Citat:
Mycket intressant information. Tack.
For the first time since World War II, Japan has chosen to share its most sensitive real-time intelligence data with a foreign power. The recipient? Ukraine’s military intelligence agency, the GUR. These are the same folks who’ve been identifying and striking high-value Russian targets with surgical precision—fuel depots, rail lines, S-400 batteries, and command posts.
Now imagine them doing it in pitch-black conditions, through fog, through smoke, through camouflage. That’s what SAR enables. This data comes from Japan’s commercial-but-dual-use iQPS satellite constellation, capable of 46cm resolution. It’s the type of tech that can see tire tracks, detect new fortifications, and guide HIMARS in real time, regardless of the weather or time of day.
As someone who served in the U.S. Air Force and worked directly with airborne radar systems, I’m telling you—this isn’t just battlefield awareness. This is a revolution in situational dominance. And it didn’t come from NATO. It came from the Pacific.
This video covers:
• Why Japan sharing SAR data is such a political and military breakthrough
• How SAR works and why it beats optical imagery in combat conditions
• What iQPS’s satellite network means for Ukraine’s ability to detect and strike
• How this could shape future alliances and intelligence-sharing norms
• Why Russia should now assume it’s being watched 24/7—because it is
This move quietly turns Ukraine’s battlefield into a chessboard… and Russia just lost the ability to play in the dark.
https://youtu.be/4uoaRMM5Q1M
Now imagine them doing it in pitch-black conditions, through fog, through smoke, through camouflage. That’s what SAR enables. This data comes from Japan’s commercial-but-dual-use iQPS satellite constellation, capable of 46cm resolution. It’s the type of tech that can see tire tracks, detect new fortifications, and guide HIMARS in real time, regardless of the weather or time of day.
As someone who served in the U.S. Air Force and worked directly with airborne radar systems, I’m telling you—this isn’t just battlefield awareness. This is a revolution in situational dominance. And it didn’t come from NATO. It came from the Pacific.
This video covers:
• Why Japan sharing SAR data is such a political and military breakthrough
• How SAR works and why it beats optical imagery in combat conditions
• What iQPS’s satellite network means for Ukraine’s ability to detect and strike
• How this could shape future alliances and intelligence-sharing norms
• Why Russia should now assume it’s being watched 24/7—because it is
This move quietly turns Ukraine’s battlefield into a chessboard… and Russia just lost the ability to play in the dark.
https://youtu.be/4uoaRMM5Q1M