MARCH 20, 2019
by T.J. COLES
Photograph Source NASA/Bill
Anders
The US is formally
committed to dominating the world by the year 2020. With President Trump’s new
Space Directive-4, the production of laser-armed fighter jets as possible
precursors to space weapons, and the possibility of nuclear warheads being put
into orbit, the clock is ticking…
Back in 1997, the now-re-established US Space Command
announced its commitment to “full spectrum dominance.” The Vision for 2020explains that “full spectrum
dominance” means military control over land, sea, air, and space (the so-called
fourth dimension of warfare) “to protect US interests and investment.”
“Protect” means guarantee operational freedom. “US interest and investment”
means corporate profits.
The glossy brochure
explains that, in the past, the Army evolved to protect US settlers who stole
land from Native Americans in the genocidal birth of the nation.
Like the Vision for 2020, a report by the National
Defense University acknowledges that by the 19th century, the
Navy had evolved to protect the US’s newly-formulated “grand strategy.” In
addition to supposedly protecting citizens and the constitution, “The
overriding principle was, and remains, the protection of American territory …
and our economic well-being.” By the 20th century, the Air
Force had been established, in the words of the Air Force
Study Strategy Guide, to protect “vital interests,” including: “commerce;
secure energy supplies; [and] freedom of action.” In the 21stcentury,
these pillars of power are bolstered by the Cyber Command and the coming Space
Force.
The use of the Army, Navy,
and Air Force—the three dimensions of power—means that the US is already close
to achieving “full spectrum dominance.” Brown University’s Cost of War
project documents current US military
involvement in 80 countries—or 40% of the world’s nations. This includes 65
so-called counterterrorism training operations and 40 military bases (though
others think the number of bases is much higher). By this measure, “full
spectrum dominance” is nearly half way complete. But the map leaves out US and
NATO bases, training programs, and operations in Estonia, Latvia, Poland, and
Ukraine.
As the US expands its space
operations—the fourth dimension of warfare—the race towards “full spectrum
dominance” quickens. Space has long been militarized in the sense that the US
uses satellites to guide missiles and aircraft. But the new doctrine seeks to
weaponize space by, for instance, blurring the boundaries between high-altitude
military aircraft and space itself. Today’s space power will be harnessed by
the US to ensure dominance over the satellite infrastructure that allows for
the modern world of internet, e-commerce, GPS, telecommunications,
surveillance, and war-fighting.
Since the 1950s, the United
Nations has introduced various treaties to prohibit the
militarization and weaponization of space—the most famous being the Outer Space
Treaty (1967). These treaties aim to preserve space as a commons for all
humanity. The creation of the US Space Force is a blatant violation of the
spirit, if not the letter, of those treaties. In more recent decades,
successive US governments have unilaterally rejected treaties to reinforce and
expand the existing space-for-peace agreements. In 2002, the US withdrew from the
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (1972), allowing it to expand its long-range
missile systems. In 2008, China and Russia submitted to the UN Conference on
Disarmament the proposed Treaty on the
Prevention of the Placement of Weapons in Outer Space, the Threat or Use of
Force Against Outer Space Objects. This would have preserved the
space-as-a-commons principle and answered US claims that “enemies” would use
space as a battleground against US satellites.
But peace is not the goal.
The goal is “full spectrum dominance,” so the US rejected the offer. China and
Russia introduced the proposed the
treaty again in 2014—and again the US rejected it. Earlier this year, the
US withdrew from the
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty. Last month, President Trump
sent an unclassified memo on the new Space Directive-4 to the Vice President,
Joint Chiefs of Staff, NASA, and the Secretaries of Defense and State.
The document makes for chilling
and vital reading. It recommends legislating for the training of US forces “to
ensure unfettered access to, and freedom to operate in, space, and to provide
vital capabilities to joint and coalition forces.” Crucially, this doctrine
includes “peacetime and across the spectrum of conflict.” As well as
integrating space forces with the intelligence community, the memo recommends
establishing a Chief of Staff of the Space Force, who will to join the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. The memo also says that US space operations will abide by
“international law.” But given that the US has rejected anti-space weapons
treaties, it is barely constrained by international law.
In late-2017,
Space.com reported on a $26.3m
Department of Defense contract with Lockheed Martin to build lasers for fighter
jets under the Laser Advancements for Next-generation Compact Environments
program. The report says that the lasers will be ready by 2021. The article
links to Doug Graham, the Vice President of Missile Systems and Advanced
Programs at Lockheed Martin Space Systems. In the original link Graham reveals that the Air Force
laser “is an example of how Lockheed Martin is using a variety of innovative
technologies to transform laser devices into integrated weapon systems.”
As if all this wasn’t bad
enough, the British Ministry of Defence (MoD) states in a projection out
to the year 2050: “Economies are becoming increasingly dependent upon
space-based systems … By 2050, space-based weapon systems may also be deployed,
which could include nuclear weapons.” But this is extremely reckless.
Discussing technologies, including the artificial intelligence on which weapons
systems are increasingly based, another MoD projection warns of “the
potential for disastrous outcomes, planned and unplanned … Various doomsday
scenarios arising in relation to these and other areas of development present
the possibility of catastrophic impacts, ultimately including the end of the
world, or at least of humanity.”
“Full spectrum dominance”
is not only a danger to the world, it is a danger to US citizens who would also
suffer the consequences, if and when something goes wrong with their leaders’
complicated space weapons.
More articles by:T.J. COLES
Dr. T. J. Coles is
director of the Plymouth Institute for Peace Research and the author of several
books, including Voices for Peace (with Noam Chomsky
and others) and the forthcoming Fire and Fury: How the US Isolates
North Korea, Encircles China and Risks Nuclear War in Asia (both Clairview
Books).
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