Richard Lawless, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for Asian and Pacific affairs who told reporters in Washington Tuesday that the Bush Administration wants South Korea to pay more for defense of the peninsula, also put a timeline on reaching an agreement about shift of wartime control. Lawless says he expects US and South Korean officials to come to produce a final plan before the upcoming US-Korean Security Consultative Meeting, set to start Oct. 20. Lawless maintained that the key holdup is the date for the transfer of control—Washington wants to transfer power in 2009 but Seoul wants to wait until 2012.
SDA’s Next Phase of Data Transport Satellites on Hold
June 30, 2025
The long-term future of one of the Space Development Agency’s two satellite constellations is on hold as officials study the options for replacing a planned “data transport layer” with one or more commercial solutions. President Trump’s proposed 2026 defense budget...