Satellite shooting unneeded says scientist
BOSTON, Aug. 26 (UPI) -- The U.S. Navy's February missile
shoot down of a spy satellite was unnecessary, a Harvard scientist
and former NASA employee said.
Yousaf Butt filed a Freedom of Information Act request
asking for the National Air and Space Agency's re-entry threat
analysis from the disabled USA-193 satellite. His conclusions
contradict the government's official explanation that the
satellite's hydrazine fuel tank posed a health hazard.
Butt described government modeling as oversimplified and
biased against likelihoods that the tank would have burned when
re-entering the atmosphere.
"The official study released so far certainly doesn't
support the contention that the tank
would have survived intact to the ground. In fact, despite
its optimistic oversimplifications, the
released study indicates that the tank would certainly have
demised high up in the atmosphere" he wrote in the Aug. 21 Bulletin
of Atomic Scientists.
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