KEY POINTS
  • The Pentagon called for a global halt to anti-satellite weapons testing on Wednesday, further decrying the practice after Russia's destructive demonstration last month.
  • "We would like to see all nations agree to refrain from anti-satellite weapons testing that creates debris," Department of Defense deputy secretary Kathleen Hicks said.
  • The Russian military destroyed a defunct satellite on Nov. 15 with an anti-satellite weapon (or ASAT), which U.S. Space Command said created more than 1,500 pieces of debris and sent astronauts on the International Space Station into shelter.
A software rendering shows a recreation of Russia's anti-satellite weapons test and the destruction of satellite Kosmos 1408, with the debris field in red.

The Pentagon called for a global halt to anti-satellite weapons testing on Wednesday, further decrying the practice after Russia's destructive demonstration last month showered low Earth orbit with debris.

"We would like to see all nations agree to refrain from anti-satellite weapons testing that creates debris," U.S. Department of Defense deputy secretary Kathleen Hicks said at a meeting of the National Space Council.