Gen. John Raymond Confirms U.S. is Developing Directed-Energy-Systems For Space Defense; Gen. James Dickinson Quoted

Gen. John Raymond Confirms U.S. is Developing Directed-Energy-Systems For Space Defense; Gen. James Dickinson Quoted

Gen. John Raymond, chief of Space Operations for the U.S. Space Force and 2021 Wash100 Award winner, recently acknowledged that the U.S. is currently developing directed-energy systems to maintain American space superiority.

During the hearing, Rep. Jim Langevin, D-RI, asked Gen. Raymond if the U.S. was developing an adequate directed energy portfolio. Raymond responded, “Yes, sir, we are. We have to be able to protect these capabilities that we rely so heavily on.”

The Missile Defense Agency (MDA) has researched using space-based lasers to intercept ballistic missiles in the past and some nations have ground-based laser dazzling weapons that blind on-orbit sensors. However, Raymond’s comment at the hearing is the first time he has confirmed that the directed energy systems are under development.

A Space Force spokesperson said in a statement to C4ISRNET, “General Raymond has stated many times that China and Russia have directed energy capabilities that are designed to damage or destroy our satellites. His response to Congressman James Langevin’s question was confirming that our architecture developments in the face of these threats are appropriate.”

The federal government justified creating the Space Force and Space Command by citing Chinese and Russian anti-satellite (ASAT) weapons development. Establishment military leaders have continued to criticize adversarial ASAT development and testing.

U.S. Space Command’s Gen. James Dickinson denounced Russian direct-ascent missile tests that demonstrated the capability to destroy satellites in low-Earth-orbit and cause hazardous space debris. Another high-level space weapon concern is a Russian satellite that can fire projectiles in space. Raymond refers to the spacecraft as an on-orbit weapon system.

“Russia has made space a war-fighting domain by testing space-based and ground-based weapons intended to target and destroy satellites. This fact is inconsistent with Moscow’s public claims that Russia seeks to prevent conflict in space,” commented Dickinson after a Russian ASAT test in December 2020.

“Space is critical to all nations. It is a shared interest to create the conditions for a safe, stable and operationally sustainable space environment,” Dickenson added,

Share the Post:

Related Posts

Leidos’ Cindy Gruensfelder Accepts 2026 Wash100 Award From Executive Mosaic CEO Jim Garrettson

Leidos Defense Sector President Cindy Gruensfelder has received her first Wash100 Award, recognizing her leadership in advancing autonomous systems, integrated missile defense capabilities and other defense technologies in support of...

Precision Talent Solutions’ Jake Frazer Receives First Wash100 Award

Jake Frazer, president and co-founder of Precision Talent Solutions, has received the 2026 Wash100 Award, earning recognition for his growing influence on GovCon workforce strategy, executive recruiting and talent innovation...

Meet the 2026 Wash100 Winners Shaping Federal Cybersecurity (Part 1)

In 2026, the cyber domain is more contested than ever as adversaries deploy increasingly sophisticated attacks targeting the nation’s most critical systems. To combat evolving cyberthreats, the winners of this...