U.S. MILITARY SATELLITES TO BE REVIEWED A top U.S. Air Force official has ordered a review of all current military satellites to determine if they are vulnerable to attack. Air Force Gen. T. Michael "Buzz" Moseley ordered the wide-ranging review in March after China detonated one of its weather satellites, prompting concern that the Asian nation may be creating anti-satellite weaponry, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday. China never officially explained the military action and a large field of debris remains in orbit because of the satellite's destruction. "What I'm looking for is just a better way to think through the challenge, now that other people have a capability to kill a satellite," Moseley said of the review. "It is a contested domain now. I've asked a bit of an open-ended question." The Times said Moseley has asked for initial results by June and has said changes would become a necessity if the study's findings are troubling. "You have a choice: You can either defend the machines or you build something that flies higher and faster," he said of the nation's satellites. Copyright 2007 by United Press International ___________________ The full version of this story is available online at http://www.physorg.com/news96475480.html