DARPA Blackjack: A Flexible and Cost-Effective Military LEO SatCom
Is it possible to build military-purpose LEO constellations on commercial platforms? What exactly did DARPA specialists manage to demonstrate? An overview and analysis by SkyLinker
The Crisis of the Classical Space Paradigm
For decades, U.S. space doctrine was built around so-called exquisite systems: a small number of massive, extremely expensive satellites deployed in geosynchronous orbit (GEO). This “monolithic” paradigm created an illusion of security through technological uniqueness. However, in today’s contested space environment, it has become a strategic vulnerability. The loss of a single “flagship” satellite costing billions of dollars can paralyze entire defense capability segments for years.
The DARPA Blackjack program emerged as a radical response to this challenge, initiating a shift toward proliferated LEO (P-LEO) architectures. The core idea was a fundamental vector change: instead of protecting individual high-value assets, resilience is achieved through quantity and network-centricity.
Blackjack is not merely a series of experiments; it represents a foundational rethinking of National Security Space (NSS). The program demonstrated that the Pentagon can integrate lessons from commercial innovation cycles and the economies of scale of NewSpace to build a survivable mesh network, where each node is functionally interchangeable.
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