December
23, 2019
In the following interview
for Strategic Culture Foundation, American Professor Karl Grossman
warns that the Trump administration is recklessly pushing ahead with long-held
US plans to militarize outer space. This is in spite of a UN treaty banning
such a development.
Grossman says the
weaponization of space is essential to US imperialist ambitions for “full
spectrum dominance” over the entire planet. He also contends that the US
enterprise will unleash a new arms race with Russia and China, thereby gravely
undermining global security and greatly increasing the risk of a nuclear war.
Much of the US space
weaponization program, he says, can be traced back to the post-Second World War
years when former Nazi rocket scientists were employed by Washington to
continue the Third Reich’s military programs.
In 1967, President Lyndon Johnson signs a proclamation
declaring an international treaty barring nuclear weapons and military bases
from outer space and prohibiting any nation from claiming sovereignty in space.
The treaty was signed
by 13 nations. | Harvey Georges/AP Photo
Grossman debunks
oft-repeated claims made by US politicians that Russia and China are advancing
their own space weaponry. Indeed, he points out, both Moscow and Beijing are on
the record over many years calling for the US to desist from violating the 1967
Outer Space Treaty. The Space Force plan being rolled out by the Trump
administration is largely being done without the US public’s knowledge or
consent.
Karl Grossman’s biography includes being a full Professor of Journalism at
the State University of New York/College at Old Westbury. He is also a
film-maker, author and renowned international expert on space weaponization,
having addressed UN conferences and other forums on the subject. He is a founding director (in 1992) of the Global Network Against Weapons
& Nuclear Power in Space. Grossman is author of the ground-breaking book, ‘Weapons in Space’.
INTERVIEW
Question: The annual National Defense Authorization Act
(NDAA) currently going through the US Congress this month makes provision for
the establishment of a Space Force as an entirely separate branch of the armed
forces. Is the Trump administration moving ahead with plans to weaponize outer
space in ways that far exceed similar plans seen under previous
administrations, such as Ronald Reagan in the 1980s and his “Star Wars”
initiative?
Karl Grossman: It is along the lines of US military space
strategy that has been developing for decades. It is important, I believe, to
note that much of this started with the arrival of former Nazi scientists –
many of whom worked on the V2 rocket program, such as Werner von Braun – to the
US after World War Two. At the Army arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, they
produced a modified V2 renamed the Redstone, the first US missile capable of
carrying a nuclear weapon.
Former General Walter
Dornberger, who supervised work on the V2, was hired as a consultant to the US
Air Force in 1947 and, notes the book ‘Arming the Heavens’ by State
University of New York Professor Jack Manno, Dornberger “wrote a planning paper
for his new employers. He projected a system of hundreds of nuclear-armed
satellites all orbiting at different altitudes and angles, each capable of
reentering the atmosphere on command from Earth to proceed to its target. The
Air Force began early work on Dornberger’s idea under the acronym NABS (Nuclear
Armed Bombardment Satellites).” Manno also writes: “Before a congressional hearing
in 1958, Dornberger insisted that America’s top space priority ought to be to
‘conquer, occupy, keep and utilize space between the Earth and the moon.’”
The “Star Wars” scheme of
President Ronald Reagan represented a full-blown plan by the US for the weaponization
of space – despite, importantly, the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 which declares
space a global commons to be used for peaceful purposes.
In my book, ‘Weapons
in Space’, I quote from various US military documents, such as the US Space
Command’s ‘Vision for 2020’, its multi-colored cover depicting a
laser weapon shooting a laser beam down from space zapping a target below. This
report, issued in 1996, proclaims the US Space Command’s mission of “dominating
the space dimension of military operations to protect US interests and
investment. Integrating Space Forces into war-fighting capabilities across the
full spectrum of conflict.”
So important, too, ‘Vision
for 2020’ compares the US effort to control space and the Earth below
to how centuries ago “nations built navies to protect their commercial
interests,” how the great empires of Europe ruled the waves and thus the world.
As General Joseph Ashy, then
commander in chief of the US Space Command, put it in 1996 in the trade
magazine Aviation Week & Space Technology: “It’s politically
sensitive, but it’s going to happen. Some people don’t want to hear this, and
it sure isn’t in vogue, but – absolutely – we’re going to fight in space. We’re
going to fight from space and we’re going to fight into space.”
As to Trump, the
preposterous US president now, as National Public Radio reported
this August, the Space Force notion “started as a joke.” Reported NPR correspondent
Claudia Grisales in a report titled, ‘With Congressional Blessing, Space Force
Is Closer to Launch’ – “Early last year President Trump riffed on an idea he
called ‘Space Force’ before a crowd of Marines in San Diego. It drew laughs,
but the moment was a breakthrough for a plan that had languished for nearly 20
years.”
She continued: “‘I said maybe
we need a new force, we’ll call it the ‘Space Force,’ Trump said at Marine
Corps Air Station Miramar in March 2018. ‘And I [Trump] was not really serious.
Then I said, ‘What a great idea, maybe we’ll have to do that.’”
The space program currently
of Trump and the US military will ultimately, I’d project, resemble the “Star
Wars” architecture – orbiting battle platforms with on-board nuclear reactors
providing the power for hypervelocity guns, particle beams and laser weapons.
(“Without reactors in orbit,” as former “Star Wars” commander General James
Abrahamson, put it at a Symposium on Space Nuclear Power and Propulsion, there
would need to be “a long, long light [extension] cord that goes down to the
surface of the Earth” to power space weaponry.
Question: Presumably, the Space Force sought by President
Trump is an irrevocable move. Once it is established, it will be a permanent branch of the US armed
services, which will not be disestablished by future presidents?
Karl Grossman: Once established, it could theoretically be
disestablished – but with government, as conservatives like to complain,
correctly, once an office is set up, once a department is created, a vested
interested is established. An entity is formed which seeks to perpetuate
itself. Further, places where components of the Space Force would be based
would lobby to retain them. Moreover, because of the partnership in the US of
the military and powerful aerospace contractors, these corporations with their
huge clout – and government contracts – would also lobby (and utilize campaign
contributions to politicians) to keep a Space Force and its components
permanent.
Question: The whole dynamic of weaponizing outer space by
successive US governments appears to violate the 1967 UN-ratified Outer Space
Treaty. From a legal point of view, is what the Trump administration and
Congress doing – setting up a Space Force – blatantly illegal?
Karl Grossman: What is being done might not now be a violation of the
Outer Space Treaty – but it certainly is a violation of the intent of the Outer
Space Treaty of 1967. As Craig Eisendrath, who had been a US State Department
officer involved in the treaty’s creation, notes in my TV documentary ‘Star
Wars Returns’, after the Soviet Union launched the first space satellite,
Sputnik, in 1957, “we sought to de-weaponize space before it got weaponized…to
keep war out of space.” Adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1966, it entered
into force in 1967. Put together by the US, the then Soviet Union and
Britain, it has been ratified or signed by 123 countries. It provides that
nations “undertake not to place in orbit around the Earth any objects carrying
nuclear weapons or any other kinds of weapons of mass destruction, install such
weapons on celestial bodies, or station such weapons in space in any other
manner.”
As I say, to be expected
with a Space Force would be – as they were planned for Reagan’s “Star Wars” –
the placement of hypervelocity guns, particle beams and laser weapons in space.
Depending on at what they are aimed, these come close – if they are not exactly
– to being “weapons of mass destruction.”
Then there is the
space-based “Rods From God” weapons plan of the US Air Force. As this article is headlined: “These Air Force Rods From God
Could Hit With The Force Of A Nuclear Weapon”.
So, yes, it can be
anticipated that space-based “weapons of mass destruction” would be positioned
in space – in outright violation of the Outer Space Treaty.
Question: American politicians who advocate for making
“space an operational domain” for the US military claim that their nation is
losing ground to advances in this domain allegedly made by Russia and China.
Yet Russia and China have consistently called for the banning of space
weaponization. Are American claims false or are Russia and China secretly
developing space weapons in violation of the Outer Space Treaty?
Karl Grossman: The Trump administration and the US military have been
claiming that a Space Force is necessary because of Russia and China moving
into space militarily but, in fact, Russia and China – as well as Canada – have
been leaders for decades in pushing for an expansion of the Outer Space Treaty.
The treaty bans weapons of mass destruction in space and the Prevention of an
Arms Race in Outer Space (PAROS) treaty, which the three nations above have
sought, would prohibit the placement of any weapons in space.
The US – under both
Republican and Democratic presidential administrations – has opposed the PAROS
treaty and effectively vetoed its enactment at the United Nations.
I’ve been at the UN and
watched as the representative of my country, the United States, has cast this
veto vote. It is an outrage.
Question: What kind of weapons is the US endeavoring to deploy
in space?
Karl Grossman: That has not been specified yet but, as I say, they
would most likely be hypervelocity guns, particle beams and laser weapons – and
“Rods From God.”
Question: Do you think it is technologically feasible to
create and deploy such weapons?
Karl Grossman: Yes, it is technologically feasible, unfortunately.
Question: What do you think are the motives behind the US
plan to weaponize space? To assert its presumption of global power over Russia
and China by way of Washington being able to intimidate these perceived
geopolitical rivals?
Karl Grossman: Yes, exactly. The US, in numerous military documents,
has through the years – and now – spoken of “full spectrum dominance” over the
Earth, seizing the “ultimate high ground” and from space being able to control
the Earth below.
As Trump has declared: “It
is not enough to merely have an American presence in space. We must have
American dominance in space.”
American dominance in space!
One country dominating space!
Question: Presumably, the Pentagon and US
military-industrial complex view the venture into space militarism as a huge
source of financial profits. Is the weaponization of space driven by corporate
profiteering?
Karl Grossman: It is a partnership of the military, aerospace
contractors which are corporate giants – and Trump.
Question: Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly
said that Russia will not be dragged into another arms race with the US as
existed during the Cold War decades. But will Russia and China be forced to
also match US developments in pursuit of space weapons, thereby unleashing a
vicious cycle of arms race?
Karl Grossman: Yes, Russia and China – and other countries – will
respond in kind to the US seeking to achieve “American dominance in space.”
And they don’t want to have
to do this. I vividly recall sitting at a table with Chinese diplomats at the
UN in Geneva a number of years ago – after I keynoted a conference on the
threat of weaponization of space – and the Chinese diplomats speaking about how
they want to feed, educate, house their nation of more than a billion people,
not waste billions in an arms race in space. My presentation earlier was
followed at that conference by the Chinese ambassador to the UN who emphasized
how his nation sought to keep space for peace.
Incidentally, on my way
walking to the UN on that visit, on the street I came upon the US ambassador to
the UN who had been at my presentation – watching me with daggers in his eyes.
A diplomat, however, he conversed cordially to me on the street and when I
spoke about Russia and China following us in kind, he declared that Russia
“doesn’t have” the money to compete with the US military in space and China was
“30 years behind” in terms of space ability. I told him this was so wrong. I
told him of having visited the Space Museum in Moscow – and seeing a “parallel”
universe to the US documenting Russian space prowess, and said his judgement
regarding China couldn’t be more incorrect.
Russia and China don’t want
to do it, I am convinced, but if the US weaponizes space – they’ll be up there,
too, with space weaponry. And the heavens will be turned into a war zone. And
if war breaks out, with nuclear-powered battle platforms up there and exchanges
between battle platforms, debris, much of it radioactive, will be raining down,
vast swathes on Earth will be devastated, huge numbers of people would die –
the overall outcome would be apocalyptic.
We must keep space for peace
– as the Outer Space Treaty has sought to do, and prevent this looming arms
race in space.
Question: Do you see the latest, more earnest phase of US
space
weaponization as part of a
wider context of Washington undoing arms
controls treaties, such as
the ABM and INF treaties?
Karl Grossman: Yes, the breaking of one treaty after another by the
GW Bush and Trump administrations goes along with Trump’s scheme of having
American “dominance” of space.
Question: Is the US attempt to weaponize space a grave
concern for global peace?
Karl Grossman: Yes, it is of grave concern. The turning of the
heavens into an arena of conflict will have a gigantic impact on the vision of
global peace.
Bringing the scourge of war
from Earth up to the heavens will be a huge historical calamity.
Question: How might this US flouting of international law
regarding the Outer Space Treaty be halted? The American public seem to be
indifferent or unaware of
the dangers?
Karl Grossman: At the UN and before other international
organizations, there must be strong – very strong – opposition to the US scheme
to turn space into a war zone. Moreover, there needs to be strong – very strong
– action at the grassroots. The international group in the lead challenging
this US space military madness is the Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear
Power in Space. I urge people to connect with this group. The address of its
website is here. And folks should become active in it.
As to indifference and lack
of awareness, it’s not just the American public but most US public officials.
For example, the US House of Representatives a few days ago passed a military
policy bill – providing for $738 billion in military spending and approving the
Trump scheme for a Space Force.
The vote for what is titled
the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for 2020 was 377 to 48. Some 189
Republicans and 188 Democrats voted for it. Six Republican House members voted
against the bill along with 41 Democrats and one independent.
The large Democratic “yes” vote
came as a result of a trade-off – for 12 weeks of paid parental leave for
civilian federal employees. A New York Times’ article said Jared Kushner,
Trump’s son-in-law and advisor, was pivotal. “It was Mr Kushner who helped
broker a deal to create the Space Force, a chief priority of the president’s,
in exchange for the paid parental leave, a measure championed by his wife,
Ivanka Trump, also a senior advisor to the president,” said The Times.
This was a pivotal vote, as
the US Senate will now consider the measure and pass it considering the
Trump-controlled majority in the Senate, and Trump will sign it.
A trade-off of giving the OK
for a US Space Force in return for paid parental leave for government employees
– something common throughout the world. What a trade-off!
Moreover, if one asks
Americans about the PAROS treaty and the push by Russia and China and our
neighbor Canada for its expanding the Outer Space Treaty and banning of all
weapons in space, if one in 10,000 American citizens are aware of this, that
would surprise me. The ratio would be better among US public officials but
still most would not be aware. Hence the baloney that the US must arm the
heavens because of Russia and China is being believed.
Thus the US is pushing the
world headlong toward unparalleled disaster.
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