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Star Wars
Speech
Dr. Bob Fitrakis
www.freepress.org
AWC Conference, August 2-5, 2005
Scholars have long commented
on the U.S. government's need for an "endless frontier"
- a substitute for the mythologized Wild West. A place Americans
can explore, conquer, and dominate, and where riches and profits
can be plundered. With the official closing of the continental
western frontier in 1890 and the ongoing exploitation of Alaska's
resources, space truly represents the "final frontier."
The current Bush administration's
plan to weaponize space and seize the new high-tech military
"high ground" poses perhaps the greatest threat to
humankind in the 21st century. The U.S.'s stated policy, revealed
in the U.S. Space Command document "Joint Vision for 2020,"
calls for "full spectrum dominance" of Earth, both
militarily and economically, through control of the moon corridor.
Amidst the bucolic splendor of
a vast nature preserve, a historic conference entitled "Full
Spectrum Dominance" was held on May 16-17 at the Airlie
Center in Warrenton, Virginia. Nobel Peace Prize winner Dr. Helen
Caldicott organized the event which gathered 45 selected media
representatives from NBC, CNN and freepress.org, among others,
to interact with 25 briefers including military backers of the
Bush administration's strategic defense initiative, scientists,
policy makers and activists opposed to the militarization of
space.
Fittingly, the retired General
Charles Horner, former Commander-in-chief of the U.S. Space Command,
opened the conference. He frankly described his past profession
as one of "destroying things and killing people." Horner
stated that he "hates war" and is a religious "pacifist,"
but insists we live in a world that is "incongruous and
divided." He asserts that "space people had to have
a space weapon."
The General made a distinction
between weapons of mass destruction in space and weapons in what
he called "near space." With this distinction, he proceeded
to argue that U.S. missiles launched into near space from U.S.
military bases or ships based off North Korea's coastline do
not constitute space weapons. He defended the Bush administration's
plans for a missile defense system asserting that even if we
only shoot down one in ten nuclear missiles, that's one city
saved. He also pointed out that the nukes ". . . we shoot
down are going to fall on Canada," not the United States.
Dr. Craig Eisendrath, Senior
Fellow at the Center for International Policy, outlined the post-World
War II history of missile defense. Eisendrath explained the post-war
yearning for merging "rocket technology with nuclear capability."
Eisendrath insists that the same issues of miscalculation, hair-trigger
defense systems and decoy problems that led the U.S. and the
former Soviet Union to sign the 1972 Anti Ballistic Missile (ABM)
treaty remain today.
Despite this, in 2001, the Bush
administration renounced the ABM treaty and its obligations that
outlawed the testing and deployment of "missile defense"
systems. Eisendrath points out that the Bush administration has
taken advantage of the 9/11 tragedy to push the missile defense
system as a "counterterrorism" measure. He insists
that intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) are not terrorist
weapons a la "a dirty bomb."
The Bush administration has falsely
manufactured the need for a missile defense system through a
". . . concentrated campaign, that is frankly despicable
and takes money away from fighting terrorism," Eisendrath
concluded.
In a critique of Bush administration
policy, Eisendrath commented that the "first line of defense
is diplomacy, not the last."
The U.S. has already spent, (critics
argue wasted), $130 billion on research and development for the
so-called Star Wars program. Ten billion dollars a year continues
to be allocated to the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) to keep alive
President Ronald Reagan's Cold War dream.
Ambassador Thomas Graham, now
a senior advisor at the Eisenhower Institute, called the ABM
treaty a "cornerstone of stability." Graham noted that
with the Chinese in possession of a mere 20 ICBMs and the Russians
having reduced to less than half their Cold War arsenal, a missile
defense system seems to make little sense at this point in history.
Graham, like Eisendrath, offers
that the $10 billion given to the MDA ? the largest single year
expenditure on any weapons system ? would be better spent on
suppression of terrorist networks. Analysts at Jane's Defense
publications called ICBMs "the least likely threat"
and "dirty bombs" the more likely nuclear option against
the United States, according to Graham.
Professor of Science, Technology
and National Security Theodore Postol of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology pointed out that it's well known that decoys easily
fool missile defense systems. Thus, cheap and low-tech ways to
counter and confuse missile defense systems have been well publicized
since the 1960s. Postol referred to "inflatable decoys"
with the "appearance of warheads" as the most obvious
possibility. "If multiple objects have the same appearance,
then the defending missiles cannot discriminate between those
objects. It is not possible," Postol explained. Hence, billions
of dollars of weapons become easily nullified.
Military personnel present quickly
countered by insisting that the decoy problem could be solved
if we simply launched pre-emptive missile strikes against any
North Korean or hostile country's space launches. The legality
under international law of pre-emptive nuclear attacks on other
nation's space launches proved quite controversial.
Eisendrath said that he believes
the entire Star Wars system, including Joint Vision for 2020,
is being "driven by lobbyists." General Horner disagreed,
but concurred that the current technology is indeed imperfect.
He posed the question of whether or not say, a "laser"
in space with military application, is per se a space weapon.
U.S. government documents previously revealed by the Free Press
indicate that lasers are a key component of the U.S. government's
secret "directed energy program."
President's Fellow at the World
Policy Institute William D. Hartung believes that the emerging
national missile defense lobby is attempting to create a "tipping
point to put behind space weapons." Companies like Boeing,
which has been actively involved in the airborne laser system,
and Milteck, which has been associated with kinetic energy space
weapons, may well seek huge profits in a reborn Star Wars program.
Hartung quantifies the various costs of the MDA and related Star
Wars programs at approximately $22 billion in weapons. This figure
included $8.8 billion for missile defense and between $300-$500
million for the new generation of space weapons.
John Isaacs, the Executive Director
of the Council for a Livable World, calls the $8.8 billion allocation
for missile defense "substantial support," even though,
in his analysis, missile defense systems are "impotent and
obsolete" in light of the dirty bomb danger. Any terrorist
with dynamite and some radioactive material poses more of a true
threat to U.S. security.
Isaacs claims that the Bush administration's
missile defense systems is driven more by neo-conservative ideology
and the forces supporting it at the Project for a New American
Century, and may be serving more as a symbol of determined projected
U.S. military and economic dominance of the planet. Seen in this
light, the system itself doesn't have to be viable. Isaacs claims
that as the biggest weapons program in the defense budget, it's
an obvious "white elephant" there for ideological reasons.
Hartung added that "space
weapons rhetoric" goes hand-in-hand with the Bush doctrine
of pre-emptive or, better put, preventive war. Ambassador Graham
described the Bush doctrine of preventive war "no longer
being driven by technology, it's new theology." He warned
against the danger of the absurd "dream of absolute security."
Bruce Gagnon, the Coordinator
of Global Network Against Nuclear Power and Weapons in Space,
called the ideology nothing less than a commitment to the intergalactic
U.S. domination of space.
Vladimar Yermakov, Senior Counselor
from the Russian Embassy provided the Russian perspective on
Star Wars. He said that militarization of space has already occurred.
What his country is opposed to is a new arms race: "the
weaponization of space."
Space has become big business'
new frontier, not only for the weapons makers, but for those
who traffic in commercial satellite signals. An estimated $91
billion a year, and this has doubled since 1996, is spent on
direct satellite TV and radio transmissions.
In 1967, the U.S. signed the
UN treaty on the peaceful uses of outer space, a treaty currently
under "review" by the Bush administration. In October
2004, the UN Committee on Disarmament and International Security
held a special session on Prevention of an Arms Race in Space.
They voted on a nonbinding resolution opposing the weaponization
of space. The final vote was 167-0-2. The two countries that
abstained were the U.S. and Israel.
While President Eisenhower dreamed
of "the peaceful use of space," the Clinton years transformed
that to a vision of "space control." Now, inevitably,
the Bush administration offers us "space dominance,"
according to Theresa Hitchens, Director of the Center for Defense
Information. The emerging commercial interests in space and colonization
of the moon, and the belief that there's "gold in them there
asteroids" is clearly driving U.S. space policy.
Dr. Richard Garwin, Senior Fellow
for Science and Technology at the Council on Foreign Relations,
stressed the advantages if the U.S. military controlled space.
He painted a catastrophic scenario where U.S. enemies attacked
and destroyed our space assets. Garwin argued that it makes no
sense for the U.S. to cooperate with other countries and give
up our space superiority.
Former Air Force Officer Peter
Hayes magnified Garwin's arguments by pointing out that in the
U.S.'s well known "shock and awe" air attack on Iraq,
70% of the weapons were guided by space satellites.
Professor of Military Studies
Everett C. Dolman from the Air Force School of Advanced Air and
Space Studies matter-of-factly represented the naked face of
U.S. militarism. The former intelligence analyst for the National
Security Agency and employee of the U.S. Space Command asserted
that the U.S. "will not give up its right to use force as
long as it is the hegemon."
In Professor Dolman's analysis,
the U.S. should think of the moon corridor in the same way that
the imperial British Navy thought of the sea lanes in the 19th
century. We should borrow from the British model of bottling
up and controlling the sea lanes to assert military and economic
dominance in the Victorian era and think of the Earth as a large
port. Dolman argues it's inevitable that the U.S. will bottle
up the key Earth port leading to the moon. The moon is the high
ground, an ideal for future military and commercial operations.
As the endless frontier beckons
the U.S. militarists and corporatists, Dr. Dolman noted that
we should not be worried about other countries trying to stop
us. He explained, "Mice always vote to bell the cat."
The predatory nature of Dolman's comments were not lost on either
Gagnon or Caldicott.
Gagnon forthrightly stated that
America is addicted to militarism and violence and that our economy
is too dependent on military spending. He called for the total
defunding of all space weapons research and development. He urged
religious leaders to consider the moral and ethical questions
posed by the weaponization of the heavens and demanded a full
public discourse on the implications of Star Wars, the sequel.
After Gagnon finished, Caldicott
rose and, in her usual thoughtful rhetoric, reminded all present
that "Our planet is under intensive care." She insisted
that we must alter our way of thinking if we are to preserve
the planet for future generations. Caldicott denounced the new
Bush policies
as "little boy's games" and pledged herself to opposing
nukes in space.
Her comments added a thematic
cohesion to the historic gathering. General Horner had remarked
in his opening comments that the Pentagon does not "want
to talk about space control because they are afraid of groups
like you that will be protesting in the streets" in a reference
to Caldicott's Nuclear
Policy Research Institute.
Also of concern is the U.S. government's
experimentation with weather modification. The theoretical outline
of the use of weather warfare is embodied in the U.S. Air Force
Academy paper "Weather as a force multiplier: Owning the
weather by 2025." While officially the U.S. government adheres
to the 1977 UN ENMOD (Environmental Modification) treaty, there
are large loopholes involving using commercial and nonprofit
enterprises as fronts for military experimentation and technological
advancement. The U.S. government, for example, denies that its
HAARP (High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program) system
has any military application. But, Dr. Arnold Barnes, who made
it rain during the Vietnam War during Operation Popeye spelled
out the military applications of HAARP in a presentation at the
U.S. Army Test
Command Center.
On May 18, the New York Times
reported that the Bush administration is planning to announce
a new national space policy. The new direction will give a green
light to the offensive weaponization of space. The policy will
spell out U.S. military space control and domination.
The lines are drawn. Will the
people of the planet take to the streets and oppose the U.S.
policy of "full spectrum dominance" of Earth from space?
Or will the cat continue to toy with the mice?
As an educator advocating diplomacy
and world peace, we must begin by exposing the unpleasant truths
about our own government's policies and embrace our fellow world
citizens in this unending peace crusade.
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