which is being built by Surrey Satellite Technology. Schmidt Sciences, founded by former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt and his wife, plans to build Lazuli as part of the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Observatory System, which also includes three ground-based observatories. Lazuli is scheduled to launch as soon as mid-2028. Credit: Schmidt Sciences

A new milestone in Space Force responsive launch operations


The U.S. Space Force's concept of "responsive space" has centered on one question: how quickly can a commercial company launch a replacement satellite after receiving military orders? 


The latest Victus Haze demonstration under the Space Force's Tactically Responsive Space (TacRS) program suggests the answer is no longer just about getting into orbit. It's about what a spacecraft can do once it gets there.


A recent demonstration completed what officials describe as the first tactical rendezvous and intercept between two commercially developed spacecraft. In the exercise, Rocket Lab launched its Puma spacecraft from New Zealand on June 19 after receiving a notice-to-launch order about 16 hours earlier. Once in orbit, Puma rendezvoused with True Anomaly's Jackal-0004 spacecraft, launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rideshare mission in May.


A shift in the TacRS program


An earlier mission in 2023 known as Victus Nox demonstrated that commercial providers could launch a satellite within roughly a day of receiving orders. Victus Haze expanded that concept by testing whether a newly launched spacecraft could quickly begin rendezvous, proximity operations and inspection of another object already in orbit — capabilities that would be needed if the military were called upon to investigate suspicious activity, assess damage to a U.S. satellite or characterize an adversary's spacecraft during a crisis.


According to True Anomaly, Jackal-0004 acquired Rocket Lab's spacecraft within hours of its arrival in a previously unknown orbit, then performed multiple circumnavigations while collecting imagery from different aspects. The company said its Mosaic autonomy software planned the mission, executed propulsion maneuvers and conducted imaging passes, completing the Space Force task in 61 hours, or 11 hours ahead of the program's 72-hour deadline.


When Victus Haze contracts were awarded in 2024, the plan called for both Rocket Lab and True Anomaly to conduct responsive launches, with True Anomaly's spacecraft flying on a Firefly Aerospace Alpha rocket after receiving its own 24-hour launch order. Instead, the operational demonstration paired Rocket Lab's newly launched spacecraft with Jackal-0004, which was already on orbit.


Neither the Space Force nor True Anomaly has publicly explained when or why the mission architecture changed. The decision may have been influenced by Firefly's ongoing effort to return its Alpha rocket to flight after the vehicle was grounded following a launch failure earlier this year, although neither company has linked the change to Alpha's status.


The exercise suggests the Space Force envisions commercial spacecraft as part of a persistent on-orbit architecture that can be called upon as needed, rather than assets launched only after a crisis begins.


The broader objective is to determine whether commercial providers can routinely execute military space missions on timelines measured in days instead of months.


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Pegasus and Atlas: The end of two eras


Two launches on consecutive days last week marked milestones that, taken together, say a great deal about the transition under way in the launch industry.


On July 2, United Launch Alliance launched the final Atlas 5 mission purchased by Amazon Leo for its low Earth orbit broadband constellation, closing one of the most important commercial launch campaigns in the rocket's history. A day later, Northrop Grumman's Pegasus XL air-launched rocket successfully deployed a spacecraft that will attempt to extend the life of an operational NASA vehicle.


The missions had little in common operationally. But each represented the end of one chapter and the beginning of another.


For Pegasus, the July 3 launch from Kwajalein Atoll could prove to be its last. Developed by Orbital Sciences — now part of Northrop Grumman — and first flown in 1990, Pegasus became the world's first privately developed orbital launch vehicle and the first operational rocket launched from an aircraft. Over 46 missions, a modified L-1011 carrier aircraft carried the winged rocket to about 40,000 feet before releasing it for ignition.


The Swift Boost mission deployed a robotic servicing spacecraft built by Katalyst Space Technologies. Its assignment is to rendezvous with NASA's Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, capture it and raise it into a higher orbit.


Swift, launched in 2004 to study gamma-ray bursts and other high-energy astrophysical phenomena, remains scientifically productive. But increasing atmospheric drag caused by heightened solar activity is slowly pulling the spacecraft toward reentry. Because Swift has no propulsion system, NASA faced a choice: replace a functioning observatory or attempt to save it.


The agency chose the latter, concluding that a roughly $30 million servicing mission was significantly less expensive than building a replacement spacecraft.


The changing launch economics


When it entered service, Pegasus offered capabilities few others could match. Air launch eliminated dependence on fixed launch pads, allowed access to a broad range of orbital inclinations and provided scheduling flexibility that appealed to government science missions.


Over time, however, those advantages became less compelling.


As satellites became smaller and cheaper, many customers opted to fly as rideshare payloads rather than purchase dedicated launches. At the same time, Rocket Lab, Firefly Aerospace and other companies entered the small-launch market, while SpaceX's Falcon 9 rideshare program dramatically lowered the cost of reaching orbit.


Pegasus also carried structural disadvantages. Maintaining a dedicated L-1011 carrier aircraft, specialized crews and supporting infrastructure made economic sense when the rocket flew regularly. As launch cadence slowed, those fixed costs became increasingly difficult to justify.


Northrop Grumman has stopped short of declaring Pegasus retired. Company officials have said they would consider flying it again if customers determined that an air-launched orbital capability had value for tactically responsive space missions. Commercially, however, Pegasus no longer competes in the market it helped create.


Atlas nearing retirement


Atlas 5 remains one of the most reliable launch vehicles ever built, compiling more than 100 successful missions since entering service in 2002.


Its final campaign for Amazon Leo reinforced that reputation.


Following delays in satellite production and uncertainty surrounding several launch providers, Amazon relied on Atlas 5 to begin deploying its broadband constellation. Since April 2025, ULA completed eight Atlas missions for Amazon Leo, placing the majority of the constellation's satellites currently in orbit and helping the company accelerate deployment toward commercial service.


ULA still has a handful of Atlas 5 launches remaining, most of them reserved for Boeing's Starliner program. ULA intends to transition entirely to Vulcan.


Atlas' departure from the national security launch market was driven largely by policy rather than performance.


For years, Atlas 5 served as the backbone of U.S. military and intelligence launches. But after Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014, Congress prohibited future national security launches from relying on the Russian-built RD-180 engine that powers Atlas 5's first stage. That decision forced ULA to develop Vulcan, powered by Blue Origin's domestically produced BE-4 engines.


Today, national security space launch missions are being launched by SpaceX and ULA, although Vulcan remains grounded and is expected to return to flight this year.


SpaceNews' latest national security coverage


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Blue Origin's seven lunar landers in production

Plus: Iridium completes its purchase of Aireon
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07/07/2026

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By Jeff Foust


In today's edition: Blue Origin is working on seven lunar landers, Iridium completes its purchase of Aireon, a Canadian astronaut will retire after flying around the moon and more. 


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Powering Golden Dome for America with mission-proven advanced avionics for missile warning and tracking space sensors, space-based interceptors, and traditional interceptors. Innoflight delivers affordable, mature, low-size, weight, and power solutions, including high-assurance encryption (point-to-point and mesh network HAIPE®), communications, networking, high-performance processing, and precision timing. Our technologies help prime contractors reduce costs, accelerate integration and deployment, and enable the resilient mesh network architecture central to Golden Dome. Partner with Innoflight to help shape the future of missile defense.

Top Stories


Recent multibillion-dollar awards to SpaceX have raised questions about the Pentagon's commitment to competition. The awards, worth nearly $6.5 billion, put SpaceX at the forefront of efforts to build a global military surveillance network and a space-based communications backbone for missile defense. The Pentagon is seeking to expand military space capabilities while simultaneously urging industry to invest in manufacturing capacity and scale production. However, its efforts to create a competitive market for proliferated military satellites is running into rising operational urgency, resulting in an increased reliance on one company — SpaceX — that has mastered industrial-scale production. Some in Congress have raised concerns about that strategy, pushing the Defense Department to increase competition in major procurements as a way to reduce costs, encourage innovation and preserve industrial capacity. [SpaceNews]


Blue Origin is pressing ahead with development of lunar landers as it recovers from the New Glenn pad explosion. At a conference Monday, a Blue Origin executive said the company has seven Blue Moon Mark 1 and Mark 2 landers in various stages of production, including a Mark 1 lander that was nearly complete at the time of the late May explosion. The company is still working on that and other landers needed for NASA's Artemis program, including an updated version of its Mark 2 crewed lander that incorporates changes reflecting NASA's decision not to build the lunar Gateway. Blue Origin is still pushing to rebuild its launch pad and resume New Glenn launches by the end of the year. [SpaceNews]


Iridium Communications has completed its takeover of Aireon, bringing the aircraft-tracking venture fully in-house. Iridium said Monday that it bought the remaining 61% of Aireon it did not already own from air navigation service providers in several countries, completing a $367 million deal announced in May. Aireon, which has provided an aviation safety service since 2019 using Iridium satellites and the Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) signals aircraft broadcast, will continue to operate as a wholly owned subsidiary. The Aireon purchase closed a week after Iridium agreed to be acquired by Rocket Lab for $8 billion. Rocket Lab has not discussed specific plans for Aireon but said it wants to enhance Iridium services in general. [SpaceNews]


BAE Systems says a microprocessor intended for use in military space applications has passed key tests. The company said the Endura processor performed reliably in testing designed to simulate both the natural radiation environment of space and the more severe strategic radiation conditions required for certain defense missions. Endura integrates multiple onboard computing functions into a single device used to power satellites operating in the harsh environment of space. BAE Systems says it is discussing use of the chip with multiple prime contractors for missile defense applications. [SpaceNews]


Simera Space will provide multispectral imagers for a Spanish wildfire-tracking satellite system. The Belgian company said it is building eight MultiScape100 sensors for Telespazio's Spanish subsidiary, which recently won 21.3 million euros ($24.4 million) from the local Canary Islands government to be prime contractor for the Earth observation constellation.  The imagers will be placed on three satellites slated to launch in the second half of 2028. The constellation, using satellites from Spanish company AVS, would be optimized specifically for the environmental and operational challenges facing the islands. [SpaceNews]


Other News


Isar Aerospace has signed a contract to develop a launch site in Canada. Isar announced Tuesday it completed an agreement with Maritime Launch Services (MLS) for a launch pad at Spaceport Nova Scotia, the launch site MLS operates, for its Spectrum rocket. The pad is slated to be ready to host launches in 2028. In May, Isar Aerospace announced an agreement with German shipbuilder TKMS to be part of that company's bid to win a contract to build submarines for the Canadian navy; an Isar launch site in Canada would be part of the proposal's industrial offset package. The Canadian government announced Monday it selected TKMS for that submarine contract. [SpaceNews]


Three European companies have joined a NASA contract vehicle for acquiring commercial Earth science data. Kuva Space, OroraTech and Satlantis were among the eight companies added to the Commercial Satellite Data Acquisition program last month. In that program, NASA acquires Earth observation data from companies for use by researchers. Airbus and Iceye were already part of the program. The new awards, company officials argue, show that European companies are at the forefront of the Earth observation sector. [SpaceNews]


NASA issued a draft request for proposals for the next phase of its commercial space station program. The draft RFP for the next phase of the Commercial LEO Destinations program comes after NASA said last month it would not pursue an alternative approach involving a government-procured core module for the International Space Station that commercial modules would attach to. Instead, NASA says it is following the desire of industry to issue fixed-price contracts to advance development of commercial stations, with the agency planning to make at least two awards for early station development, and then one or more for final design and certification. Feedback on the draft RFP is due to NASA late this month. [NASA]


Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen is retiring three months after flying around the moon on Artemis 2. Hansen said Monday he will leave the Canadian Space Agency as well as full-time duty in the Royal Canadian Air Force in September. He will remain with the military as a reservist. Hansen was selected as an astronaut in 2009 but did not fly in space until the Artemis 2 mission in April, becoming the first non-American to leave Earth orbit. He said the decision to leave the Canadian astronaut corps while remaining an air force reservist is "a deliberate launchpad designed to leave the door open for creative, ongoing ways to support and enable the vital work happening in Canada with respect to space." With his retirement, Canada has three active astronauts, including Joshua Kutryk, who will fly to the ISS this fall on the Crew-13 mission. [CBC]


FROM SPACENEWS

Submit nominations for the 2026 SpaceNews Icon Awards through Aug. 14

Honor the icons shaping space: Since 2017, the SpaceNews Icon Awards have celebrated the companies, teams and individuals driving breakthroughs across civil, commercial and military space. Nominate the innovators, collaborators and leaders whose work over the past year — or an entire career — has left a lasting mark on the industry. Submit your nomination today.

Exciting Unpredictability


"If you tried to predict what was going to be the biggest opportunity for space companies five to seven years ago, no one would have mentioned data centers in orbit. Now that's all the rage. The unpredictability of this industry is what makes it so exciting."


– Adam Spice, Rocket Lab's chief financial officer, speaking at the Spacetide conference on Tuesday.


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Military Space: The next phase of ‘responsive’ launch

Plus: The twilight of Pegasus and Atlas  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ...