WRC-27
The Treaty Conference That Most Americans Have Never Heard Of
The World Radiocommunication Conference is the International Telecommunication Union's primary regulatory instrument for spectrum governance. It convenes every four years, draws delegations from all 193 ITU member states, and revises the Radio Regulations — the binding international treaty framework that governs how spectrum is allocated globally, what services are permitted in which bands, and what interference protection standards apply between countries and across borders.
The Radio Regulations are not advisory. They are treaty law. When WRC revises a frequency allocation — identifying a band for International Mobile Telecommunications, adding a satellite service, or removing a primary allocation — those revisions bind every signatory. A country that deploys a service in a band without proper WRC authorization risks international interference complaints, equipment compatibility problems, and diplomatic friction with every country whose services it affects. The allocation chart that sits beneath the Astatic D-104 in the series image is the domestic expression of the international framework that WRC maintains. The colors on that chart did not get there by domestic decision alone. They got there through ninety-nine years of WRC decisions, negotiated among every country on earth, that the United States then implemented in its national allocation table.
WRC-27 will be the forty-second revision of the Radio Regulations since the ITU was founded. Its decisions will shape the global spectrum landscape through the 6G era — determining which bands are available for 6G deployment in which regions, what sharing rules apply between terrestrial and satellite services, and what the international framework looks like for the space-terrestrial convergence that Starlink and its competitors are building. These are not technical minutiae. They are the governance decisions that determine whether the next generation of global wireless infrastructure runs on open, interoperable standards or on a bifurcated architecture where the choice of equipment vendor determines which frequencies work and which don't.
Most Americans will never hear of WRC-27. The decisions it makes in Shanghai in October 2027 will determine what frequencies their phones use, whether their rural broadband has coverage, what equipment their logistics networks depend on, and whether the wireless infrastructure of the American economy is built on open standards or on a foundation that a foreign government helped design to serve its own strategic interests. The conference is invisible. Its consequences are not.
What Gets Decided in Shanghai — and Why It Matters
WRC-27's agenda was established at WRC-23 through Resolution 813. It runs to dozens of items covering every service category in the Radio Regulations. The items with the highest strategic significance for the U.S.-China competition cluster around two themes: mid-band IMT identification for 6G, and the satellite-terrestrial sharing framework for the LEO constellation era. Over 80 percent of the agenda involves satellite and NGSO systems — reflecting the transformation of wireless communications from a purely terrestrial technology to a space-terrestrial hybrid that Starlink, Amazon Kuiper, and their competitors are building in real time.
What Home Field Actually Means at a Treaty Conference
China hosting WRC-27 is not a conspiracy. The ITU rotates conferences among member states by geographic region, and China's turn as host was awarded through the normal ITU process at WRC-23. The structural advantages that hosting confers are real regardless of how the hosting rights were obtained — and they are worth understanding precisely because they are not the dramatic advantages that worst-case analysis might suggest, but they are also not trivial.
The host country controls the physical conference environment: the venue, the interpretation services, the side meeting spaces, the informal gathering areas where the real negotiation often happens between formal sessions. In a month-long conference with hundreds of agenda items and thousands of delegates, the logistics of where conversations happen and who has easy access to whom are not irrelevant. The host country's delegation arrives having managed conference preparation for four years, having cultivated relationships with ITU bureau staff, and having shaped the preparatory process through its participation in the ITU-R study groups that produced the technical documents the conference will consider.
China's most significant advantage at WRC-27 is not the home field. It is the technical credibility that comes from having deployed 5G at a scale that no other country has matched. When China's delegation advocates for mid-band harmonization in the 7-8 GHz range, it speaks as the country that has already deployed 3.5 million 5G base stations in the equivalent 5G bands. That deployment record is evidence. The United States' equivalent advocacy on the same bands is supported by a domestic pipeline that has been running against DoD incumbents for years. The difference is not about hosting advantages. It is about what each country's delegation can credibly claim its domestic governance has delivered.
U.S. strengths at WRC-27: The United States leads the ITU's Americas regional organization (CITEL) and has strong coordination with European allies through the CEPT framework. On satellite agenda items — NGSO sharing, D2D frameworks, Earth stations in motion — the United States has deployed commercial systems that give its technical positions credibility. Starlink's global operational record is the most significant piece of technical evidence in every satellite-related proceeding. On open standards and security architecture, the United States' position is strengthened by the demonstrated security risks of Chinese infrastructure that the Huawei record has documented.
U.S. vulnerabilities at WRC-27: On AI 1.7 — the 6G mid-band identification item that is the conference's primary strategic battleground — the United States' position is complicated by the DoD incumbency in the 7-8 GHz range that the domestic reallocation pipeline has not yet resolved. A U.S. delegation advocating for global IMT harmonization in bands it has not yet cleared domestically faces a credibility question that China's delegation — which has already allocated its equivalent bands — does not. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act's pipeline addresses this, but its implementation is not complete before WRC-27 convenes.
The security monitoring concern: U.S. intelligence and congressional oversight have raised concerns about the security of U.S. delegation communications during a conference held in Shanghai — noting that the conference venue and surrounding infrastructure are under Chinese jurisdiction, that electronic surveillance of foreign delegations is a documented Chinese intelligence practice, and that the sensitive nature of spectrum negotiating positions makes delegation communications a high-value target. These concerns have influenced U.S. delegation preparation and communication security planning. They do not change the conference outcome but they add a cost and complexity to U.S. participation that does not apply to the host.
The allied coordination asset: The United States' most significant structural advantage at WRC-27 is the coherence of its allied coordination. European countries through CEPT, Indo-Pacific partners through the Quad framework, and Americas partners through CITEL share broadly aligned positions on 6G mid-band, satellite frameworks, and equipment security that give the U.S.-led coalition a larger voting bloc than China's position commands. WRC decisions that go to vote rather than consensus can be determined by this coalition. The challenge is maintaining coalition coherence on the specific technical positions where allied interests in 6G deployment and satellite access align closely enough to hold together under Chinese pressure for alternative harmonization outcomes.
Before Shanghai — The Governance Checklist
WRC-27 convenes in October 2027. That is approximately sixteen months from the publication of this series. The governance decisions that determine what the United States brings to Shanghai are being made right now — in NTIA reallocation studies, in FCC proceedings, in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act's implementation, and in the DoD coordination negotiations that will determine whether upper mid-band spectrum is available for the commercial deployment that would give the U.S. delegation technical credibility on AI 1.7.
The checklist is not long. It does not require solving every problem this series has documented. It requires delivering on the specific items that determine the U.S. delegation's credibility on the most consequential agenda items.
Upper mid-band domestic progress: NTIA's studies on the 7.125-7.4 GHz and 7.25-8.4 GHz ranges need to produce credible timelines for commercial access — not final clearing decisions, but evidence that the United States is moving toward commercial use of the bands it will advocate for at WRC-27. A U.S. delegation position on AI 1.7 that is unsupported by domestic reallocation progress is a position that China's delegation can credibly challenge as aspirational rather than operational.
CBRS protection: The FCC's CBRS power proceeding needs to resolve in a way that preserves the GAA shared tier. Not only because CBRS's rural broadband and private network record is valuable in itself, but because CBRS is the United States' primary empirical demonstration that shared spectrum governance produces innovation at scale — the governance model that distinguishes U.S. spectrum policy from China's administrative allocation approach. Eliminating CBRS's shared tier before WRC-27 removes the demonstration from the record at the moment it is most needed as a counter-narrative to China's centralized model.
Starlink D2D regulatory clarity: The FCC's framework for Starlink Direct-to-Device needs to provide the regulatory certainty that allows SpaceX to deploy the V2 satellite constellation — with its 150 Mbps capability and 100x data density improvement — on the timeline that makes it operational before WRC-27. The United States' strongest card on satellite agenda items is a deployed, commercially operational D2D service that demonstrates coverage capabilities no terrestrial network can match. That card requires regulatory clarity that the FCC's 2026 spectrum coordination decisions have advanced but not completed.
Allied coordination coherence: The CEPT and CITEL preparatory processes need to produce aligned positions on AI 1.7 that hold through the conference. The risk is that European countries — which have their own mid-band deployment priorities in the 6 GHz range that differ somewhat from U.S. priorities — reach accommodation with China on band harmonization that fragments the allied position. U.S. diplomatic engagement in the ITU-R preparatory process through 2027 is the mechanism for managing that risk.
What the Treaty Conference Establishes
WRC-27 is where five posts of domestic governance failure become visible as geopolitical position. The 1927 public resource framework that nobody has fundamentally revised. The auction machine that converted temporary permissions into permanent franchises. The three capture vectors — carrier, DoD, broadcaster — that have defended the mid-band spectrum that 6G requires. The managed commons that works and is under active threat. The China race that domestic capture has made harder. All of it arrives in Shanghai in October 2027, in the treaty conference whose decisions bind every country on earth, hosted by the country that has benefited most from American spectrum governance's failures.
China's hosting advantage is real and bounded. The home field gives China logistical control, informal agenda influence, and the deployment credibility that comes from having put 3.5 million 5G base stations on the ground before the conference convenes. It does not give China the ability to impose outcomes over a coalition of allied countries that share broadly aligned positions on 6G mid-band, satellite frameworks, and equipment security. WRC decisions that go to vote can be determined by the allied coalition's arithmetic. The question is whether the United States arrives with the domestic deployment progress and allied coordination coherence to lead that coalition effectively on the items that matter most.
The satellite convergence layer is the United States' most significant structural advantage. Starlink Direct-to-Device, Amazon Kuiper, and AST SpaceMobile represent a coverage capability that China's ground-based infrastructure cannot match and whose LEO constellation equivalent China has not yet deployed at equivalent scale. The WRC-27 agenda items on D2D regulation and NGSO sharing frameworks are the treaty-level infrastructure for the service that closes rural dead zones — on I-81, in rural Pennsylvania, across every geography that the auction machine's revenue-maximization logic left unserved. The United States' ability to protect and advance those agenda items is its clearest path to a WRC-27 outcome that serves both domestic coverage needs and global strategic interests simultaneously.
The ISAC dimension is where spectrum governance and military intelligence converge. 6G's integrated sensing and communications architecture means that the global deployment of 6G infrastructure is the deployment of a distributed sensing network. The country whose equipment is embedded in global 6G infrastructure has sensing capabilities as well as communications infrastructure. This is why the Huawei security concern was not theoretical. It is why the WRC-27 ISAC framework matters beyond the telecommunications industry. The governance decisions that determine whose 6G equipment gets deployed globally are governance decisions about whose sensing infrastructure covers the world. That is the strategic stakes of the spectrum race stated in their starkest form — and it is why the Astatic D-104 on the frequency allocation chart is not a nostalgic artifact. It is the starting point of a chain of governance decisions whose end point is visible in Shanghai, in October 2027, in the conference room where the invisible infrastructure of the next thirty years gets its rules.
What Six Posts Establish
The spectrum belongs to the public. The Radio Act of 1927 said so explicitly. No one can own a frequency. The government holds the spectrum in trust. Licenses are temporary permissions revocable in the public interest. That framework has governed American wireless communications for ninety-nine years. It has not been fundamentally revised in all that time — not because it has remained adequate, but because the interests that accumulated on top of it became powerful enough to prevent the revision that its inadequacy required.
What accumulated on top of it was capture. The auction machine that converted temporary permissions into permanent franchises, generating $200 billion in revenue and concentrating the most valuable spectrum in three national carriers. The Department of Defense holding mid-band allocations whose utilization no external actor can independently audit. The broadcast television industry that held spectrum for sixty years past its public interest justification and was paid billions from public auction revenue to vacate public property. The national carriers currently seeking to eliminate the managed commons band that has produced more private network innovation than any equivalent licensed band. Four decades of individually rational decisions, none of them responsible for the aggregate they produced. The aggregate is the mid-band deficit that has given China its 5G deployment lead and is threatening to give it its 6G standards position.
The managed commons proved the alternative works. Wi-Fi was not produced by an auction. CBRS was not produced by an auction. The innovation ecosystem that the unlicensed bands generated — without exclusive licenses, without permanent franchises, without the investment-certainty arguments that the carrier industry deploys to defend its holdings — is the empirical refutation of the exclusive licensing orthodoxy that has dominated American spectrum policy since 1994. The proof of concept exists. The political economy that would allow it to scale is the obstacle.
The domestic story and the geopolitical story are the same story. Every MHz that DoD defended with an unverifiable security claim is a MHz China allocated to 5G. Every year the broadcaster incentive auction took to negotiate is a year China spent building base stations. Every CBRS innovation band that carriers convert to exclusive franchise is a shared-access success story that will not be replicated in the next contested band. The governance failure is not an internal problem with external consequences. It is the external problem, expressed in domestic regulatory politics, arriving at its logical conclusion in Shanghai in October 2027.
The truck driver who ran Channel 19 on I-81 knew something that the frequency allocation chart confirms. Dead zones are not accidents of physics. They are the output of governance decisions — about who gets spectrum, at what price, under what conditions, with what obligations to the public that owns the resource they are using. The static on Channel 19 in a Pennsylvania valley is the same governance failure as the C-band auction that took four years to clear, the same DoD incumbency that has held mid-band spectrum against commercial access for decades, the same carrier lobbying that is trying to eliminate the shared tier that rural broadband operators depend on. Physics does not produce dead zones. Governance does.
The Full Record — What the Series Establishes
| Series Finding | Post | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Electromagnetic spectrum is public property under Radio Act of 1927 — licenses are revocable temporary permissions, not property rights; public interest standard governs every license | Post I | Documented |
| FCC auction authority 1993 — $200B+ gross bids since 1994; permanent private franchises created on public spectrum; three-carrier oligopoly produced; rural coverage failures systematic | Post II | Documented |
| Three independent capture vectors — carrier lobbying, DoD mid-band incumbency, broadcaster protection — collectively explain U.S. mid-band deficit in 5G/6G competition | Post III | Structural Finding · Supported |
| Managed commons model — unlicensed bands, CBRS, amateur radio — produces innovation, rural coverage, and investment that exclusive licensing auction model structurally cannot; CBRS $14B+ investment, 437,000+ devices, 98% county coverage | Post IV | Documented |
| China has 3.5M+ 5G base stations vs. ~500K U.S.; mid-band deployment gap is governance gap, not technology gap; China holds ~40% of declared 6G patents; WRC-27 hosting gives structural agenda advantages | Post V | Documented |
| WRC-27 convenes Shanghai October 2027 — AI 1.7 (6G mid-band), D2D satellite, NGSO sharing, and ISAC are key agenda items; U.S. position strengthened by satellite convergence and allied coordination, weakened by DoD mid-band incumbency on 7-8 GHz bands under discussion | Post VI | Documented |
| ISAC architecture makes 6G infrastructure deployment simultaneously a communications and sensing network — whose equipment covers the world covers the world in more than one sense | Post VI | Structural Finding · Supported |
| Dead zones on American highways are governance failures, not physics failures — the public resource that belongs to everyone has been allocated by a system designed for revenue maximization and incumbent protection, not for the coverage, innovation, and strategic deployment that the public interest requires | Posts I–VI | Series Finding |
| WRC-27 outcome is contested and not predetermined — U.S. satellite convergence, market innovation, and allied coordination are genuine offsets; domestic governance decisions made before October 2027 determine which set of advantages the U.S. delegation can credibly present | Post VI | Open Question · Evidence-Based |
Sub Verbis · Vera
The spectrum belongs to the public. The Radio Act said so in 1927. The auction machine built franchises on top of it. The incumbents defended those franchises. The managed commons proved an alternative. The China race made the cost visible. WRC-27 in Shanghai is where the invoice arrives.
The Astatic D-104 is on the frequency allocation chart. The dead zones on I-81 are in the governance record. The base stations China built while America fought its own incumbents are in the deployment data. The conference opens in October 2027.
The frequency is public. The allocation is the argument. The rulebook is being written. Sub Verbis · Vera.


