Space is no longer just the final frontier — it’s the next geopolitical battlefield. What was once the domain of scientific exploration is rapidly becoming a aplikasi Naga169 theater of strategic rivalry and commercial dominance.
The United States and China lead the charge, with both nations establishing plans for lunar bases and competing satellite networks. The Artemis Accords, led by Washington, now count over 30 signatories, while Beijing and Moscow pursue an alternative lunar research station.
Private companies like SpaceX, Blue Origin, and India’s ISRO partners are transforming space from government monopoly to global marketplace. Satellite mega-constellations promise faster internet but raise concerns about orbital congestion and militarization.
The weaponization of space — once taboo — is becoming reality. Anti-satellite tests, cyberattacks on ground systems, and military space commands underscore the strategic stakes. “Space has become the backbone of modern warfare,” says defense analyst Theresa Hitchens.
Legal frameworks lag far behind. The 1967 Outer Space Treaty prohibits the placement of weapons of mass destruction but says little about commercial activity or resource extraction. Nations now race to shape new rules that balance innovation with security.
As space becomes the new high ground of power, the politics above Earth may soon determine who controls the future below it.