Abstract

ABSTRACT The arrival of the nuclear age highlighted the inadequacy of U.S. and allied information networks for transmitting vital messages across the globe. Submarine cables could be cut and radio easily jammed. U.S. and allied officials looked to emerging space technologies to compensate for the inadequacies of radio and submarine cables and to reduce their dependence on terrestrial telecommunications hardware. But satellites were also vulnerable and insufficient for meeting all communications requirements. Consequently, creating layered telecommunications networks that stretched from under the sea, across the land, and into space emerged as the optimal strategy for strengthening information security.

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