U.S. GSSAP satellites execute GEO handoff to monitor China’s Shijian-29 spacecraft

Ground-based observations of the Shijian-29A and 29B satellites in geostationary orbit. Credit: s2a Systems

HELSINKI — Commercial space tracking data shows U.S. satellites coordinating maneuvers to maintain proximity and continuous observation of a pair of Chinese spacecraft in geostationary orbit.

Observations by commercial space domain awareness provider Comspoc show USA 324 and USA 325, a pair of U.S. Geosynchronous Space Situational Awareness Program (GSSAP) satellites, executing a “handoff” operation between 14–18 March while tracking China’s Shiiian-29A and 29B satellites.

The geostationary orbit (GEO) is a belt 35,786 kilometers above the equator at which satellites’ orbital velocity matches the rotation of the Earth. Raising or lowering an orbit above or below GEO allows them to drift either west or east along the GEO belt respectively, allowing repositioning.

“For 4 days from 14-18 March, USA 324 and USA 325 (GSSAP) positioned themselves on opposite sides of China’s Shijian-29A and 29B — a coordinated “bracket” providing observation angles from both east and west, followed by a handoff for continuous watch on the Chinese pair,” the COMSPOC Operations Team wrote in a post on X.

USA 324 (GSSAP-5) had closed to within roughly 63 km of Shijian-29A by March 19, a relatively close distance in GEO that enables detailed observation while remaining within apparent safety margins. USA 325 (GSSAP-6), which had been tracking the pair since early January, performed a burn to depart the area, around 73 degrees East, March 18, completing the surveillance handover.

🛰️ GEO INSPECTION EVENT: US satellites hand off on China’s SJ-29 pair

For 4 days from 14-18 March, USA 324 and USA 325 (GSSAP) positioned themselves on opposite sides of China’s Shijian-29A & 29B — a coordinated “bracket” providing observation angles from both east and west,… pic.twitter.com/Pogr3u635G

— COMSPOC_OPS (@COMSPOC_OPS) March 26, 2026

The Shijian-29 pair, part of a broad, experimental and often classified series of satellites, were launched towards GEO in late December 2025 on a Long March 7A rocket. No images of the spacecraft were published, with China’s state-owned main space contractor CASC describing the pair as to be mainly used to “conduct verification tests of new technologies for space target detection.” 

This could be interpreted as being for space situational awareness (SSA) purposes, meaning the U.S. and China’s inspector satellites are, as characterized by COMSPOC “inspectors watching inspectors.” However, the capabilities and operational role of Shijian-29A and 29B remain unclear.

Ground-based observations of Shijian-29A and 29B in January by s2a Systems, a Swiss SSA firm, shed some further light on the pair. It suggests that Shijian-29A, developed by CASC’s Shanghai Academy of Spaceflight Technology (SAST), appears much brighter than Shijian-29B, developed by the Innovation Academy for Microsatellites of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IAMCAS). It is unclear if this difference in apparent brightness is due to the respective size, shape or even coatings of the spacecraft.

The episode is the latest in a series of accelerating maneuvers and exchanges in GEO among major spacefaring powers, especially the U.S., China and Russia. These have fielded satellites capable of rendezvous and proximity operations (RPO), raising the question of the line between benign inspection and potential counterspace applications.


Andrew Jones covers China’s space industry for SpaceNews. Andrew has previously lived in China and reported from major space conferences there. Based in Helsinki, Finland, he has written for National Geographic, New Scientist, Smithsonian Magazine, Sky…
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