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Subject: [mobilize-globally] U.S. MILITARY MOVES TO CONTROL SPACE


Subject:
           [CTRL] U.S. Military Moves To Control Space
     Date:
           Thu, 29 Mar 2001 22:05:47 EST
     From:
           DIG alfred webre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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-Caveat Lector-

 -Caveat Lector-

 U.S. MILITARY MOVES TO CONTROL SPACE AND
 BE ENFORCEMENT ARM FOR THE GLOBAL ECONOMY

 Presentation at Technology and Globalization Teach-In

 New York City,  February 24, 2001

 by Karl Grossman

         The United States is seeking to control space and from space
 dominate the Earth below and "control" and "dominate" are words used
 repeatedly in U.S. military documents. The U.S. military, further,
would
 like to base weapons in space.  The new Bush administration is
gung-ho for
 U.S. projection of space military power. As last month's report of
the
 "Space Commission" chaired by incoming Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld
 puts it: "In the coming period, the U.S. will conduct operations to,
from,
 in and through space in support of its national interests both on the

 Earth and in space." Star Wars is back.
         But there's a difference since Star Wars first emerged under
 Ronald Reagan in 1983. Then it was purportedly needed to fend off
what
 Reagan called the "evil empire," the Soviet Union. There is no Soviet

 Union any longer. And a key rationale for Star Wars now, U.S.
military
 documents acknowledge, is the global economy of which the U.S. is the

 engine. The U.S. would, from the "ultimate high ground" of space,
 "dominate" the planet below in part to keep the global economy on
track.
 Says the U.S. Space Command's "Vision for 2020" report , its cover
 depicting a laser weapon shooting a beam down from space zapping a
target
 below: "The globalization of the world economy will also continue
with a
 widening between "haves and have-nots." From space, the U.S. would
keep
 those "have-nots" in line.
         The U.S. Space Command, set up by the Pentagon in 1985,
describes
 itself in "Vision for 2020" this way: "US Space Command dominating
the
 space dimension of military operations to protect US interests and
 investment.  Integrating Space Forces into warfighting capabilities
across
 the full spectrum of conflict."  Vision for 2020 compares the U.S.
effort
 to "control space" and Earth below to how centuries ago "nations
built
 navies to protect and enhance their commercial interests," referring
to
 the great empires of Europe that ruled the waves and thus the Earth
to
 maintain their imperial economies.
         Consider the "Long Range Plan" of the U.S. Space Command.
"The
 United States will remain a global power and exert global
leadership," it
 says. "The United States won't always be able to forward base its
forces.
 Widespread communications will highlight disparities in resources and

 quality of life contributing to unrest in developing countries. The
global
 economy will continue to become more interdependent. Economic
alliances,
 as well as the growth and influence of multi-national corporations,
will
 blur security agreements. The gap between have' and have-not' nations
will
 widen creating regional unrest. One of the long acknowledged and
commonly
 understood advantages of space-based platforms is no restriction or
 country clearances to overfly a nation from space."
         The U.S. Space Command seeks to become "the enforcement arm
for the
 global economy," as Bill Sulzman, director of Citizens for Peace In
Space
 put it at the international conference last year of the Global
Network
 Against Weapons and Nuclear Power In Space.
           U.S. citizens are not aware of the broad military plans of
the
 U.S. for space because of the PR spin of the new Star Wars pitch
(it's
 about protecting against a "Space Pearl Harbor," as the Rumsfeld
 Commission puts it, "just" about "missile defense") and due to
 communications media that are lazy and worse. But other nations of
the
 world do understand. That's why, at the United Nations last November
20, a
 resolution was introduced on which 163 nations voted yes for
"Prevention
 of an Arms Race in Outer Space." It reaffirmed the basic
international law
 on space, the Outer Space Treaty of 1967, and specifically its
provision
 that space be set-aside for "peaceful purposes." The United States
 abstained.
           A country leading in the international effort to stop the
U.S.
 plans by strengthening the Outer Space Treaty and barring all weapons
from
 space is Canadano potential rival.
           As Marc Vidricaire, representing Canada, said at the UN
last
 year: "It has been suggested that our proposal is not relevant
because the
 assessment on which it rests is either premature or alarmist.  In our

 view, it is neither.  One need only look at what is happening right
now."
 Moreover, stressed the Canadian statement, "There is no question that
the
 technology can be developed to place weapons in outer space.  There
is
 also no question that no state can expect to maintain a monopoly on
such
 knowledge -- or such capabilities -- for all time.  If one state
actively
 pursues the weaponization of space, we can be sure others will
follow."
 But the rogue state called the United States is blocking the Canadian

 initiative. For the U.S. thinks it can be as the motto of the Air
Force
 Space Command terms it "Master of Space."  "Master of Space." It
appears
 as a Space Command uniform patch and is in three-foot high letters
over
 the entrance of the Air Force's 50th Space Wing. It pretty well sums
up
 the attitude toward space of the U.S. power structure. Working
closely
 with the U.S. military in achieving this goal are major aerospace
 corporations. Indeed, the "Long Range Plan starts out by explaining
how it
 has been U.S. Space Command's" #1 priority, investing nearly 20
man-years
 to make it a reality" and: "The development and production process,
by
 design, involved hundreds of people including about 75 corporations."
The
 "Long Range Plan" goes on to list those 75 corporations beginning
with
 Aerojet and going through Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon and
Sparta
 Corp. to TRW and Vista Technologies. President Dwight Eisenhower
warned in
 his "farewell address" in 1959 of the influence of a
"military-industrial
 complex." Now, the U.S. military boasts about how giant corporations
are
 helping set U.S. military doctrine. Star Wars, with its powerful
backers,
 never, in fact, went away. Funding at $6 billion-a-year plus monies
in the
 "black" or secret for U.S. space military activities continued
through the
 Clinton administration. Last December, Clinton's Department of
Defense
 cleared the way for development of the "Space Based Laser Readiness
 Demonstrator" a project of Lockheed Martin, Boeing and TRW with a
 "lifecycle budget" of $20 to $30 billion.  A second space-based laser

 weapon on which development continued through the Clinton years is
the
 "Alpha High-Energy Laser," now test-fired more than 20 times.
         It was Clinton's Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Air Force
for
 Space Keith Hall who said: "With regard to space dominance, we have
it, we
 like it, and we're going to keep it." And things are far worse now
with
 Bush and Cheney, their administration intimately linked to the
aerospace
 companies Cheney himself a former member of the TRW board, his wife
Lynn a
 member of the Lockheed Martin board and tied to the ultra right-wing
 "think tanks" that, with the U.S.  military, have been promoting Star

 Wars.  The new administration is pushing hard and fast to make space
a new
 arena of war. Last month's report by the Rumsfeld "Space Commission"
calls
 for U.S. "power projection in, from and through space." It seeks U.S.

 "superior space capabilities." It says the U.S. president should
"have the
 option to deploy weapons in space." It emphasizes that it is
"possible to
 project power through and from space in response to events anywhere
in the
 world. Unlike weapons from aircraft, land forces or ships, space
missions
 initiated from earth or space could be carried out with little
transit,
 information or weather delay. Having this capability would give the
U.S. a
 much stronger deterrent and, in a conflict, an extraordinary military

 advantage." It proposes the U.S. Space Command become the nucleus of
a
 U.S. Space Corps, to be like the Marine Corps and possibly
"transition" to
 a fully separate Space Force or "Space Department" on par with the
Army,
 Navy and Air Force several years hence.  As the man whose legislation
got
 the Rumsfeld "Space Commission" established, Senator Bob Smith of New

 Hampshire, said in an interview just taped with him to be part of my
 forthcoming "Star Wars Returns" video documentary, involved is the
new
 "manifest destiny" of the U.S. "It is our manifest destiny," said
Senator
 Smith. "You know we went from the East Coast to the West Coast of the

 United States of America settling the continent and they call that
 manifest destiny and the next continent if you will, the next
frontier, is
 space and it goes on forever." Now it's U.S. cosmic "manifest
destiny."
         The book, "The Future of War: Power, Technology and American
World
 Dominance in the 2lst Century," by think-tankers George and Meredith
 Friedman, concludes: "Just as by the year 1500 it was apparent that
the
 European experience of power would be its domination of the global
seas,
 it does not take much to see that the American experience of power
will
 rest on the domination of space...Just as Europe expanded war and its

 power to the global oceans, the United States is expanding war and
its
 power into space. Just as Europe shaped the world for half a
millennium,
 so too the United States will shape the world for at least that
length of
 time. For better or worse, America has seized hold of the future of
war,
 and with it for a time the future of humanity."
         The rest of the world will not sit back and accept U.S.
"world
 dominance" from space. If the U.S. moves ahead on its program of
 astro-imperialism, deploys weapons in space, other nations China and
 Russia right off will meet the U.S. in kind. There will be an arms
race
 and inevitably war in space.  As First Secretary of China's UN
delegation,
 Wang Xiaoyu, has declared: "Outer space is the common heritage of
human
 beings. It should be used entirely for peaceful purposes and for the
 economic, scientific, and cultural development of all countries as
well as
 the well-being of mankind.  It must not be weaponized and become
another
 arena of the arms race."
         "Space domination," he stated, "is a hegemonic concept. Its
 essence is monopoly of space and denial of others access to it." If
the
 U.S. pushes ahead, "other countries would in response launch their
own"
 space military programs, China vowed. However, China is, for now,
holding
 off and, paralleling Canada's initiative, also seeking an
international
 ban on weapons in space.  But the U.S. has rebuffed the Chinese
 initiative, too. Incidentally, the weapons the U.S. military wants to

 deploy in space especially lasers will need large amounts of power.
And
 nuclear energy is seen by the U.S. military as the "natural" power
source
 for them.
         As "New World Vistas: Air And Space Power For The 2lst
Century," a
 U.S. Air Force board report, states: "In the next two decades, new
 technologies will allow the fielding of space-based weapons of
devastating
 effectiveness to be used to deliver energy and mass as force
projection in
 tactical and mass and cost to effect very many kills." But "power
 limitations impose restrictions" on such-based weapons systems making
them
 "relatively unfeasible.  A natural technology to enable high power,"
it
 goes on, "is nuclear power in space."  "Setting the emotional issues
of
 nuclear power aside, this technology offers a viable alternative for
large
 amounts of power in space," asserts "New World Vistas."
         The Outer Space Treaty is a visionary document. It is a pact
to
 keep war out of space. The U.S., incidentally, was a leader in
getting it
 enacted. It is now signed now by most nations of the world. Based on
the
 Antarctic Treaty, it calls for the "exploration and use of outer
space
 [to] the benefit and in the interests of all countries" and prohibits
the
 "placement in orbit around the Earth any objects carrying nuclear
weapons
 or any other kinds of weapons of mass destruction." For nearly four
 decades, it has kept space war-free.  What a legacy to be left for
our
 children and their children at the dawn of this new century, this new

 millennium, if the U.S. succeeds in trashing the Outer Space Treaty
and
 makes space a new place for war. No one will profit but Boeing,
Lockheed
 Martin and Raytheon and TRW, and so on.
         We have a narrow window to keep space for peace, to
strengthen the
 Outer Space Treaty and ban all weapons in space. We must join with
peoples
 from around the world and stop this move by the United States to turn
the
 heavens into a war zone.
         Getting and spreading the information about what is going on
is
 critical.  And then: action, action, action. I urge you to join with
the
 Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power In Space and move
against
 what is happening. We must challenge the anti-environmental,
 anti-democratic global economy and we must challenge its would-be
 "enforcement arm" the new U.S. space military establishment.

    ***
 Karl Grossman, professor of journalism at the State University of New

 York/College at Old Westbury, has specialized in investigative
reporting
 for more than 30 years. His books include "The Wrong Stuff: The Space

 Program's Nuclear Threat To Our Planet" (Common Courage Press) and
his
 video documentaries include "Nukes In Space: The Nuclearization and
 Weaponization of the Heavens" (EnviroVideo).  His new video
documentary,
 "Star Wars Returns," is forthcoming from EnviroVideo (1-800-ECO-TV46
or
 http://www.envirovideo.com) and new book, "Weapons In Space," soon to
be
 published by Seven Stories Press (http:[EMAIL PROTECTED] or

 212-226-8760).  Grossman is a charter member of the Commission on
 Disarmament Education, Conflict Resolution and Peace of the
International
 Association of University Presidents and the United Nations.  He is
 convenor of the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power In
Space
 (352-337-9274 or http://www.space4peace.org or E-mail:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Its address is PO Box 90083, Gainesville, Florida   32607.
 Grossman's home address:        Box 1680, Sag Harbor, New York 11963.

 Telephone: 631-725-2858. Fax: 631-725-9338.             E-mail:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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 (COAT),  Editor, Press for Conversion!
   541 McLeod St., Ottawa Ontario Canada  K1R 5R2      Tel.:
613-231-3076
 Fax: 613-231-2614
   Email: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>    Web site: <www.ncf.ca/coat> >>

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