The spy fleet in space that can spot a moving car on UK streets

On 15 March, an American supersonic B1-B “Lancer” bomber heaved into the skies above Gloucestershire and headed for Iran. While the Pentagon doubtless wanted to keep the jet’s flight path and ultimate target a secret, a Chinese satellite data company had other ideas.

Within moments of the heavy bomber’s take-off from RAF Fairford in Gloucestershire, staff at MizarVision began collating satellite information tracking the aircraft’s position, altitude and likely destination – an Iranian missile launch site near the Strait of Hormuz. The data was then posted on the partially state-owned company’s social media feed on China’s popular Weibo platform for all to see.

The episode was one of several in recent weeks where MizarVision, based near Shanghai, has caused alarm from Washington to London by publicly posting detailed images of sensitive military hardware. These have ranged from American F-22 stealth fighters at an Israeli airbase to an assault ship being re-stocked at the joint UK-US naval base of Diego Garcia, as well as various sorties from UK air bases.

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The incidents have highlighted how Beijing now has the ability to watch and catalogue military and security movements – from the Cotswolds to Carolina – with the depth and intensity that was once the sole preserve of America and its allies – and is willing to share its findings with Russia and Iran.

A former White House aide and senior CIA expert on China told The i Paper that Beijing’s burgeoning fleet of military and commercial satellites was capable of spying on Western assets such as defence manufacturing sites and there could be “no doubt” that it was sharing imagery of the UK and other European countries with its allies.

China’s growing space army

China has rapidly accelerated its space programme in recent years after President Xi Jinping announced he wanted his country to be a leading global space power by 2030.

The number of Chinese satellites in orbit has grown at a blistering pace, from about 900 in 2024 to a current estimate of more than 1,300 commercial and state-owned spacecraft. China is now second only to America in the number of satellites it controls.

Britain is among Nato countries which have already expressed concern that China and Russia are developing capabilities to attack Western satellites in space. But the ability to look down on Earth and catalogue the activities of adversaries remains a core activity.

According to intelligence estimates, more than 510 of China’s satellites are surveillance devices with global coverage. Beijing is also quickly catching up with Washington when it comes to highly classified military satellites, deploying 157 compared to America’s 257. Britain has just six.

JIUQUAN, CHINA - JULY 29: China launches the SQX-1 Y10 commercial carrier rocket into space from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on July 29, 2025 in Gansu Province of China. The rocket blasted off at 12:11 pm (Beijing Time) from the launch site, sending a satellite into its planned orbit. (Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty Images)
A Chinese SQX-1 Y10 commercial rocket (Photo: VCG/Getty)

Professor Dennis Wilder, a former White House intelligence official under Barack Obama and a CIA Asia specialist, said: “China has the capability today to target all kinds of areas of interest, including defence manufacturers.

“The imagery is incredibly useful in espionage activities. I have no doubt China shares this kind of imagery on the UK and other European countries.”

The UK assets likely to be of interest to Beijing are understood to range from defence manufacturing sites and military testing facilities such as Salisbury Plain, through to data cable-laying activities off the British coast and military exercises involving British troops abroad.

Defence sources told The i Paper that Chinese commercial satellites now match or exceed the technical specifications of Western equivalents by being able to produce images of any location on Earth within 8-10 minutes at a resolution of about 25cm – accurate enough to identify a moving vehicle. Such is the number of satellites under Beijing’s control that images of the same location can be captured every 90 to 120 minutes.

According to space industry forecasts, China sent 127 commercial satellites into orbit in January alone and is expected to launch more than 1,000 over the coming year.

WARMINSTER, ENGLAND - JULY 23: Soldiers from 4 Brigade look on as an RAF Hercules transport plane makes an airdrop during a military exercise on Salisbury Plains on July 23, 2020 near Warminster, England. The training exercise involved long-range patrols, simulated attacks and meetings in recreated villages, as well as testing the medical capabilities of the rapid-response field hospitals. Towards the end of 2020, 250 soldiers from the British Armed Forces Task Group will be joining the UN peacekeeping mission in Mali, West Africa. Following the training that has been provided by the British armed forces in West Africa over recent months, the troops will move into the area in a bid to stem the growth of the Islamist-led insurgency in the region. A French-led force has been operating in Mali since early 2013 under
A British Army military exercise on Salisbury Plains, Warminster (Photo: Leon Neal/Getty)

Bill Greer, a satellite expert and co-founder of Commonspace, a non-profit looking to build a satellite constellation for disaster relief, said: “They can likely view any area in the UK multiple times a day, and likely with different sensors. They would [also] definitely be targeting US military, Iran, Ukraine, and all other global areas of interest and conflict.”

A Western intelligence source added: “China is increasingly making its presence felt in the space arena. Its reach is now considerable and it will be looking at the UK and anywhere else where it thinks gathering or sharing data will bear fruit.”

China ‘helped Iran with satellite targeting’

Indeed, the extent to which China is playing a role in the Iran and Ukraine conflicts has come under close scrutiny in recent weeks.

While American commercial satellite companies have been banned from selling detailed images of US military assets in the Middle East since the start of the Iran war, Beijing is widely believed by Western intelligence agencies to have provided Tehran with satellite imagery used for targeting or assessing damage.

China is also thought to have sold an advanced surveillance satellite to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the military force charged with maintaining the Iranian regime, in 2024. The satellite, known as TEE-01B, is believed to have been sold to the IRGC as part of an “in orbit” package including launch into space offered by Chinese firms. Beijing has strongly denied any such sale.

However, there is growing evidence that China is willing to use its technical prowess in space as leverage in its relationship with allies. As Kari Bingen, an expert at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, puts it: “China is using space as a tool of diplomacy and influence.”

One of China’s largest commercial operators, Chang Guang Satellite Technology (CGST), is already under sanctions from Washington and the European Union for providing images to Houthi rebels and Russian mercenaries in Ukraine – allegations which the company denies.

Precision warfare

Dr Bleddyn Bowen, a space politics specialist at the Royal United Services Institute think-tank and an academic at Durham University, said China’s enhanced capabilities – albeit untested in wartime -opened the door to its use of satellite data to carry out highly-precise strikes – including in aid of other states – in the event of conflict.

He said: “We’ve been used in the West to doing precision warfare, long-range airstrikes where we can hit not only certain buildings, but specific floors of certain buildings with munitions from a distance. We now have to get used to the other side doing similar things.”

TOPSHOT - This UGC image posted on social media on March 29, 2026 and verified by AFP staff appears to show a destroyed US Air Force Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) aircraft, primarily used for air traffic control, in the aftermath of a projectile strike at Prince Sultan Airbase in Saudi Arabia. An Iranian missile and drone attack on the Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia wounded at least 12 US soldiers, two of them seriously, according to The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, citing unidentified officials. (Photo by UGC / AFP via Getty Images) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT AFP - SOURCE: UGC / UNKNOWN - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS - NO RESALE -
A US Air Force E-3 Sentry aircraft destroyed in an Iranian strike in Saudi Arabia (Photo: AFP/Getty)

Experts emphasised that when it comes to space technology, there is routinely a blurred line between private satellite operators in one country and its government, who are more often than not also the biggest customers of the data provided.

In the case of China, the result is a burgeoning ecosystem of private companies, some run by individuals with links to state defence research institutions, competing to provide Beijing and other customers with space-based data.

MizarVision, which does not operate its own satellites and sources imagery from providers thought to include China’s Jilin-1 surveillance constellation as well as Western operators, did not respond to questions from The i Paper. Chinese commentators have insisted its activities are not dissimilar to Western commercial satellite companies, although the firm is reportedly 5.5 per cent owned by the Chinese state.

Among the locations highlighted for its “geo-spatial intelligence” service is Ramstein airbase in Germany, a major US Air Force hub used as a logistics hub for transporting weaponry to Ukraine.

The Western intelligence source added: “The key point here is that these are capabilities which can be harnessed by the Chinese state whenever it wants. The ability to watch everything and supply that information to anyone to gain an advantage is now firmly a Chinese capability. We should not forget that.”

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