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How a Secret Japanese Satellite Deal Just Supercharged Ukraine’s War Intel

7 min readMay 6, 2025
An illustrative image of the compact, high-resolution QPS-SAR orbiting the Earth. The satellite was developed by a Japanese startup, the Institute for Q-shu Pioneers of Space, Inc. (iQPS).

On April 21, 2025, Japan did something it had never done before: it handed over its most advanced form of space-based surveillance to a foreign military.

And not just any military… Ukraine’s GUR, the country’s military intelligence agency that has been hunting Russian logistics hubs, field commanders, and infrastructure with near-religious intensity since the first tank rolled across the border in 2022.

The asset in question?

Synthetic aperture radar imagery from Japan’s rising star in commercial aerospace, the Institute for Q-shu Pioneers of Space, or iQPS. It’s radar, but on steroids. And Ukraine is about to use it in the most brutal real-world testbed on the planet.

Japan’s First Step into the Intelligence Arena

For decades, Japan has been a space power with strict limits. Its postwar constitution discourages militarization and restricts the export of defense-related technology. But Russia’s war on Ukraine is changing old assumptions across Asia, and Tokyo is no exception.

After a brief but disruptive pause in US satellite intel sharing with Ukraine in early 2025, Ukrainian officials began quietly asking around. By February, a closed-door discussion with Japan turned into a working…

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Wes O'Donnell
Wes O'Donnell

Written by Wes O'Donnell

US Army & US Air Force Veteran | Global Security Writer | Juris Doctor | Intel Forecaster | TEDx Speaker | Pro Democracy | Pro Human | Hates Authoritarians

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