Rods from God Editor of IN THESE TIMES, March 09,2003 With no fanfare, the
Bush Administration is taking military control of what it terms
near space, thereby laying claim to the area of the Solar System
that lies between the Earth and the Moons orbit. A key objective
& is not only to ensure U.S. ability to exploit space for military
purposes, but also as required to deny an adversarys ability to
do so,is how the Pentagons 2001 Quadrennial Defense Review
explained U.S. strategy.
One of the key systems in U.S. plans to rule the heavens are the Xseries of military space planes,the prototype of which is being developed by Boeing and Lockheed Martin at a cost of $4.8 billion. The Air Forces Xseries, designed to attack and destroy enemy satellites, is slated to replace NASAs Space Shuttlein the same way that the Pentagon is now slated to replace NASAs civilian administration. Sean OKeefe, the former navy secretary and current chief of NASA, has said that every NASA mission from now on will be dual use(have both military and civilian purposes at the same time). The legal impediment to the U.S. conquest of space was overcome in 2001 when President George W. Bush canceled the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty with Russia, which prohibited the testing of space-based anti-ballistic missiles. Today, the obstacles standing in the way of U.S. space dominance are Chinas budding space program and the European Space Agencys plans to deploy the Galileo satellite system. Not surprisingly, the Bush administration is trying its best to persuade the European Union to put its space program under NATO control. And, this spring at the Space Warfare Center at Schriever Air Force Base, a space-based war game set in the year 2017 pitted the U.S. Blue Team against the Chinese Red Team. Participants at this years games were told not to get bogged down in discussions about space law and policies, which disrupted the games military operationsin 2001. Peter Teets, a one-time president of Lockheed Martin, is the director of the agency that controls military satellites, the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO). He worries about a situation where an adversary chooses to leverage the Global Positioning System or perhaps the Galileo constellation to attack American forces with precision.To prevent such an occurrence, according to Teets, beginning in 2004, the NRO will draw up policies to deny other nations, allies included, the use of near-Earth spacea policy that goes by the term negation. In the 80s, Reagans Star Wars program prompted public world-wide protest. The lack of concern over Bushs new-and-improved Star Wars demonstrates just how anesthetized we have become. Lets hope we wake up by November 2, 2004. ![]() Joel Bleifuss is the editor of In These Times, where he has worked as a investigative reporter, columnist and editor since 1986. Bleifuss has had more stories on Project Censored's annual list of the 10 Most Censored Storiesthan any other journalist. |