Trump signs “Ensuring American Space Superiority”: how the US is turning space into a strategic domain
Trump signs “Ensuring American Space Superiority”: how the US is turning space into a strategic domain
The executive order “Ensuring American Space Superiority”, signed by Donald Trump on December 18, 2025, marks a strategic shift in US space policy, transforming space from a scientific frontier into a core arena of national security, economic competition, and long-term geopolitical dominance.
A formal break with the “space as science” paradigm
The signing of the executive order titled “Ensuring American Space Superiority” represents more than a routine policy update. It formally ends the long-standing framing of space as primarily a scientific or cooperative environment. Instead, space is explicitly defined as a strategic domain where superiority, persistence, and control matter.The language of the order is revealing. The use of the term “superiority” aligns space policy with doctrines historically applied to air, sea, and cyber domains. This framing implies permanence, competition, and preparedness for conflict rather than temporary exploration or symbolic presence. From a strategic standpoint, the order signals that space is no longer treated as a neutral commons, but as a critical layer of national power.

Trump signs “Ensuring American Space Superiority”: how the US is turning space into a strategic domain
Space superiority as a component of national security
A central pillar of the executive order is the integration of space into the US national security architecture. Space-based assets are framed as essential for deterrence, early warning, communications, navigation, and defense systems. The order reflects an assumption that future conflicts will extend beyond Earth’s atmosphere, whether through disruption of satellites, space-based surveillance, or potential weaponization of orbital platforms.Analytically, this approach acknowledges an existing reality rather than creating a new one. Modern military operations already depend heavily on space infrastructure. What changes here is the explicit prioritization of dominance rather than resilience alone. The focus shifts from protecting assets to ensuring the ability to operate freely while denying that freedom to adversaries if necessary.
Economic control and commercial expansion beyond Earth
The executive order also places strong emphasis on economic activity in space. Space is framed as a domain of future commercial growth, industrial development, and resource utilization. This includes orbital infrastructure, lunar operations, and long-term commercial presence beyond low Earth orbit.The strategic logic is clear. Economic activity creates permanence. Permanent infrastructure creates leverage. By encouraging private-sector involvement and reducing regulatory friction, the US aims to anchor its dominance not only through state programs but through market-driven expansion. This model mirrors earlier US strategies in aviation, telecommunications, and the internet, where commercial leadership reinforced geopolitical influence.
This is not presented as deregulation for its own sake, but as a mechanism to accelerate deployment, reduce costs, and outpace competitors operating under more centralized state models.
Institutional restructuring and long-term governance
Another important dimension of the order is governance. “Ensuring American Space Superiority” implies changes in how space activities are coordinated across government agencies. The executive order sets the stage for faster procurement, tighter coordination between civilian and military space programs, and clearer chains of authority in space-related decision-making.From an analytical perspective, this reflects a recognition that fragmented governance is incompatible with strategic competition. Space programs designed for research timelines struggle to adapt to environments where speed, redundancy, and scalability are decisive. Centralization, in this context, is not ideological but operational.
Implications for global competition in space
The executive order inevitably reshapes the global space landscape. By explicitly framing space as a competitive and strategic domain, the US sets a precedent that other powers are likely to follow. This increases the likelihood of parallel doctrines emerging elsewhere, each emphasizing national control, security, and long-term presence.This does not automatically imply immediate militarization of space, but it does reduce the credibility of purely cooperative narratives. Once dominance becomes an explicit goal, neutrality becomes structurally unstable. Alliances, access agreements, and technology-sharing frameworks will increasingly reflect strategic alignment rather than scientific collaboration.
“Ensuring American Space Superiority” is best understood as a doctrinal reset. It aligns space policy with broader US strategic thinking, where economic strength, military capability, and technological leadership are treated as inseparable. The executive order does not introduce space competition; it acknowledges that it already exists and formalizes a response.
The long-term significance of the order lies not in individual programs, but in the framework it establishes. Space is no longer a distant frontier. It is a domain of power, governed by the same logic as every other strategic environment where the US seeks to lead rather than participate.
By Jake Sullivan
December 23, 2025
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December 23, 2025
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