The
attack on NYC cannot be justified, ignored or appeased but must be
understood and fixed by the destruction of the root causes.
The impossible dream Connecting the dots: http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmes/analysis.shtml 1993 – Defense analysis reports on the danger
of terrorism including the danger of al Qaeda martyr brigades use of
Airplanes to attack the Whitehouse or the Pentagon – aircraft likely to
be used as weapons – several more such reports up to a 1999 reports with
specific analysis of suicide bombers using aircraft (with explosives or
fuel) are identified in national security reports – It is not a new or
un imagined idea 1993 Attempt to blow up
twin trade towers 1994 – Algerian terrorist attempt to fly a
highjacked commercial airline into landmarks in Paris with a heavy load of
fuel stopped on ground by storming the aircraft. (Therefore it is not true
no one imagined such a possibility of driving aircraft into landmarks) 1995 Various plots discovered in the Philippines by
Arab terrorist to use aircraft as weapons 1999 Reports of possible
air attack by suicide bombers on the G7 in Italy 2001 – Report from FBI in Arizona about suspicious
Arabs taking flying lessons
One such Arab (accused of being one of the team of 9/11 with phone
numbers linking him to the leadership of the attack) He was reported as
being very suspicious and was arrested in Minnesota but computer and
documents not searched or reported to terrorist taskforces at DoD or CIA. The dots are there – but there was no (as there
still is not) a central organization or computer system to put them
together (of 13 intelligence agencies many in DOD, but also drug agencies,
state department, customs, coast guard, ATF et al). There was and is no
linkage between foreign information and domestic law enforcement.
Prevention is not like making a criminal case for a court of law. The
issue is not perusing a crime but finding out what is going on by
infiltration, information gathering, and analysis. The NSA has the computer power to review millions of
pieces of data a minute and could have tracked the connections – al
Qaeda, Aircraft, highjack, flight schools, the report from Minnesota and
Arizona, tracks to who took lessons (and had an interest in crop dusters)
right to the bombers themselves who were using their own names to buy
tickets and rent cars. In short better police work could have stopped the
attacks of 9/11. Not for sure
but it is quite possible –AND more important We are not much better
organized today to find and disrupt attacks – it is still business as
usual (stove pipes) without a central point of analysis. Therefore it is
of vital importance to track the record and fix the broken links. http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/politics/politics-arms-bush-crusader.html?todaysheadlines Remote
sensing and swarms of precision weapons (missiles, rockets, cannon from
the low flying aircraft, drones, helicopters) can destroy any enemy from a
distance. Troops are peacekeepers not war fighters - future war are fought
with information systems and weapons directed from a distance. Think
about cannon (and riflemen or infantry) - five hundred years ago they
required a important revaluation of methods and equipment in warfare
(warfighting) systems and changed the geo-political nature of the world.
The warlords or feudal aristocracy who depended on fortification or
castles were over run by central states and their batteries of cannon.
Since the 14th century because of the mass armies organized by centralized
national states and their armies became all powerful. Empires were based
on the competitive advantage of better cannons and boats. Since
the development of cannon, people getting up front and personal and then
shooting at each other fought wars in close contact. Cannon and their
companions of rifles, machine guns, and the platforms from horse drawn
wagons to tanks to aircraft fought war with the same idea; to kill the
enemy by getting close enough to see the enemy and hitting him with shells
and explosions with shrapnel while the other side did the same thing. First
in Panama, then in the gulf war precision weapons fired from remote
platform so weakened and terrified the enemy that infantry, tanks and
cannon were not needed to fight other soldiers in close contact. The 10%
of modern IT troops and weapons did 90% of the work, more of the same
with Yugoslavia and even more so in Afghanistan. So much for cannon -
their time has passed yet people still think and talk about World War II
type battles thus tanks, troops, old industrial style rust belt weapons
and military organizations. The White House warned Congress on Thursday against
trying to save the Army's $11 billion Crusader artillery system, saying
President Bush stood firmly behind Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's
decision to cancel the weapon and find alternatives. (with self propelled
shells from light launch pads that guide themselves to targets or smart
cheap mass produced missiles) Rumsfeld's decision to kill
the Crusader system has drawn heavy fire from lawmakers from states where
the 155mm self-propelled howitzer and its components are built by United
Defense Industries Inc. . House Republican Conference
Chairman J.C. Watts of Oklahoma, where the Crusader is assembled, and
other key lawmakers have vowed to fight the cancellation in what analysts
see as a test of Rumsfeld's ability to push through reforms he thinks are
needed to transform the U.S. military. Peace
and prosperity: There
is a growing Global awareness that peace and prosperity depend on two
factors. The World Economic Form, Tony Blair and many elements of the
international elite, the intellectual media and average people know that
the world is very unbalanced, out of joint, unequal, and unstable because
of the vast and growing gap between the first world: the modern secular
scientific, technological, democratic, economical advanced and highly
specialized world of about one billion (Per Capita Income - PCI over
$10,000), in North America Europe, some in Latin America, Japan and parts
of Asia: (The G8) The
second world (was USSR and its empire) is now the billion semi-developed (PCI
around or over $1,500) with India having a bigger middle class than Great
Britain – a growing middle class in Latin America and China – and a
growing gap with - And
the Third world: three billion primitive, superstitious, illiterate, with
archaic authorities both in government and religion, (PCI about or under a
dollar a day) The
second great issue comes from the first – terrorism which uses the tools
of modern economies for the ends of ancient ideologies and cultures. SO: Yes,
we need to go after terrorist and those that could supply them with
weapons of mass destruction (WMD) but avoid making social and political
condition worse, more angry, as they become helpless in the face of
technological warfare – hopelessness does not mean passive - But
we need to improve conditions in the “Third World” But
with local development – local enterprise – education and
infrastructure to give people hope and economically active – using the
Taiwan, South Korea, – model – an authorities promote education and
industrial development – partly global but also local – If
the first world supported universal education – there would be millions
of school teachers as lower middle class and semi-literate people – a
base to build better services and enterprises, improved health – the
average age of the third world is under 18 – so about a billion school
children – or at 100 to one that is 10 million teachers – at $1,000
each – is only 10 billion – (not good schools – but schools)
supplemented by NGO’s and local resources.
The goal is 90% literacy at the 5th grade level in a few
years for a billion children and young adults. The 10 million teachers
require high school or normal school training but it could be done –
better than 50 billion more defense expenditures. The
program could be run by the UN working with NGO’s.
America became a great
industrial power in the 20th century by becoming the great arsenal of
democracy rather than a focus on a massive land based Army. The decision
was made in WW II to mobilize less than one third of the divisions
needed for an invasion of Europe. We counted on Russia to provide
the troops and take the casualties while we build 10,000's of aircraft
and provide weapons. The results of the massive air war were mixed - the
reductions came in the civilian sector and military production was
maintained - the population was terrorized but continued to work and
produce. During the Cold War, we defended Europe with Atomic blackmail
with symbolic land forces which were expected to be over run in days.
All our technology only prolonged and make more terrible the war in
Korea and Vietnam. If we want to pull down the regime in Iraq we need
ground forces of 100,000's engaged in messy fights - therefore we will
need allies - land wars is just not our thing. Our military
is 3/4 tail and only 1/4 bite - we require a logistics system which is
very complex. A few fast, mobile, inventive special forces can effect
small wars but not middle size ones. http://www.wiredbrain.net/defense.htm A botched operation is much worse
than no mission at all. In the case of a long messy war, the
anti-militarism passions and activities are still out there, the
growing world view of America is acting as a bully because it has much
more military power than the rest of the world combined will fuel
protests and left wing activity. In history, since the raise of the
nation state, such a unequal balance of power among states creates
a strong desire for the weaker nations to regain more influence by
ganging up on the bully - In the 16th century it was against Spain, then
against France in the 18th, then against Britain in the 19th, then
Germany and Russia in the 20th century and now US. Since there is no military option,
the European Union which is now a super power will use diplomatic,
psychological, economic and other means to get America more in line. The
weaker states turn to terror tactics. 1.) There is not an organized
opposition in Iraq such as the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan - the
Wall Street Journal front-paged a 2,000-word piece from the Kurdish area
of Iraq that made clear the Kurds had never had it so good with their
share of Iraqi oil sales and wanted no part in a war to remove Saddam
from power. Turkey is very concerned about renewed Kurdish problems of
its own. 2.) Iraq has at least 10 times more
military capacity than Afghanistan and a semi-modern state with the
ability to retaliate in most unpleasant ways. The forces can be mixed
into civilian populations not out in the open - there is no front line.
It is possible even billions in smart bombs and other precision-guided
munitions will not cause a regime change. Populations under attack then
to pull together not apart. 3.) Turkey is quite uncertain,
Israel already has enough problems - Arabs are opposed so our regional
base is soft. 4.) Afghanistan is not over by a
long shot leaving the right flank exposed. 5.) Worse case scenario is quite
scary - instability causing a coup in Saudi Arabia, a oil crisis,
attacks in force on Israel, more terrorist attacks, energizing the
Anti-American forces of a billion Moslems. It could radicalize Iran even
more - But the thinking is that only reason
for not going after the Iraqi leader as an addendum to Afghanistan,
another media insider explained, is that the Pentagon had to replenish
its almost exhausted arsenal of smart bombs and other precision-guided
munitions. http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2002/2/17/122713.shtml
Clearly Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, who was among the
guests, and his let's-get-Saddam-now hawkish followers within the
administration, has won the intra-mural struggle against Secretary
Powell. But the Saddam devil is in the Pentagon details. That the Kurds will rise up against Saddam as soon as the first bombs
fall was another given at the vice president's party. Two days later,
the Wall Street Journal front-paged a 2,000-word piece from the Kurdish
area of Iraq that made clear the Kurds had never had it so good with
their share of Iraqi oil sales and wanted no part in a war to remove
Saddam from power. Another question raised with the conservative opinion-makers was what
happens if the U.S. victory in Afghanistan continues to unravel as it
appears to be doing. There was a response for all the caveats. "We
should not be involved in Afghanistan beyond the defeat of al-Qaeda and
Taliban," said another stalwart. What happens if Saddam does not sit this out waiting for the
superpower to strike? He may well agree to a return of U.N. inspectors
-- whatever weapons of mass destruction capability he has accumulated is
well hidden by now and presumably beyond discovery -- under the 1991
U.N. Resolution 687? Nuclear Weapons-Free Zone Saddam is reported to be leaning in that direction with a little
wrinkle designed to sway Arab opinion: Resolution 687 has an
unimplemented provision that calls for "the establishment of a
nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East region." Israel is
known to have a nuclear arsenal of some 300 weapons. Such a ploy would
automatically garner the support of the Arab league of 22 nations. America became a great industrial power by becoming the arsenal
of democracy rather than a mass land based Army. The decision was made
in WW II to mobilize less than one third of the divisions needed for an
invasion of Europe. We counted on Russia to provide the troops and
take the casualties while we build 10,000's of aircraft and provide
weapons. The results of the massive air war were mixed - the reductions
came in the civilian sector and military production was maintained - the
population was terrorized but continued to work and produce. All our
technology only prolonged and make more terrible the war in Vietnam. If
we want to pull down the regime in Iraq we need ground forces of
100,000's engaged in messy fights - therefore allies -
The real and the ideal – both are
required - 35 Then
one of them, which was a lawyer, asked him a question, tempting him, and
saying, 36 Master,
which is the great commandment in the law? 37 Jesus
said unto him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and
with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. 38 This
is the first and great commandment. 39 And
the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. 40 On
these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.
Matthew
22: 1 - 46 - http://www.biblestudytools.net/OnlineStudyBible/bible.cgi?passage=mt+22&version=kjv&showtools=0 The world as we experience it is
partly illusion. We have familiarity with a flat earth that stands still
while the sun rises and falls over us. Science requires special care and
methods to validate experience with experiments, observations and
confirmations. Science cannot fathom the spirit or dreams of humans and
other animals. These imaginary worlds are real in our heads, shaped by our
social environment where those around us confirm dreams as reality and
illusions are facts. The all
too solid earth is mostly space between forces called atoms which behave
in ways completely out of our awareness. The romantic love of God leading to a
mystic union with the beloved is beyond everyday people and life, the idea
of true selflessness, outside our tribal families, is also unlikely and
rare. But people keep trying to be more spiritual, more kind, better
members of the holy family or church and try to behave, believe, and act
by the ideals of the community of saints. In the same way we can not make a
perfect world, we can not solve everyone’s problems, so the great divide
between the fifth of the earths people who live in technical cultures with
their wealth, military and economic power and the 3/5th of
peoples and cultures left behind, tribal, superstitious, primitive, poor,
and the gap keeps growing – the rich getting richer and the poor getting
poorer and more numerous and a greater proportion of all peoples. The well off cannot live in peace and
prosperity in such a world. There
are no gates high enough, there are no seas wide enough, and there are no
mountains that can keep the technically dependent cultures from the
disruption of irregular warfare. Security
is our world is an illusion and an impossible dream – just as the
Christian message and salvation by faith alone is only conjure based on
hope and fantasy. BUT we must keep trying or just become a pragmatic,
practical, materialist nation and people, without high culture, poetry,
having no vaster ambitions, beyond history – we need to live in history
knowing where we came from and where we want to go, having a sense of
mission for humanity - BUT – Legends, Myths and Fairy Tales; Wars and personal conflicts become
violent when both sides do not figure out each other and the others
intentions. World War I was a classic lack of understanding as explained
in the “Guns of August” by
Barbara W. Tuchman which JFK asked people read during the Cuban
missile crisis. Understanding does not mean approval. Napoleon and Germany
underestimated Russia as did Japan fail to take a realistic view of
American power, southerners did not know what the North would do to
preserve the union, the Allies did not prepare for German aggression
because they did not take seriously the nature of the threat, thus
conflict comes when there is a lack of realism. The lack of realism is due not to both
sides just being stupid or stubborn, while there is always plenty of that,
they always remember where they buried the last hatchet, BUT because of
false beliefs, legends, myths, and fairy tales – racism, nationalism,
Nazi romantic mythology, Japanese jingoism and cults, Southern cultural
mythology preserved in “gone with the wind”, communism, Christian
crusades, British imperialism, the ugly American bully capitalist cultural
and economic empire and other sad stories of people with false beliefs and
passionate attachments to dreams and fairy tales based on a little
knowledge showing little interest in paying attention to the concerns,
character and intentions of others. Extreme
Moslems do not understand us and we don’t understand them and neither
side cares to change the situation. Imaginary stories are important and
powerful, from history, tribal customs, religion, entertainment, politics,
and the dreamland of the collective consciousness. Yes, Santa Claus is a
vigorous and good spirit, Virginia, as are Joe Hill and Thomas Jefferson
who will be in spirit where ever men are not free, along with the evil
one, the great devil, and how Disney made it’s fortune retelling
European children’s story. Our history as is most a narration dominated
by legends and myths used to increase loyalty and self love. We know and
love ourselves and know how we are superior and better than others.
We love ourselves much better than our neighbors because we are
better than they are. Osama bin Laden’s mythology is similar; he knows
he is superior to the corrupt Americans. We have helped to create and fallen
for Osama bin Laden’s mythology, he believed we were the weak horse and
would not be capable of massive response. Clearly both sides do not know
each other and the conflict increases the misunderstanding and makes
legends and myths more important as patriotism takes over from curiosity.
Blowback is when people believe in their own propaganda, how
wonderful they are, how evil the enemy is, how god is on their side.
Nationalism takes the form of the cultural and the religious moralist and
superiority of certain knowledge. Several forms of mythology about
America are now in conflict – Some have heard and believe the story that
America is a specially divine place, a Zion, separate from the gross
materialism and power politics of the old world which is in conflict with
the myth of America as the great fiend, as a evil imperialist empire. Both
stories are powerful but false legends, as are the legends in Palestine
and Israel, so real people die real deaths involved in the unreal popular
fairy tales that become doctrine and articles of faith.
Nations are shaped and formed by their myths, people come together
united in vague dreams and stories, such as the legends of the “Holy
Land”, America’s mission to humanity, the Nation of Islam,
international socialism, racism, dreams of the after life, heaven and
hell, stories often told and sometimes beloved, commonly believed, and
unlikely to be questioned. This blind belief causes the lack of
interest in the reality of the enemy, causes gross mistakes and a clear
and present danger to real security and safety BUT built into human
culture and psychology. This doesn’t mean we give up and fall into a
crude existentialism, or any of several philosophical systems of the 20th
century. Or logical positivism, also known as
scientific EMPIRICISM, modern school of philosophy that in the 1920s
attempted to introduce the methodology and precision of mathematics to the
study of philosophy, much as had been done in symbolic logic (see LOGIC).
Led by the Vienna Circle, a group including the philosophers Rudolf CARNAP
and Moritz Schlick and the mathematician Kurt GÖDEL, the logical
positivists held that metaphysical speculation is nonsensical; that
logical and mathematical propositions are tautological; and that moral and
value statements are merely emotive. The function of philosophy, they
maintained, is to clarify concepts in both everyday and scientific
language. The movement received its inspiration from the work of FREGE,
Bertrand RUSSELL, WITTGENSTEIN, and G.E. MOORE. The Vienna Circle
disintegrated in the late 1930s after the Nazis took Austria, but its
influence spread throughout Europe and America, and its concept,
particularly its emphasis on the analysis of language as the function of
philosophy, has been carried on throughout the West. KIERKEGAARD developed a Christian
existentialism that recognized the concrete ethical and religious demands
confronting the individual, who is forced each time to make a subjective
commitment. The necessity and seriousness of these decisions cause him
dread and despair. Following Kierkegaard, HEIDEGGER and SARTRE, both
students of HUSSERL, were the major thinkers of the movement. Heidegger
rejected the label of existentialism, describing his philosophy as an
investigation of the nature of being in which the analysis of human
existence is only a first step. For Sartre, the only self-declared
existentialist among the major thinkers, existence precedes essence: there
is no God and no fixed human nature; thus, each person is totally free and
entirely responsible for what he or she becomes and does. This
responsibility accounts for human dread and anguish. Sartre influenced the
writings of CAMUS and de BEAUVOIR. A Christian existentialism was
developed in France by Gabriel Marcel, a Roman Catholic. The religious
thinkers Karl BARTH, Paul TILLICH, Reinhold NIEBUHR, and Martin BUBER, and
the philosopher Karl JASPERS are often included in the orbit of
existentialism.
The issue of why and what to do about terrorism
lingers - mainly because there is no RATIONAL reason and no practical
solution.
http://news.haaretz.co.il/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=160381&contrassID=2&subContrassID=4&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y&itemNo=160381
Powerful countries that wish to operate beyond their borders need bases
- if not a permanent air or naval base, then at least one at which they
can refuel; if not for mounting operations, then at least for gathering
intelligence; and if not for takeoffs, then at least for landings. The
local neighbors which have hosted western bases charged a political fee
for their hospitality. The claim that the foreign armies in these bases
also protected their hosts was countered by the contention that the
foreign presence fomented the local populations and endangered the
stability of the regimes.
U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has strengthened America's
relationship with Turkey and the various central Asian countries that
host bases. In aspiring to transform the American army, Rumsfeld
encountered opposition on the part of the conservative military
leadership, which refuses to give up the weapons systems of previous
wars. The conservative generals have connived with their friends in
Congress to invest billions of dollars in upgrading these systems.
Rumsfeld wants that money for weapons for future wars. This week, the
Pentagon erupted with the affair of the army's efforts to foil
Rumsfeld's decision to cancel the Crusader mobile artillery.
http://news.haaretz.co.il/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=160381&contrassID=2&subContrassID=4&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y&itemNo=160381
The plot was foiled six years ago. In other words, the Clinton
administration and the U.S. intelligence community knew in the mid-1990s
of credible plans for 9/11-style attacks where kamikaze aircraft would
be used to kill Americans. Knowing as we do now what our government and
intelligence communities knew and when they knew it is maddening.
![]()
Their hope is to black-mail (anthrax means black carbuncle, malignant pustule - sent in the mail) the United States into abandoning our war on terror, and forsaking our friends and allies and security commitments around the world. Our enemies are bound for disappointment. America will never be black-mail (anthrax means black carbuncle, malignant pustule - sent in the mail) ed, and we will never forsake our commitment to liberty. (He was talking of "almost every state that actively sponsors terror is known to be seeking weapons of mass destruction and the missiles to deliver them at longer and longer ranges" rather than terrorist groups not nations using balloons, boats, trucks, civilian planes, suitcases, containers, et al are all more likely then missiles - not atomic bombs but stateless bioterrorist)
To win this war, we have to think differently. The enemy who appeared on September 11th seeks to evade our strength and constantly searches for our weaknesses. So America is required once again to change the way our military thinks and fights. And starting on October 7th, the enemy in Afghanistan got the first glimpses of a new American military that cannot, and will not, be evaded. (Applause.)
The need for military transformation was clear before the conflict in Afghanistan, and before September the 11th. Here at the Citadel in 1999, I spoke of keeping the peace by redefining war on our terms. The same recommendation was made in the strategic review that Secretary Rumsfeld briefed me on last August -- a review that I fully endorse. What's different today is our sense of urgency -- the need to build this future force while fighting a present war. It's like overhauling an engine while you're going at 80 miles an hour. Yet we have no other choice.
Our military has a new and essential mission. For states that support terror, it's not enough that the consequences be costly -- they must be devastating. (Applause.) The more credible this reality, the more likely that regimes will change their behavior -- making it less likely that America and our friends will need to use overwhelming force against them.
Our commanders are gaining a real-time picture of the entire battlefield, and are able to get targeting information from sensor to shooter almost instantly. Our intelligence professionals and special forces have cooperated in battle-friendly -- with battle-friendly Afghan forces -- fighters who know the terrain, who know the Taliban, and who understand the local culture. And our special forces have the technology to call in precision air strikes -- along with the flexibility to direct those strikes from horseback, in the first cavalry charge of the 21st century. (Applause.)
This combination -- real-time intelligence, local allied forces, special forces, and precision air power -- has really never been used before. The conflict in Afghanistan has taught us more about the future of our military than a decade of blue ribbon panels and think-tank symposiums.
The Predator is a good example. This unmanned aerial vehicle is able to circle over enemy forces, gather intelligence, transmit information instantly back to commanders, then fire on targets with extreme accuracy.
We will not get very far if we don't understand what is going on - how we are organized to respond, and the current nature of international black-mail (anthrax means black carbuncle, malignant pustule - sent in the mail). The discussion has been off the point - good and evil, global problems or just people who hate us - all this maybe true but miss the vital issues - power, money, oil and Iraq.
If contemporary Islamic terror can be considered a variety of totalitarian terror, it becomes clearer just how limited the injustice theory and the question of "root causes" are. No doubt, injustices and policies can be argued over, but not as root causes of terror. Totalitarianism stands above such niceties. No injustices, separately or together, necessarily lead to totalitarianism and no mitigation of injustice, however defined, will eliminate its unwavering beliefs, absolutist control and unbounded ambitions. Claims of "root causes" are distractions from the real work at hand.
Off base - what are the real material causes
Poverty and inequality play a big part in the background - as in nation states the world is more stable with a big middle class, open opportunity for many, free markets, democracy and hope for the down trodden. A nation or a world with vast inequality and hopelessness can not be stable and peaceful - but it is not the immediate cause of the attack on the U.S.
Ideological and political extremism is part of the causes but not sufficient. They did not go through all this just because that hate us. They want something, not just ideas or fancy of an Islamic nation but real thing in the real world. What they want is control of the real base, the real cause of wars in the region is OIL, the core of middle eastern politics and the war on Iraq. A long term and organized military (covert espionage and sabotaging our economic and political system) is not an activity of a crazy minority - but of state action. Iraq feels they have lost a battle but not the war. If you make people really angry they need to be disabled from revenge. The Afghanistan situation is a double blind - or patsy - if you attack a big power you need good cover and distractions otherwise they nuke you.
In Italy some years ago some especially nasty kidnappers took the child of a rich family. They sent the family a part from their child - a toe or finger and offered to sent the child back in pieces if not paid off. The black-mail (anthrax means black carbuncle, malignant pustule - sent in the mail)ers have send us one message in civil aircraft crashing into the WTC - better and more real than a rogue nation with missiles - more powerful, cheaper, more accurate, and no one really know source except the belief in the double blind - the lone gunman - ( the Afghans and Bin Laden do not know who they are working with ) - we have received one finger and a note to pay up. (really to back off) The next message will be balloons with 50 Kilos of Anthrax down wind from DC that will kill a Hiroshima size population in DC (150,000) Then marital law, economic and political panic, censorship, or the Oh. Shit syndrome.
http://www.wnd.com/news/printer-friendly.asp?ARTICLE_ID=25220
We will not get very far if we don't understand what is going on - how we are organized to respond, and the current nature of international black-mail (anthrax means black carbuncle, malignant pustule - sent in the mail).
Struggle
with big new concepts:
Are
we too comfortable with the way things were and not serious enough about
painful changes?
The
increasing inequality on the planet is confronted with the ideal of social
justice and the civil society with some sense of fairness. Reality is out of
joint with our institutions and ways of making choices. There is a growing
feeling that the current tribulations are bigger than our way of dealing
with global change and are greater than the passion for cooperation. In
short events are out of hand, we have lost control of the future, that
events are greater than our ability to plan and cope – it’s all to big
and hard.
True
enough –
Visionary
leadership cannot in itself change a pattern of reaction, or over reaction
to proactive behavior and setting firm requirements to change the dynamics
of paradigm shifts. A shift from local, tribal, clan and family to national,
from national to international, from me to us, from ours vs. them to a more
universal feeling of humanity. Without
visionary leadership there is not a prayer people will shift their
worldviews on their own. The masses have to begin to understand they are not
alone and are interdependent on a new world order.
A
simple case is state department visas, INS, border patrol, customs, coast
guard, CIA, FBI, all with different computers and information, homeland
defense, bioterrorism, secure visas and tracking, security cards, air
travel, all around an issue of foreigners coming into America and doing us
great damage. We have 10 million illegal residence, mostly doing jobs local
don't want, how do we control our population. What we do has little to do
with making us safer but adds to confusion, uncertainty, delays,
inconvenience, loss of liberty, costs of doing business, and in counter
productive - i.e. harmful.
The
war in Afghanistan seems successful but threaten a increase in chaos, a war
of all against all, and even the period of Russian control was better - much
better - there was no famine, no free play of war lords, more real freedom,
more choice, so the whole effort since 1978 has been a disaster - only has
made things worse. Hard facts but true. We don't know what we are doing and
therefore do dumb things.
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Nation
household accounts:
$3,000
each household for a (useless?) war vs. $15.00 for smallpox to save our lives,
way of life, and security, does this make sense to you?
The
bioterrorism activity of the federal government is going to include 1.5
billion for 300 million smallpox vacations. (.0065 % or 1.5 of the 2,000
billion budgets) That sounds like a lot of money but it is crumbs from the
real feast at the federal trough. It almost doubles the current federal
expenditure on bioterrorism, which is only a small part of the 30 billion
on homeland defense, disaster preparing, and law enforcement with more by
states and local government.
The
1.5 billion / 300 million people = $5.00 each that could save our lives. Now
that doesn’t sound like a lot. We have a 10,000 billion national economy or
10 trillion. Two thirds is spent by households and one third by business. The
federal government controls a one fifth and total government is about 1/3 but
federal money is paid to households in social security or health benefits so
this is call a transfer payment – someone pays taxes someone else gets
benefits.
If
we take the whole country as a household (100 million of them) the budget
would be something like this:
Each
total trillion (10 % = each trillion)
10,000 1 paid in interest – person debt is very big and the functional limit on spending
10,000 1 paid for housing and utilities
10,000 1 paid for transportation and travel
10,000
1 for everything else, consumer
goods, services,
10,000
600 billion for heath care plus
600 billion public = 1.2 trillion
16,000
1 income taxes, payroll plus a lot of other taxes
Households
– 6.6 trillion (includes government transfers, salaries, and benefits)
Business
3.3 trillion
10
- trillion Total
This
compares to $15.00 for bioterrorism –
$3,000
for the military (300 billion) – $3,000 for public education –
What
is wrong with this picture?
The
fundamental purpose of government to protect us from fear, chaos, and let us
live our lives in a civil society gets little or nothing. Defense is focused
on the unreal threat of foreign invasion by big armies and protecting our
interests overseas, mainly oil. The benefits of enterprise and initiative
have given us an unprecedented material existence but that wealth depends on
security.
Why? Elections are expensive because mass advertising has replaced party loyalties, clubs, and personal contacts. Politics follows money – banking, construction and real estate, oil and cars, airlines, and other business interests keeping their profits safe and protection from regulation and redistribution of resources from those that have (the few) to those that don’t (the many) so the many have to be discouraged from voting (by negative campaigns) or fooled most of the time.
http://www.wiredbrain.net/war.htm
http://www.wiredbrain.net/bioterrorism.htm
http://www.wiredbrain.net/terror.htm
http://www.wiredbrain.net/microbes.htm
http://www.wiredbrain.net/whatisnext.htm
What needs to be done?
Let
me be as clear as possible about what needs to be done now, at once, today
-(by executive order under emergency powers with congressional
approval to follow) to protect the American population from a “Hiroshima”
size catastrophe. This has to be
the first priority.
If 9/11 was
not enough to get our attention – 6,000 dead, a trillion dollars in damage
– (including the economic, travel, employment, extra costs etc) then what
will? If we can’t do what needs
to be done now at least we should have the plans in place ready to go the next
time.
Open
discussion on a cease-fire – under the cover of the need for crisis
assistance.
A real
National Security Department: with a national and international supreme
commander (The Secretary of State – Powell)
Combine all
national and international capacities to counter terrorism – International
center with spies, electronic, observer systems, remote sensors, hit teams,
made up of people who know what they are doing. The police (FBI) and
intelligence community (CIA) and DOD special units must be put under unified
command including EU and others with a clear focus on prevention. A meeting of
principles should happen today – it is a grand alliance such as the NATO
Supreme Command structure of military warfare with a supreme commander - who
can draft whatever resources needed, make battlefield commissions, and apply
military discipline. Their job is to reduce the power of terrorist
organizations.
Make Homeland
defense (Gov. Ridge or the Sect. of Homeland Defense) one temporary super
agency with wide emergency powers to include FEMA, Coast Guard, border
security, INS, DOD, HHS and the other 40 agencies reporting directly with
flexible budgets to move resources quickly. The three functions – target
protection including populations from bioterrorism and facilities from attack,
money controls, and control of people’s travels (national ID cards) as well
as response, should be separate from the law enforcement or intelligence
function – the first makes risk assessment the other makes plans to defend
and respond. If we need the FBI, DOD, National Guard, and other agencies the
part that is target protection is broken off from their prevention functions. Their
job is to make it difficult to attack and respond when they do,
"Confusion
reigns at the lowest and the highest) levels," said Mohammad Akhter,
executive director of the American Public Health Association, who watched with
growing unease last week as a single anthrax-tainted letter pushed the
Washington area's emergency response system to the limit. He added, "This
is the one thing that causes us to shake in our boots."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A31008-2001Oct21.html
http://www.wiredbrain.net/terror.htm
http://www.wiredbrain.net/bioterrorism.htm
http://www.wiredbrain.net/defense.htm
What is to be done?
You can not go after an infection
with surgery.
First, I have to believe the Government from the
President on down is doing their best, as they know the best to do. Many
people are critics the government until they find they are dependent on the
collective community to provide for their safety and welfare. May God bless
our leaders, grant them wisdom and nerve, they need all the support and help
they can get.
But the sense of danger and emergency seems greater in
the public than in some of the administration doing business as usual. The
following suggestions are actions, which will improve our domestic security,
the first priority of Government, because without order there is no other
freedom.
First freedom from fear is the first freedom, then
freedom from overwhelming misery and want that blinds people to higher goals
and reduces life to the law of the jungle, then freedom from ignorance,
superstition, and false knowledge that drives people into evil, destructive,
and prevents needed confidence and progress, the forth freedom is civil
society, the room to disagree without being disagreeable, to promote diversity
without chaos, the room to experiment and innovate. But they come in that
order; so without security it is hard to provide the framework for basic
economic progress, without basic living standards, basic education is
impossible, and without a basic education civil society is impossible.
Thus, all effort should be directed to security and
the first line of defense is offence. There is no way of “target
hardening” or borders, or ID, or police work that will make us secure. The
War on Drugs is a close example and cannot defeat the importation of drugs.
The War on Terror even if 10 or 100 times the war on drugs and even if 10 or
100 times more repressive and nasty, dirty, and mean will not make us safe
here at home or our interests overseas.
Therefore, our domestic security depends on covert
intelligence and working on causes of misery, repression, ignorance, in those
parts of the world which provide the motivation, troops, and where with all to
attack us. Without a global vision there is no safety for the rich in a sea of
poverty.
1.) Assign every resource in the coalition to covert penetration, disruption, decimation, and assassination, of the enemy. A rapid response hit team from the G8 should be organized immediately and centered in the region. The Russians, Pakistanis, Jordan and the dictators of the CIS stans in the region, the Israeli, Egyptian, Saudi, Chinese, all have experience in kidnapping (including family members of the actors) bribes, threats, much better than we do. They are supported by electronic and visual intelligence, Special Forces and Air power, but the leadership is international, based on covert action not American traditional military. If you disrupt bank accounts you cannot use them to trace to the owners and who is getting the funds at the operational end. If you bomb camps you disperse the enemy rather than destroy them. You can not go after an infection with surgery.
2.) Internationalization of border security is done at the source more than at the frontier. The world has to get use to a high level of certification of people and cargo at the point of origins. Universal ID cards (passports) with biological ID need to be provided travelers, and secure manifests and seals for cargo. Oracle has volunteered to create such a system and we need it now – with tracks on travelers by recording the card at hotels, banks, auto rentals, airlines, and requiring all aliens to report via ATM machines (with bio scanners) on a regular basis.
3.) The great information system in the sky which can provide every traffic cop, border agent, visa officer, Airport, car rental or other contacts with a good real time lists of who we are looking for what ever their ID or false papers. Persons must be identified by their person not their documents. This system must be international, universal, and efficient.
Contrasts:
Basic elementary education, worldwide would be a
fraction of the U.S. Military budget – A billion students – at $100 each
– teaching salaries are under $1000.00, classrooms are primitive, books are
reused or shared. That could do more to make us secure in the new world than
seventy divisions. Includes a basic feeding program for 10 cents a day.
I have sat in a modern office building in a modern
University in a Southern City and looked across the street at “slave
quarters” – little wooden houses for domestic staff. We have the backward
areas in the Delta, in Appalachia, in Slums – England has Liverpool and
south London, Spain has extreme contrasts, but nothing like it was is in
Afghanistan, or Ethiopia, or of parts of the old Soviet Union, or China or
India or Pakistan, or North Africa, Egypt, South Africa – Modern
Universities, hospitals, engineering firms, communications along with tribal
areas without roads (tracks), water, or any modern technology, medicine, just
as a thousand years ago, or two thousand years ago or five thousand years ago.
As the world moves forward faster and faster, those
who stand still, or worse decline and get poorer because of ecological and
population pressures, are further and further behind. Some can leap frog –
jump from no phones to cell phones, but most are more and more dysfunctional
and uncompetitive, both in means and ideas. Ideas from a thousand years ago
were superstition, magic, tribal, irrational, but functional to their times
and needs. The clash of civilization is a clash of ideas – modern vs.
ancient. In Haiti, which has been in decline most of its history, and has a
population ecological disaster, it became clear as we prepared for an election
– a very modern idea –that voting was based on tribal customs and the
power of Voodoo and village tom-tom macude, loyalties were based on clans and
old land owning and business elites, politics included magic and witchcraft,
there were few newspapers because people can’t read, independent radio was
new and just beginning to have an impact, but the media was often in French, a
foreign language to the 90 % who know only dialects,
there has been no renaissance, no age of enlightenment, no industrial
revolution, no liberal middle class, no sense of a neutral bureaucracy or a
constitutional army, so sense of modern law and procedures, but just an
election imposed from outsiders.
Basic elementary education, worldwide would be a fraction of the U.S. Military budget – A billion students – at $100 each – teaching salaries are under $1000.00, classrooms are primitive, books are reused or shared. That could do more to make us secure in the new world than seventy divisions.
Selling Modern Islam:
Positive and negative feedback of Globalizations:
National Interest and international interests cannot be separated
Interdependence
Economic – growth -
Inequality, half under $3 a day, a billion under $1
Information -
New tools good and bad
Medical:
Better and new plagues
Democracy
Truth, Life and diversity – one or many
Tuesday,
October 09, 2001
Watch
Address
by Fmr. Pres. Bill Clinton
Sponsored by the Greater Washington Society of Association Executives.
Topic: Leadership & National & International Issues. Washington,
DC
http://www.c-span.org/terrorism/about.asp
The Stock Market Game
The new tech search
The list of companies in tele-communications
Contrasts:
Basic elementary education, worldwide
would be a fraction of the U.S. Military budget – A billion students – at
$100 each – teaching salaries are under $1000.00, classrooms are primitive,
books are reused or shared. That could do more to make us secure in the new
world than seventy divisions. Includes a basic feeding program for 10 cents a
day.
I have sat in a modern office building
in a modern University in a Southern City and looked across the street at
“slave quarters” – little wooden houses for domestic staff. We have the
backward areas in the Delta, in Appalachia, in Slums – England has Liverpool
and south London, Spain has extreme contrasts, but nothing like it was is in
Afghanistan, or Ethiopia, or of parts of the old Soviet Union, or China or
India or Pakistan, or North Africa, Egypt, South Africa – Modern
Universities, hospitals, engineering firms, communications along with tribal
areas without roads (tracks), water, or any modern technology, medicine, just
as a thousand years ago, or two thousand years ago or five thousand years ago.
As the world moves forward faster and
faster, those who stand still, or worse decline and get poorer because of
ecological and population pressures, are further and further behind. Some can
leap frog – jump from no phones to cell phones, but most are more and more
dysfunctional and uncompetitive, both in means and ideas. Ideas from a
thousand years ago were superstition, magic, tribal, irrational, but
functional to their times and needs. The clash of civilization is a clash of
ideas – modern vs. ancient. In Haiti, which has been in decline most of its
history, and has a population ecological disaster, it became clear as we
prepared for an election – a very modern idea –that voting was based on
tribal customs and the power of Voodoo and village tom-tom macude, loyalties
were based on clans and old land owning and business elites, politics included
magic and witchcraft, there were few newspapers because people can’t read,
independent radio was new and just beginning to have an impact, but the media
was often in French, a foreign language to the 90 % who know only dialects,
there has been no renaissance, no age of enlightenment, no industrial
revolution, no liberal middle class, no sense of a neutral bureaucracy or a
constitutional army, so sense of modern law and procedures, but just an
election imposed from outsiders.
Basic elementary education, worldwide would be a fraction of the U.S. Military budget – A billion students – at $100 each – teaching salaries are under $1000.00, classrooms are primitive, books are reused or shared. That could do more to make us secure in the new world than seventy divisions.
What we think we know:
Right from Sept. 11th most of us knew that we were vulnerable. They could attack again and we don’t know where they were, who they are and what they have in mind.
Second, any military action or even good police work might have a very unpleasant response.
But to do nothing would not reduce the danger but increase it. If they, as they say, were out to so weaken US that we can no longer protect our friends and allies and so they can spread their “base” in the region, doing nothing or something stupid, as Reagan did in Lebanon and Clinton did about the embassies in Africa, does not reduce but greatly increases the danger. There is no risk free option.
So indeed we are between the rocks, where a evil group out to weaken the military, political and economic strength of Christian Civilization so they can expand their ideological empire, and the clear and present dangers of retaliations to our responses, we have no choice but to respond which is a hard place indeed since there maybe a very high cost.
So far so good as the man falling from 101 floors says at floor 10 – but we have special units in country, we have forces in the neighborhood, we have complex anti-taliban activities going on everywhere – the issue is the Taliban – if they go – Ben Laden goes (if he has not left already) and the training camps and facilities are lost to his use – necessary but not significant progress.
The reality has changed for a generation the “geo-political” landscape. The Christian civilized world, within the community of nations clearly has a mission. The mitigation of the wrenches and wretched life in the region, in Africa and South Asia leading to a more just world is a great challenge for globalization, free markets and civic societies.
When the rebels of North American Colonies took upon themselves to form a more perfect society they had in mind a message and hope for all of mankind. The ideal of a just civil society under the rule of law and due process was an invaluable human right, the way of reason and progress (except for blacks, women and Indians), which made a universal human claim on justice inherent in being born human. Justice, natural law and order was not given and can not be taken away because it is a divine right of man. Well, lets just do it.
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Educational Reform
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part of reform
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wireless and beyond
Left and Right:
If kept is the broad context the specifics of civil
liberties, military and social policy, and all the complex issues can be held
together without dissimilating factional fights which is a clear and present
danger. It requires the vision of Blair, we can hope that the Bushes who have
in the past had trouble with the “vision thing” catch the spirit and
themes of a better world coming from the ashes of Sept. 11th. Without idealism and realism the long struggle will not
hold together and will be lost in petty fights on the edges.
The campaign against terror requires idealism in terms
of a world vision of a peaceful and more just world – realism in the needs
of police powers and restrains on freedom in time of war. It comes down to
trust – a community that trusts its leaders, trust each other, and even
trusts foreigners and strangers. The realist who feels that a dirty war will
be required and feels constrained by moral limits or international
participation and feel that any means and ally is useful regardless of their
moral standing, these hacks need to understand that public support depends on
idealism, hope, trust and faith. If their methods undercut trust, it will not
work. So as in most of life a balance is struck between the worlds we want and
the worlds we have, realism is based on pragmatic and practical actions that
work from where we are to where we want to go. Spiritual values and ideal work
in mobilizing energy, creating union, forming supports, motivation for the
long hall, and gives meaning and purpose to it all.
I have been saying for a long time that the old issues
between traditional left and right is out of date, irrelevant and more that
useless, nevertheless it persists partly because people have made a cottage
industry out of ideologies. My
favorite world leader Tony Blair repeated the modern attitude between idealism
and realism in his Party Conference speech yesterday. The core ideals of the now world order is based on a
rational (secular) community of nations and peoples. The globalization has
made us all interdependent, economically, militarily, politically and
ideologically. The community of nations has standards and goals – ideals and
practical policies to make a better and safer world.
The old socialist ideal of equality did not understand
that rational prudent management is critical to national well-being and not
one of redistribution. A rational government is pro-business, pro enterprise,
pro new technologies and maintains a prudent fiscal policy. New Labour
supports a reasonable national defense, law and order, reasonable pro-growth
tax policies, rational incomes and Labour standards to encourage change and
innovation. These policies are
not just stratagems to neutralize the right but because they are the greater
good for the greater number. Low unemployment, interest rates, growth and good
education are the best way to promote social justice.
In a global sense all governments should support,
third way, new Labour, new democrat, centralist non-ideological policies to
promote and ideal of a more prosperous, just and secure world. With law and
order internationally there can be no progress toward a more perfect union.
International justice calls not just for more redistribution of foreign aid
but real opportunities for the world peoples. Pakistan needs schools, Africa
needs basic health systems, and everyone needs peace and a chance to get
ahead. Afghanistan need peace and bread, then rational government, public
services, education, health, development with indigenous resources.
Then the basis of terror will diminish.
The left and right are really in agreement and should not allow the cottage industry of ideological extremist throw them off balance. Of course, nothing justifies terror. Of course, there are causes beyond the whims of a few crazies. Of course, we must use military action. Of course, we must make more friends and fewer enemies. Of course, nothing will work by itself and all together it still will be very difficult – military action, intelligence, target hardening, more security and police powers, public relations and propaganda, forcing a settlement on Israel and Palestine, reducing forces in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere that appear to be propping up unpopular states, reorganizing the military from cold war to global police peace making and peace keeping functions, working toward more open and progressive governments in our authoritarian allies, working with the UN and others in agreements on money, travel ID, chemical and biological weapons, economic development, civil rights, health, agricultural issues, trade, and everything else toward a more perfect planet.
The electronic battlefield:
see Http://www.wiredbrain.net/terror.htm
American
rules the world and helps get us out of our economic slump.
http://www.wiredbrain.net/thefeareconomy.htm
Technology
rules economic growth and military advantage.
When the great and powerful can be brought down by a mosquito, the military should dance like a butterfly, sting like a bee or a swarm of bees.
The
border between the north and south of Korea is defended by World War II
systems. There are troops in
fixed positions with guns, tanks, and cannons, all backed up by tactical air
support. Now consider the alternative of space age warfare.
The
critical elements in warfare is knowing the location of the enemy and having
means to destroy them. GPS and remote sensing gives the technological capacity
to find all the enemy and set exact targeting information.
The
benefit/cost analysis is how expensive in men, material and money were various
strategies. In world war II it took 5,000 bombs to be sure a target was
destroyed, many rounds of artillery fire, with low accuracy. Now it is 5 or
less smart bombs or cruse missiles a 1000 to 1 change, and another 1000 %
improvement is quite possible. Satellites
replace advanced spotters or low flying surveillance planes. Drone unmanned
aircraft and see through radar can even see underground tunnels and
emplacements. Individual soldiers can be identified one by one if
necessary. Our last few
wars have been almost causality free, by our side, because of the new
technologies. The bullet shooting down a bullet MDI (with a transponder
broadcasting its location) is really a kamikaze microcomputer. These self
directed weapons could be produced in mass at fairly low costs as computers
become forever cheaper and smarter.
A
modern defense line would be full of sensors, not troops. Our side which is safely
to the rear would have enough smart weapons to destroy any locations,
thereby eliminating supplies, troops, bridges, railroads, supply convoys,
airfields, communications and command and control.
Smaller weapons, launched from planes, helicopters or on the ground,
could be targeted on individual soldiers scattered over a wide area.
The cost of one dead in Vietnam was $50,000 in 1960’s dollars, which
now would be several hundred thousand each.
The terror and panic caused by targeted weapons from which there is no
defense, no place to hide, would break up any attempt to move troops in the
field.
The
missile defense initiative MDI is a cover for advanced systems. We
should be able to destroy any target anywhere, anytime from space, from cruse
type missiles from land, air and sea, smart bombs from planes, lasers, with
little risk to our troops. We do not need and can not afford World War II
bases in Europe, in many parts of the world such as Okinawa, in Korea, and in
dozens of domestic bases. Few or No tanks, cannon, soldiers with guns,
venerable aircraft carriers, but smart ships, small airfields, and small but
high technology centers scattered for maximum security. A war game between a
high tech command and traditional military should be 100 to 0 and demonstrate
that classical weapons are useless. American rules the world and helps get us
out of our economic slump.
In other words a few experts with lots of equipment could well protect the border without much risk to themselves or the land being protected. The key is sensors that identify every target and weapons that go where they are instructed.
1. Subsumptive
Military Satellite Constellations (InCrea)
Based on a Space Tactics School Thesis, this white paper advocates
distributed function of constellations. This type of architecture would
demonstrate favorable characteristics, including compatibility with new
concepts of war in the Information A
5/15/2000 http://www2.dmci.net/~danam/usats.htm
See results from this
site only.
2. Subsumptive
Military Satellite Constellations (InCrea)
Based on a Space Tactics School Thesis, this white paper advocates
distributed function of constellations. This type of architecture would
demonstrate favorable characteristics, including compatibility with new
concepts of war in the Information A
8/14/1999 http://www.qsl.net/ka9snf/usats.htm
See results from this
site only.
3. The
AnswerSleuth's Satellites And Sigint
Satellites And Sigint, Satellites, Sigint
4/7/2001 http://www.answersleuth.com/questions/satellites_and_sigint.shtml
See results from this
site only.
4. The
AnswerSleuth's Satellites And Sigint
Satellites And Sigint, Satellites, Sigint
4/19/2001 http://answersleuth.com/questions/satellites_and_sigint.shtml
See results from this
site only.
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AUG 05, 2001
The Next Battlefield May Be in Outer Space
By JACK HITT
The Defense Department's newest satellite technology, Warfighter I, sits inside a protected clean room in Germantown, Md. To enter, you must run your shoes through a cleaning device and then don a "bunny suit," a layered hooded outfit that covers every part of your body except your eyes.
"Human skin sloughs off as many 30,000 particles a second," says the program manager, Michael Lembeck, as we step onto a tacky mat, essentially an enormous piece of flypaper. "If one speck of skin got on the Warfighter's lens," he adds with friendly hyperbole, "it would set us back 20 years."
The satellite, which is not much bigger than a college sophomore's dorm refrigerator, is undergoing final tests. Several different machines -- producing an artificial magnetic field, digitally created blinking stars, phony sunshine and computer-generated Global Positioning System signals -- are fooling the satellite into acting as if it were in real orbit. Several lights Click on and motors grind. "It must think it just cleared the North Pole," Lembeck says, "and is reorienting itself toward the sun."
After a few more tests confirm the on-board systems are working, Lembeck says, "We'll get all the graybeards in the room, tell them what we've done here and they will bless us and say, 'Go fly."'
In fact, Warfighter I is an extremely powerful camera, one that will give the Pentagon revolutionary new powers of surveillance. But its importance goes beyond its technological wizardry. The launch of Warfighter -- scheduled for early September -- will mark the latest effort by the Pentagon to end a new threat to American security. According to the nation's war planners, America has had a free ride in space during the last 40 years, when the only country capable of even getting there was Russia. Now there is a satellite rush in the final frontier, with both countries and companies entering space. Commercial space launches started to outnumber military ones in 1998. Of the 1,000 active satellites currently in orbit, about an eighth belong to the U.S. military, and that percentage will diminish by the end of the decade, when experts estimate that operating satellites in space will reach 2,000. (Warfighter is being launched by a private company called Orbital Imaging, itself a sign of the times.)
America's war planners fear that we could soon lose our advantage in space. As a result, the military has commissioned numerous studies and long-range plans, all of them coming to the same conclusion. Space, the Pentagon believes, is the ultimate military "high ground" -- the tower from which to pour boiling oil. Therefore, America's goal there should be, in the felicitous phrase used in an early study, "Global Battlespace Dominance."
Perhaps that term sounded a little too Strangelove, for the Pentagon's preferred phrase has since become "Full Spectrum Dominance." Last year, the Air Force developed its Strategic Master Plan for space, which states our goal bluntly: "To maintain space superiority, we must have the ability to control the 'high ground' of space. To do so, we must be able to operate freely in space, deny the use of space to our adversaries, protect ourselves from attack in and through space and develop and deploy a N.M.D. capability."
N.M.D. stands for national missile defense, the controversial $8.3 billion missile shield that President Bush and his secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, have championed. (Last month, the Pentagon announced that it was ready to pour concrete on the first missile-defense test site, in Alaska.) And yet the political attention devoted to national missile defense, which is an updated version of President Reagan's Strategic Defensive Initiative, has obscured its larger purpose. According to the Strategic Master Plan, N.M.D. is but one part of a triad of technologies -- along with improved space surveillance and antisatellite offensive weaponry -- that, the Air Force hopes, will lead to total "space control." George Friedman, an intelligence consultant and the author of "The Future of War," calls the national missile defense plan a "Trojan horse" for the real issue: the coming weaponization of space.
The cost of expanding our space assets is only now beginning to show itself. Many of the specific systems for space have had their budgets increased in President Bush's first defense-spending proposal, which has been otherwise criticized for being stingy. A new system of space sensors went from $239 million to $420 million. (By comparison, the Air Force's new F-22 Raptor fighter plane has a price tag of $180 million.) A previously unfunded space-based radar program is budgeted at $50 million. And a line for "space control technology" -- a euphemism for antisatellite weaponry -- was expanded from $8 million to $33 million. Carefully budgeted space technologies like the Warfighter will cost only $42 million, but the more exotic ideas face a long climb up the technological curve and will cost billions.
Warfighter's camera features a new form of imaging called hyperspectral. Space is already home to multispectral cameras, which can take a picture of an ecosystem and discern conifer from deciduous trees. But hyperspectral goes much further, distinguishing the subtle "light signatures" that separate a field of oats from barley and telling you the precise species of oats. And then whether the field contains natural or genetically altered oats. And then whether the field is infested with insects or damaged by nitrogen depletion.
The eventual commercial potential of such a technology is obvious. But if you talk to enough colonels and experience what old Pentagon hands call "death by briefing," -- and I have -- you will hear mentions of hyperspectral quickly followed by the new mantra of contemporary war planners: tanks under trees. To put it briefly: as with oats, so with tanks. Warfighter I will be able to discern the unique light signatures of extremely specific things -- like tanks hiding under trees or tanks covered in camouflage or tanks painted with a paint meant to make them not look like tanks.
Consider what such space-assisted technology would have meant to a commander in, say, Kosovo two years ago. He could have swept the contested area with Warfighter I and zeroed in on every enemy tank, missile, ammo dump or plane, almost no matter how hard the Serbs tried to conceal them. Then the commander could have called in a cruise missile to blast each one. In theory, the entire conflict could have been finished off in time for lunch. It's a nice, sweet, hammock-tempting image if you're a war planner.
In preparation, space planners have already engaged in some feverish brainstorming. They envision a high-tech arsenal that will take full advantage of the military potential of space, ranging from the near-term possible to long-term notional: kinetic energy rods, microwave guns, space-based lasers, pyrotechnic electromagnetic pulses, holographic decoys, robo-bugs, suppression clouds, 360-degree helmet-mounted displays, cluster satellites, oxygen suckers, microsatellites, destructo swarmbots, to name a few.
Some civilians find these plans deeply troubling. "If you start talking about putting actual weapons in space, you can take the unhappiness that our allies, Russia and China already have with the missile shield and multiply it by 10," warns Lisbeth Gronlund, a physicist with the Union of Concerned Scientists. Such critics see the Pentagon's effort to weaponize space as profoundly dangerous for national security -- not to mention expensive and potentionally unfeasible.
"Once you start spinning this baby out," says Dan Smith, an analyst with the Center for Defense Information, "it becomes more complex, more expensive and more impossible to protect ourselves. After the next country introduces space weaponry, then what do we do? Live with a new, unpredictable threat orbiting right above us? Or commit an act of war by pre-emptively removing their weapons from space? The basis of security is that it never works for just one. You have to have security for everyone or it fails."
Not surprisingly, the Realpolitik leadership at the Pentagon disagrees. Just before taking over Defense, Rumsfeld led a space commission that was established not long after Congressional Republicans grew enraged that Clinton had line-item-vetoed funds for a space plane, antisatellite weapons and a missile-defense technology. The commission issued its report nine days before Bush was sworn in as president, and it concluded: "Every medium -- air, land and sea -- has seen conflict. Reality indicates that space will be no different." And Warfighter I, it turns out, is the beginning of a many-splendored arsenal to ensure we're ready for battle when it does.
uch of the military's research into space technology takes place at the Space Research Lab. It is divided into 10 missions scattered across the country, ranging from the Propulsion Directorate to the Munitions Directorate. On a blazing hot afternoon in June, I arrive at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque to get cleared into the Space Vehicles Directorate, which specializes in satellite technology. Many outposts of the emerging bureaucracy of space distill their enthusiasms into a shoulder patch. The First Space Operations's patch shows stars and a plane above the words "Always in Control." The 50th Space Wing's logo is an image of Pegasus above the claim "Master of Space." Some divisions have more informal slogans. The motto of the Space Warfare Center is "In Your Face From Outer Space."
I first meet with Alok Das, the head of the Space Vehicle Directorate's innovative concepts group. His latest work has been perfecting the microsatellite. Unlike traditional satellites, which can weigh tons, microsatellites are the size of a suitcase and weigh about 200 pounds. Since it costs "a bar of gold to launch a can of Coke," as Das put it, lightweight microsatellites will be much cheaper to launch than their obese precursors. The idea is to send microsatellites into space in flocks. In this cluster, they would be reprogrammable, able to switch to new tasks when the Pentagon required it. They might be set in linear formation to conduct ground reconnaissance or grouped in a circle to serve as a communications satellite. "It's like going from a mainframe computer to a network of PC's," Das says brightly. "Together, they'd form a larger virtual satellite."
Yet a flock could also be launched with separate missions. One microsatellite might refuel a larger satellite or upgrade its software. Others might scoot about with small on-board cameras to provide live video feeds from space -- a capability no nation currently has.
As I am escorted into a clean room to the see the first microsatellite under construction, one officer offhandedly confides, "It could also go right up to an enemy satellite and look at it real close -- maybe even bump it."
That's how easy it is to go from peaceful mission to offensive weapon. A suitcase-size microsatellite would just have to put a little shoulder and some thrust into an S.U.V.-size satellite to push it off its proper orbit and render it temporarily unable to communicate with the ground. Another idea is to mount a microwave gun on board so that once the microsatellite maneuvered right beside an enemy satellite, it could emit a pulse of microwaves and fry the electronics permanently. Space planners call this application a high-power microwave pill. Better yet, this microsatellite's sabotage operations would be covert, undetectable from earth. It would give a nation complete deniability: that Chinese satellite that Saddam Hussein has been using doesn't work? Must have been a solar storm.
The first microsatellite launch is planned for this fall.
Later, I talk with the lab's experts in hyperspectral imaging. How, I ask them, will the Warfighter learn the precise "light signature" of, say, a tank hiding beneath a pine-forest canopy?
"Think of them as fingerprints," says Tom Cooley, one of the lab's top researchers. "The wavelength of any kind of camouflage, regardless of composition, can be distinguished -- by the dyes, cotton, different lignants from plants. If you look at black-and-white images of camouflage next to scrub brush, they look the same. But a leaf from the scrub brush does not look at all like camouflage to hyperspectral. It would be sharply different."
Before hyperspectral can work, it will require some novel research and testing, says Col. Jack Anthony, chief of space experiments. "Take a tank under a tree," he says, explaining some coming tests. "We'll take some panels made of wood and paint them with different paints, government paint, some paint you might buy at a store. Then we'll take some images with the Warfighter I, and that will give us what's called 'truth."'
To build what Anthony calls "a library of light signatures," a lot of truth will have to be collected. All possible contingencies -- tank under trees, tank under branches, tank under government paint -- must be cataloged, one by one. "So if the bad guys are hiding tanks under trees," Anthony explains, "and you have a good idea what the bad guy's tank is made out of and you know what the local trees look like, then you can screen out the trees' wavelength and just see the tank's signature. Then you're going to know there's something bad under that tree. And we can arm our soldiers accordingly."
Cooley adds that "anything from Somalia to Bosnia to Haiti would have dramatically different backgrounds," making it necessary to bank in a library the differences among, say, Honduran swamps and Libyan deserts. "And by the way, water vapor is terribly opaque and will cause the special signature to be completely invisible." However, Cooley continues, another project will be to gather data in order to "correct for water vapor that may blur some of those special features."
To a civilian, hyperspectral surveillance can sound amazing and then -- once you hear about light-signature libraries and water-vapor snafus -- it can seem a bit iffy, about as dependable as launching a Xerox machine into the stress of low-earth orbit and then counting on it to work during a war.
That's how the Pentagon's critics see it. "There are already countermeasures for this kind of technology," Lisbeth Gronlund says. She describes a new kind of camouflage that entails bundling, say, two dozen Mylar balloons beside a nuclear warhead. After launch and the boost phase, the balloons and the warhead are scattered into space. Each has a slightly different light signature. So which target do you shoot down? "The military is very sensitive about this problem," Gronlund says.
Yet Anthony is doggedly optimistic. He believes that hyperspectral could be working successfully in the battlefield before the end of the decade. And he thinks the technology will help save lives: "It makes me feel good if I can help a soldier, sailor, airman, marine to know there is something bad hiding on the other side of that hill. We're just putting another arrow in our quiver."
Anthony's robust enthusiasm for space is shared among the research scientists. This enthusiasm is extraordinary. The Nasdaq bubble that burst around election time last year has not affected the military. Space-wise, war planners are prebubble techno-enthusiasts. (And their visions of space warfare are as cinematic as a summer blockbuster. Just look at the language: "Full Spectrum Dominance," "destructo swarmbots," "robo-bugs." It's hard to imagine the Pentagon's idea of space without Hollywood's.)
Inside the military, all technological setbacks -- like the fact that two out of the four major missile-defense simulations conducted so far have failed -- are set aside as part of the natural arc of any technological testing. Failure is just proof that there needs to be more research. But the real reason the military is so excited by space is that so much that is already up there, both civilian and military, works splendidly. Nearly all the emblems of our technologically quotidian life -- the A.T.M., credit-card transactions, cell phones, the Internet -- rely upon satellites.
When space technology has catastrophically failed, the public's reaction has not been greater skepticism but mere annoyance. In May 1998, the Galaxy IV satellite malfunctioned, causing 45 million pagers to shut down and credit-card transactions to cease. The public did not decide to return to making house calls, paying cash and reading by candlelight: it simply expected it to be fixed because it has so internalized the presumption that such technology works, and works wonders. And so has the military.
If the A.T.M. is the shorthand symbol of how easy modern space-based technology has made our lives, then the precision-guided munition is that symbol for the average grunt. The invention of a missile that can be aimed after it has been fired has fundamentally changed modern warfare. It is why arguments about the possible failure of new technologies bounce off space researchers as if off a force field.
Back in World War II, it took, on average, 5,000 bombs to take out one target like a bridge. By the time of the Vietnam War, the ratio had dropped to 500. But in all those wars, bombs were dumb, meaning once you let go of them, they fell in the general direction in which they were pitched.
Then came the gulf war. During this conflict, the U.S. military used space to conduct nearly all of its secret communications, reconnaissance missions and bombing raids. And space-based technology guided new "smart bombs" with such accuracy that the hit ratio plummeted to 1 in 10. "The 500-year history of ballistic warfare has come to an end," George Friedman says. "The gulf war was the first space war."
Although not of the same scale, one notable fact of the Kosovo conflict of 1999 is that no Americans died in combat. Military planners credit that result in part to munitions directed by the Global Positioning System, a constellation of 24 satellites orbiting the earth that is capable of precisely geo-locating any object equipped with the proper receiver. Couple such technological progress with the ultimate lesson of Vietnam -- no body bags on TV -- and you begin to understand the military's profound enthusiasm about space and why there has been so much blue-sky planning to maintain "Full Spectrum Dominance."
nside the lab of the directed energy directorate, where research on everything from microwave beams to lasers begins, the machines thrum to a start. A long pipe of fuzzy purple light in a large tube seems to vibrate like a plucked string. In an adjacent chamber that has had most of the air removed to mimic the high altitude of a missile trajectory, a piece of carbonized steel like that which might clad a rocket fuel tank is set in a grip. It begins to spin rapidly to simulate a missile in its ascent. Visual access to the vacuum room is supplied by a closed-circuit television. Technicians call out from one system to another that they are ready. The machines screech into action. On the TV screen, the piece of spinning metal is suddenly blasted with bursts of columnated light that scorch it, back-splashing in a dramatic laser fan.
"We're testing the laser's effect on what would be the body of a rocket spinning in flight," says Capt. Eric Moomey, the chief of this facility. (His insignia reads "Peace Through Light.") In effect, what I am seeing is a small part of what might one day become the national missile-defense shield.
At one point, Moomey clamps a four-inch-square piece of thick plexiglass in a C-clamp and orders the crew to fire up the laser. We all put on safety goggles as the laser shouts for a portion of a second. Burned neatly in the center is an indentation, just big enough, the captain tells me as he hands me the square, to hold a coffee cup. It is holding mine right now. I suspect that my souvenir coaster is not the first of its kind.
Such laser parlor tricks suggest just how far we've come since President Reagan first suggested this idea. Back then, the technology was far off and impossible. The Strategic Defense Initiative amounted to a bluff against the Soviets, and in the end it collapsed amid political ridicule. Back in the early 80's, the idea of shooting down a missile with another missile was widely scoffed at as trying to "shoot a bullet with a bullet." The Star Wars program specifically designed to do this was called Brilliant Pebbles. Besides being technologically complex, it frightened many people with its inherent idea: ringing the planet with thousands of space-borne projectiles, each of which could drop down into the atmosphere to collide with an enemy's missile.
Brilliant Pebbles is now being revived by President Bush, but given the instantaneous speed of lasers, it may soon be joined by a companion technology. With the ability to lock onto the trajectory of a missile, Moomey explains, you might be able to aim an air-based laser at an enemy missile's fuel tank and rapidly heat up the cladding so that "the liquid propulsion vents out and it rips open like a tin can." Moomey says that this kind of laser defense weapon, budgeted at $11 billion, should be operational sometime around 2010.
I next speak with Doug Beason, another expert on laser weaponry. Colonel Beason is a thin, amiable man and a widely read scientist. His magazine rack has well-thumbed editions of Sky and Telescope, Science and Wired. He is the author (sometimes co-author) of 10 novels, including "Virtual Destruction," "Assemblers of Infinity" and "Assault on Alpha Base." A few of his works have just been issued in paperback. When I casually use the word "sci-fi" in a sentence, Beason stops me politely to say that "techno-thriller" is the genre in which he labors. Sci-fi is a "50's expression," he says, trying to be cordial, even though it's clear that I've committed a faux pas on the order of asking Jane Campion about her next chick flick. There are bright lines in Beason's world -- between techno-thriller and science fiction, but also between research that looks great on paper and technology he can help put in the hands of an American space warrior.
"The time between invention and mass use of the fluorescent lamp was 79 years," he says. "For the jet engine, 14 years; for the wireless, 8 years." This lag time is shrinking rapidly, he says. "We have the tools to exploit the technology, and that's why I'm so excited. Lasers, for example, are no longer used just for CD's and light pointers."
As a result, the Pentagon has its hopes set on a space-based laser. President Bush doubled the research budget this year to $165 million. The estimated cost for a working space laser test is about $5 billion. Actual testing in space is expected to take place as early as 2008.
"This is the technology that can provide the next revolution in military affairs," Beason says, "the Buck Rogers kind of thing."
He adds that lasers have many warfare applications besides outright weaponry. "We've also been working on a flexible-membrane mirror," Beason says, one that would be deployed in space. Then, from earth, a commander could fire a certain frequency of laser, bounce it off the mirror and "onto the battlefield to light up the night only to people with certain types of goggles."
Whenever I express any sense that these technologies sound a bit too, um, sci-fi, Beason responds the same way all his colleagues do. "These are all concepts," he explains, "and like any weaponry in a mature technological arsenal, it all depends on how much money you want to spend." Men like Beason are supremely confident in the technology; it's the political will to have space-based weapons that's the problem.
The peculiar thing about space warfare is that many of the innovations that sound the most far-fetched -- like illuminating a battlefield at night with light that only one side can see or the deployment of high-power microwave pills -- are actually much closer to existence, technologically, than some items that might seem more logically in line for development. Consider the spaceplane. It would be a tremendous tool for the military, since it could get to any point on the globe in a few hours. But building a manned craft that can quickly glide in and out of low orbits has proved incredibly daunting. Earlier this year, the X-33, NASA's big experiment in flying into space, ended in failure. The image that most people have of "Star Wars"-style combat -- manned spaceplanes engaging in dogfights near the moon -- is very far off. But the use of space for weaponry directed back at earth or guided from space is pretty much at hand.
"I'm particularly excited about high-power microwaves," Beason tells me. Lacking the thousand-mile reach of lasers, H.P.M.'s, as they are called, can be projected only about a half-mile. But were an unmanned plane guided from space able to transport a high-powered microwave device close to a battlefield, the possibilities could push the Pentagon's bomb-to-target ratio even closer to perfection. To an invading army of modern soldiers, a massive hit by high-powered microwave could ground their high-tech weapons, leaving them to wage modern warfare with their fists.
The time lag between the current R.&D. on microwaves and its application in the battlefield may be a while. Beason himself estimates 15 years, although one use is on the verge of showing up in battlefields soon. On the ground, a microwave weapon could be used to drive back an invading squadron. "It'll feel like opening the door of an oven," Beason says. "We're testing it on humans now." He pauses and worries that he is bumping up against classified information. "If you want to know more," he adds, "you'll have to contact the Human Effectiveness Directorate."
he Pentagon's passion for space also derives from the thrill of discovering the medium's own peculiar disadvantages and advantages. True, you have to worry about new problems -- space debris traveling at 16,000 miles per hour, solar flares, the Van Allen radiation belt. But it is never overcast in space, the field of vision is planetary and the speed of light is really, really fast. For the far term, war planners have conceived scores of new and exciting weapons. Talking about them is not a conversation the military wants to have in public, given the gnarly debate over the missile shield, but it is one they have been having in private for some time.
Among the internal reports generated by the war colleges and service branches are a half-dozen that imagine how space will be integrated into the U.S. military: The Strategic Master Plan, New World Vistas, Long Range Plan, Guardians of the High Frontier, Almanac 2000, Joint Vision 2010, Spacecast 2020 and Air Force 2025. Taken together, they form an encyclopedia of our war planners' dreams.
Any military response in the future would rely heavily on technologies aloft in space or directed from there. As a result, the U.S. Air Force will little resemble the service as we now romantically conceive it. According to a study entitled Counterair: The Cutting Edge, "uninhabited aerial vehicles will be widespread in 2025." Our new fleet of pilot-free planes would be directed from space and would range from small devices permitting a squadron leader to see over a hill to much larger craft that could deliver powerful weapons to a distant battlefield with tremendous speed. For example, one notion for an unmanned space-directed vehicle -- called Strike Star -- could "loiter over an area of operations for 24 hours" to deliver "stun bombs' producing overbearing noise and light effects to disrupt and disorient groups of individuals."
Weapons like the Strike Star would exist on earth but be orchestrated from space. If we can get used to the idea of weapons actually in space, though, then a new arsenal would emerge. For example, if a laser cannon were to be inserted in space, its potential as an offensive weapon would make a cruise missile look like a firecracker. Why? Because, according to one study on directed energy, "a full-power beam can successfully attack ground or airborne targets by melting or cracking cockpit canopies, burning through control cables, exploding fuel tanks, melting or burning sensor assemblies and antenna arrays, exploding or melting munitions pods, destroying ground communications and power grids and melting or burning a large variety of strategic targets (e.g., dams, industrial and defense facilities and munitions factories) -- all in a fraction of a second."
Just as the sea and the air presented different advantages in maneuverability, so will space. Having a weapon up there means being at the top of the "gravity well"' so that the force that frustrates rocketeering is suddenly your friend. "Kinetic energy weapons" are the subject of a study included in Air Force 2025, with one application being rods, or "flechettes," designed to be tossed down to earth from space. Like the legendary penny tossed off the Empire State Building boring 10 feet into the sidewalk, flechettes could travel at supersonic speed (by aiming a laser just in front of them to create an "air spike," eliminating most of the effects of shock and heat). At such a speed, they could pierce the earth's surface to a depth of one-half mile and obliterate a hidden underground bunker.
Another idea is to set into orbit a number of "giant mirrors" that would take a boy's notion of burning ants with a magnifying lens and loft it into space. "This concept constructs a 10-kilometer magnifying glass or focusing element in space to illuminate targets on the ground or in space," reads one report touting it. "This illumination can turn night to day on the ground, scorch facilities or overheat satellite components." There is a database of such ideas at the Air War College in Alabama. This "solar energy weapon" is colloquially known as "concept No. 900163."
What precisely some of these concepts do is not known, but their names can be tantalizingly glimpsed in footnotes throughout the reports that reference the space database. For example: No. 901178, "space debris repulsion field"; No. 900168, "meteors as a weapon"; No. 900231, "gnat robot threat detectors"; No. 900288, "swarms of micromachines"; No. 900390, "holographic battlefield deception"; No. 900522, "space-based AI-driven intelligence master mind."
In these internal documents, real-world constraints like political will are postponed and the enormous issue of cost is finessed. The one roadblock that is seriously addressed is the bureaucratic resistance from pilots upset at the very concept of unmanned warcraft. In such moments, the tone of the language is melancholic -- the problem referred to sorrowfully as "pro-pilot bias" -- and suggests that listening to such woes is akin to hearing out the complaints of old sergeants a century ago harrumphing about all that crazy talk of a horseless cavalry.
n a clear blue Colorado afternoon, a bus with high-security officers, civilian engineers and computer techies rumbles into the entrance tunnel to Cheyenne Mountain, the underground cold-war city built on giant springs to withstand a Soviet ICBM attack. I have come here to try to see the emerging space bureaucracy, the elements that may one day make up a new branch of the military, the United States Space Force. At the first checkpoint, we set out on foot. A cool persistent wind practically pushes us through the 30-ton blast doors. For most of the last 40 years, Cheyenne was famous for being the home of Norad, the North American Aerospace Defense Command -- the U.S.-Canadian early-warning system that scanned the globe looking for the telltale launch plume of an intercontinental ballistic missile. In fact, it is a Canadian officer from Norad who escorts me into the command room and to the chair where a commanding general would make the decision to launch a nuclear weapon.
"Don't mash the distress button under the desk there," the Canadian warns me, "or armed guards will storm the room." Before me are a wall of television screens reporting global data. (On account of my presence, several are draped with blankets marked Top Secret.) And right away, the shift toward space is obvious. The main screen reads "Combined Command Center for NORAD/USSPACECOM."
The U.S. Space Command is the proto-bureaucracy of our emerging space force. Its current commander, a four-star general named Ralph E. Eberhardt, was given more prominence last May when Rumsfeld reorganized the space command structure. Eberhardt is being touted as the possible next chairman of the Joint Chiefs. Should he be appointed, it will be the most powerful signal yet that President Bush's campaign promise to "leapfrog" to the next generation of weaponry will mean the militarization of space.
The clearest evidence is across town from Cheyenne at Schriever Air Force Base. The Space Warfare Center was established there in 1993. It has three branches, the Space Battle Lab (patch: "Above All Others"); the Space Warfare School (patch: image of missile shooting off lightning bolts); and, as of last October, the 527th Space Aggressor Squadron (patch: image of cartoon bird standing on a cloud tossing a missile to earth). A good deal of the theory about how space can assist our troops during wartime on earth -- today -- is being developed here. It is the Space Battle Lab that will soon be figuring out how to take a reading from the hyperspectral camera aboard Warfighter I and make that information meaningful to a pilot flying an Air Force bomber.
"We are trying to bring the utility of space directly to the fighter," says the battle lab commander, Col. Ron Oholendt, "by either increasing lethality or mission effectiveness." Another project under way is to make better use of space for "bomb-impact assessment."
"As a cruise missile is heading for its target," Oholendt says, "it would transmit a data burst into space just before impact. It might tell us, 'I'm armed; here's where I am; the scene I see matches the target I was given.' So we'd have a confidence it was successful. Or it might say, 'I'm here; I don't see anything familiar so I'm going to blow up some dirt.' After we downloaded the information from the satellite, we'd be fairly confident that site would have to be retargeted."
Rumsfeld has said that the military must prepare itself to avoid a "space Pearl Harbor." This is where such preparations are being made. The commander of the space aggressor squadron, Col. Conrad Widman, spends his days envisioning how an enemy might exploit space -- in order to train our forces how to react.
"The one thing you don't want to do is go to war and encounter the enemy's capability for the first time," Widman says. In one simulation exercise, he and the 527th posed as an Iranian terrorist cell set against some real U.S. troops stationed in South Asia. During the exercise, Widman hired a French satellite to take a picture, which can be paid for with a credit card.
"The guys on the Iranian team were able to count airplanes and see entry control points," Widman explains. "They could even see the tent-city area and figure out how many people they had deployed. They could also tell there was some kind of air-defense batteries. They knew that Patriot missiles often played that role, so they went to the Raytheon home page and learned that Patriot batteries are normally laid out in a format with the radar in the center." By the time the 527th had finished the simulation, they had learned the surrounding landscape, the best approach path and the entry points into the concertina-wire-protected camp.
"Is this how the terrorists in Yemen figured where the U.S.S. Cole was?" Widman says chillingly. Widman's work repeatedly reveals that technologies once carefully held as national-security secrets are now commonplace because of satellite proliferation and the Internet. "More and more," Widman's colleague Col. James Rogers says, "the problem is not another superpower, but a guy with a credit card."
As a sign of space's growing importance to the military, the first large-scale war game devoted to space issues was held for five days in January. The hypothetical conflict was set in the year 2017 and involved fighting a space battle with a "near-peer competitor" country named Red that resembled China. During the simulation exercise, which involved 250 people, the two main weapons used to duke it out were laser cannons and microsatellites. Even though select journalists were invited to "watch," the Pentagon did not provide many details of the fighting, except to say that the conflict hinged on attempts to blind each other's satellites as a first step toward waging war. The message of the demonstration, however, was clear: whoever doesn't control space in the next conflict will lose.
he future of space depends a great deal on how we describe it, a struggle that is largely metaphorical. Is space merely an extension of the air and therefore the province of the Air Force? Or is it an entirely separate medium for power, like the land or sea, in need of a new doctrine? The first comparison more easily allows a militarization of space as just more of what we already have, while the second challenges us to debate space as the frontier it still is.
Rumsfeld leans toward the first comparison. His reorganization of the space command structure two months ago put Eberhardt and the Air Force in charge. The changes are even linguistic; the Air Force has revived the antique word "aerospace" to remarry the two domains. The Strategic Master Plan, for example, describes the current Air Force as being engaged in a "transition from a cold-war garrison force to an expeditionary aerospace force" in order to train "21st-century aerospace warriors."
At every stop, I was reminded of the incremental militarization of air after World War I. The Air Force began as a wing of the Army, flying over enemy territory and providing surveillance. Then the pilots began shooting one another down; later they started to drop bombs. Space can be seen as undergoing the same process, progressing out of its current stage as an arena of surveillance to microsatellites attacking other satellites to, finally, space-based lasers aiming down at fighter jets to blast them from the sky.
Yet at some point the future of space will emerge as a great American debate. Over and over, as I interviewed military scientists and generals assigned to space, I was reminded that the decision to move into space will, at the end of the day, be made in Washington. Already, a few politicians have foreseen this conversation and staked out positions.
"Space is our next manifest destiny," explains Senator Bob Smith, Republican of New Hampshire, "because it's a dangerous world out there." Smith says that we have to weaponize space before somebody else does or face the consequences: "I don't want to see a president in the position where he has to step up to the microphones and say that the next Iraq has threatened us with a full-scale attack tomorrow, and we've either got to surrender or nuke them."
On the other side is Representative Dennis Kucinich, Democrat of Ohio. This fall, he intends to introduce a bill to ban completely the weaponization of space. "It's bad enough that we've turned space into a junkyard, but they want to turn space into a place of death," he says. "Think about the metaphysics. For all of human history, space was a place of wonder, of dreams, of aspirations -- an almost visual portrayal of Browning's poem: 'Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp,/Or what's a heaven for?"'
Ugh. Maybe this is how the debate must begin -- duck-and-cover fear-mongering versus mawkish piety. Yet both positions are really built around the same fear: weaponizing space is terrifying. Smith resolves his fear by weaponizing first; Kucinich by appealing to a pristine notion of space that hasn't existed for 40 years. But this fear is real precisely because space weapons, unlike those at sea or on land, would orbit invisibly above us all. That fear would be irresolvable, like the nuclear nightmares of the last century, with their bomb shelters, gas masks and decades of mass-destruction anxiety. It is bad enough that space-surveillance technology has conspiracy theorists convinced the government can see them stepping out of the shower. Can you imagine the global neuroses if deadly lasers could be fired from space?
There is, however, a middle ground between hang-nukes-from-every-star and leave-space-the-inky-domain-of-magi, one that is occupied by some civilian theorists and military war planners.
"If we aggressively move weaponry into space," warns Michael Krepon of the Stimson Center, a Washington think tank, "then we will start an arms race." By inspiring nations to compete directly and immediately with our space-based assets, we will almost certainly guarantee the loss of the very advantages we seek to protect. Krepon supports a doctrine called "space sanctuary," a woolly phrase that sounds more feel-good than it is. His position is really that of a space pragmatist.
Pragmatists like Krepon want the military to continue research into space technologies; it would be foolish not to do so. But instead of testing or deploying a space-based arsenal, pragmatists would hold up a threat: if any rival country goes into space to test armaments, then America will go up with its own devices immediately. In the meantime, pragmatists believe, the United States should be promoting efforts to create rules of the road for space. As a model, Krepon suggests the bilateral agreements that currently regulate behavior among blue-water ships on the oceans. They are informally negotiated navy to navy, rather than through the more potentially hostile venues of governments and treaty arrangements.
Space pragmatists also believe there is great danger in abandoning the treaties that so far have guided behavior in space: the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, which forbids putting weapons of mass destruction in space, and the 1972 Antiballistic Missile Treaty, which created the surveillance system to prevent nuclear conflict (and forbids most antimissile testing). President Bush has roundly condemned the ABM treaty as a "relic" and has said that he will test antimissile technology no matter what -- prompting precisely the kind of reaction Krepon fears. Even our allies have expressed "concern."
"If the ABM treaty is trashed, its protections of satellites also go by the boards," Krepon cautions. "The ABM treaty contains the most explicit protections of satellites on the books. They pertain only to those satellites that monitor treaty provisions, but when you kill the treaty, you also remove the protections." Indeed, if the U.S. abandons the treaty, a rogue nation might well respond by tossing into orbit what experts call a "keg of nails" -- that is, putting thousands of metal shards into a 16,000-mile-per-hour counterorbit against our low-orbit satellites.
Kaboom.
The Pentagon's certainty that "Full Spectrum Dominance" is the only answer is curious because its own actions undercut the theory. Throughout all the conversations I had, I was perplexed by one glaring paradox. The linchpin of our precision-guided munitions is the Global Positioning System. After making the system public in the 90's, we opened it up further two years ago so that anyone on the earth can use its efficacy down to one meter of accuracy. This is an amazing gift to the world. Why did we make it? I kept asking the officers this question and heard an answer that didn't quite satisfy: "American businessmen could make some money off it."
But there is one other theory that is not stated so publicly: if we permitted everyone to use it, then no one would feel driven to build a competing system. Rather, everyone would become dependent on it. And, in fact, everyone has. The world has incorporated our G.P.S. into its daily life as rapidly as Americans took up the A.T.M. banking network, and the rules of the G.P.S. road are getting written. The entire military forces of Australia now rely upon our G.P.S., and the new generation of cell phones will automatically locate a 911 caller.
By sharing G.P.S., no one feels so threatened to compete with it. And its use is so ubiquitous internationally that any country that damaged it would provoke a global fury. There is a sense of transparency on our part by giving away access to the G.P.S., even a feeling of generosity. Naturally, there are encryption devices on our satellites. In a crisis, we could block a bellicose nation's access to G.P.S. What was done with G.P.S. is a kind of space pragmatism.
A similar protocol could be done for introducing direct video access to space. Once it is developed, the U.S. military could make technology that allows us to see and confirm exactly what is happening up in space publicly available. This would, once again, be viewed as American generosity. It would ease competitive tensions since there would be mutually assured awareness in space. A nation with a defunct satellite would be able to confirm that it was not sabotage but the usual wear and tear of, say, subatomic bombardment (another new space hazard) that caused a breakdown. The benefit for us would be that when the crunch time of a crisis came, the visual infrastructure to see precisely what's going on in space, like G.P.S., could be made unavailable to a hostile force.
The strength of the pragmatic position is that it seeks neither to march into space while locking and loading nor does it naively strive for a purity that no longer exists. Space pragmatism doesn't pretend to keep space unsullied, because it can't. Without a doubt, more and more satellites will go up. More businesses will operate there, new uses will be discovered and quarrels will occur. And gradually, a military presence that is already there will get expanded. But the pragmatist intent is to hold the line at surveillance.
Can we? Can we hold the line without necessarily filling space with weaponry? The pragmatist position holds out the hope that by writing rules now -- and by sharing technology -- the United States could make it much harder for anyone to ever breach that line. On the other hand, if we plan, test and deploy aggressively as the lone superpower, we make certain that after a brief respite from the cold war's nuclear competition, we will once again embark on a fresh and costly arms race. And with it, assume the dark burden of policing a rapid evolution in battlespace.
Jack Hitt is a contributing writer for the magazine.
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