Space Industry Cheat Sheet: Artemis Gets a Reality Check, Golden Dome Accelerates, and the LEO Economy Opens for Business

The space indus­try does not sleep, and this past week proved it. While the coun­try watch­es Oper­a­tion Epic Fury unfold across the Mid­dle East, the space domain qui­et­ly val­i­dat­ed what many of us have been say­ing for years: the con­ver­gence of com­mer­cial space and nation­al defense is no longer the­o­ret­i­cal. It is oper­a­tional, fund­ed, and mov­ing fast.

Let us start with the biggest sto­ry of the week. NASA Admin­is­tra­tor Jared Isaac­man dra­mat­i­cal­ly restruc­tured the Artemis pro­gram, and frankly, it was the kind of restruc­tur­ing that was need­ed. Isaac­man announced a sweep­ing restruc­ture that shifts Artemis III from a crewed lunar land­ing to a low Earth orbit inte­grat­ed sys­tems test, mod­eled after Apol­lo 9. The orig­i­nal plan had NASA jump­ing from a fly­by mis­sion straight to a sur­face land­ing, which is the kind of risk pos­ture that gets peo­ple killed. Isaac­man called the pri­or archi­tec­ture “not a path to suc­cess,” and he is right. The new plan inserts a ren­dezvous and dock­ing test with one or both com­mer­cial lan­ders from SpaceX and Blue Ori­gin in mid 2027, push­ing the first crewed land­ing to Artemis IV in 2028. He also stan­dard­ized the SLS rock­et con­fig­u­ra­tion and offi­cial­ly scrapped Mobile Launch­er 2, a bil­lion-dol­lar project plagued by cost over­runs. Mean­while, Artemis II is back in the Vehi­cle Assem­bly Build­ing after a heli­um flow issue forced a roll­back from the pad, with a new launch win­dow open­ing in April. The Sen­ate Com­merce Com­mit­tee endorsed Isaacman’s plan dur­ing its markup of the NASA Autho­riza­tion Act of 2026, which also directs NASA to estab­lish a per­ma­nent Moon base and extends the Inter­na­tion­al Space Sta­tion through 2032.

Speak­ing of the ISS, the race to replace it got a seri­ous injec­tion of cap­i­tal this week. Vast closed a $500 mil­lion fund­ing round to accel­er­ate pro­duc­tion of its Haven com­mer­cial space sta­tions, with back­ing from Bale­ri­on Space Ven­tures, Qatar’s sov­er­eign wealth fund, and Mit­sui. This brings the total invest­ment in Vast to over $1 bil­lion. The com­pa­ny plans to launch Haven 1 in ear­ly 2027 and is posi­tion­ing itself for NASA’s Com­mer­cial Low Earth Orbit Des­ti­na­tions Phase 2 con­tract. Not to be out­done, Sier­ra Space closed a $550 mil­lion Series C at a val­u­a­tion of $8 bil­lion, led by Lumi­nArx Cap­i­tal. Sier­ra Space has piv­ot­ed hard toward nation­al secu­ri­ty cus­tomers, win­ning over $1.5 bil­lion in defense con­tracts since 2023. The LEO econ­o­my is no longer a con­cept. It is cap­i­tal­ized and build­ing hardware.

On the nation­al defense side, the Her­itage Foun­da­tion released its annu­al Index of U.S. Mil­i­tary Strength, and the Space Force received an over­all grade of “mar­gin­al.” The report did not mince words, stat­ing that the Space Force is “woe­ful­ly short of the resources required to hold adver­sary space sys­tems at risk” and is “not ready to oper­ate in a con­test­ed envi­ron­ment.” Readi­ness was down­grad­ed from last year’s already con­cern­ing mar­gin­al score to “weak.” For any­one who has fol­lowed this space, these find­ings are not sur­pris­ing. China’s oper­a­tional satel­lite fleet exceed­ed 1,060 by mid 2025, and the threats of sig­nal jam­ming, direct­ed ener­gy attacks, and cyber intru­sions are not hypo­thet­i­cal. They are hap­pen­ing dai­ly. The report rec­om­mend­ed craft­ing a nation­al secu­ri­ty space strat­e­gy and increas­ing the use of com­mer­cial tech­nol­o­gy, which I am spir­i­tu­al­ly moti­vat­ed to endorse.

The Gold­en Dome mis­sile defense ini­tia­tive con­tin­ued to gain trac­tion this week. The Mis­sile Defense Agency opened bid­ding for “nov­el launch­er” pro­to­types to sup­port a new gen­er­a­tion of inter­cep­tors that will form the ter­res­tri­al lay­er of the Gold­en Dome archi­tec­ture. This comes on the heels of the award of pro­to­type con­tracts for boost-phase space-based inter­cep­tors in Novem­ber 2025. CSIS host­ed a detailed dis­cus­sion on Gold­en Dome this week, dur­ing which ana­lysts not­ed that the Sec­re­tary of Defense report­ed­ly signed a memo grant­i­ng the Direct Report Pro­gram Man­ag­er “god­like acqui­si­tion author­i­ties,” a move designed to cut through the usu­al pro­cure­ment bureau­cra­cy. Con­gress has allo­cat­ed approx­i­mate­ly $37 bil­lion toward Gold­en Dome efforts between the rec­on­cil­i­a­tion law and FY2026 defense spend­ing. The pro­gram remains ambi­tious in scope and con­test­ed in cost esti­mates, but the acqui­si­tion machin­ery is now turning.

Mean­while, Oper­a­tion Epic Fury demon­strat­ed why space assets mat­ter. Air and Space Forces Mag­a­zine report­ed that mil­i­tary space capa­bil­i­ties played a crit­i­cal role in the ear­ly stages of the cam­paign, with con­trol of the skies enabling the Pen­ta­gon to rely more heav­i­ly on satel­lite and laser-guid­ed muni­tions. This is what inte­grat­ed com­mand and con­trol looks like when it works, rein­forc­ing the argu­ment that space is not just a sup­port­ing domain. It is the domain that enables every­thing else.

On the com­mer­cial launch front, Japan took a hard hit this week when Space One’s Kairos rock­et failed for the third con­sec­u­tive time, with the flight ter­mi­nat­ed just 69 sec­onds after liftoff. All five pay­loads were lost. Japan’s goal of reach­ing 30 launch­es annu­al­ly by 2030 now looks increas­ing­ly dif­fi­cult, though the gov­ern­ment appears com­mit­ted to weath­er­ing the storm. In bet­ter launch news, SpaceX is tar­get­ing Starship’s 12th test flight for as ear­ly as March 9, which would be the first flight using ver­sion 3 hard­ware. This is the pro­duc­tion con­fig­u­ra­tion that NASA needs for Artemis, and its suc­cess or fail­ure will have rip­ple effects across the entire lunar explo­ration timeline.

Final­ly, SpaceX announced Stargaze, a new space sit­u­a­tion­al aware­ness ser­vice lever­ag­ing data from near­ly 10,000 Star­link satel­lites to track objects in low Earth orbit. The ser­vice promis­es 30 mil­lion obser­va­tions per day, a mas­sive leap over ground-based track­ing capa­bil­i­ties. SpaceX is offer­ing Stargaze for free to oper­a­tors will­ing to share their maneu­ver plans, which has the SSA com­mu­ni­ty both impressed and ner­vous. When the biggest play­er in orbit offers a free ser­vice that dwarfs what every­one else can pro­vide, the com­pet­i­tive land­scape shifts overnight.

The bot­tom line this week is straight­for­ward. The space indus­try is mov­ing from aspi­ra­tion to exe­cu­tion across every front, from Artemis to com­mer­cial sta­tions to mis­sile defense. The mon­ey is flow­ing, the hard­ware is being built, and the oper­a­tional rel­e­vance of space is being demon­strat­ed in real time over the skies of Iran. The ques­tion is no longer whether space mat­ters. The ques­tion is whether we can move fast enough to stay ahead.


Sources Index:
Space­News, Pay­load Space, Air & Space Forces Mag­a­zine, CSIS, Avi­a­tion Week, Orlan­do Sen­tinel, The Hill, Space­flight Now

Pax ab Space

Clin­ton Austin is a Senior Busi­ness Devel­op­ment Direc­tor for GDIT who cov­ers the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Space Force, and the Mis­sile Defense Agency.

The views expressed are those of the author and do not nec­es­sar­i­ly reflect the offi­cial pol­i­cy or posi­tion of Gen­er­al Dynam­ics Infor­ma­tion Technology.

March 9, 2026

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