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Star Wars VII - The US empire strikes first fact sheet

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Everything You Wanted to Know About Weapons in Space,
But Were Afraid to Ask.

What they want:
The U.S. Air Force has filed a futuristic flight plan, one that spells out need for an armada of space weaponry and technology for the near-term and in years to come.  Called the Transformation Flight Plan, the 176-page document offers a sweeping look at how best to expand America's military space tool kit.  Among a roster of projected Air Force space projects:
  • Air-Launched Anti-Satellite Missile: Small air-launched missile capable of intercepting satellites in low Earth orbit and seen as a past 2015 development.
  • Counter Satellite Communications System: Provides the capability by 2010 to deny and disrupt an adversary's space-based communications and early warning.
  • Counter Surveillance and Reconnaissance System: A near-term program to deny, disrupt and degrade adversary space-based surveillance and reconnaissance systems.
  • Evolutionary Air and Space Global Laser Engagement (EAGLE) Airship Relay Mirrors: Significantly extends the range of both the Airborne Laser and Ground-Based Laser by using airborne, terrestrial or space-based lasers in conjunction with space-based relay mirrors to project different laser powers and frequencies to achieve a broad range of effects from illumination to destruction.
  • Ground-Based Laser: Propagates laser beams through the atmosphere to Low-Earth Orbit satellites to provide robust, post-2015 defensive and offensive space control capability.
  • Hypervelocity Rod Bundles: Provides the capability to strike ground targets anywhere in the world from space.
  • Orbital Deep Space Imager: A mid-term predictive, near-real time common operating picture of space to enable space control operations.
  • Orbital Transfer Vehicle: Significantly adds flexibility and protection of U.S. space hardware in post-2015 while enabling on-orbit servicing of those assets.
  • Rapid Attack Identification Detection and Reporting System: A family of systems that will provide near-term capability to automatically identify when a space system is under attack.
  • Space-Based Radio Frequency Energy Weapon: A far-term constellation of satellites containing high-power radio-frequency transmitters that possess the capability to disrupt/destroy/disable a wide variety of electronics and national-level command and control systems. It would typically be used as a non-kinetic anti-satellite weapon.
  • Space-Based Space Surveillance System: A near-term constellation of optical sensing satellites to track and identify space forces in deep space to enable offensive and defensive counterspace operations.

This is not a picture from your kid's sci-fi comic. It's an illustration from a report by
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's Space Commission.


 The report advocates circumventing the intent of international laws (notably, the Outer Space Treaty of 1967) that seek to keep space free from war and urges that the President "have the option to deploy weapons in space." National Missile Defense, begun as Star Wars under Reagan, is just one layer of this much larger scheme to "control" space and "dominate" the earth, in the words of the report. "The United States is seeking to turn space into a war zone," maintains the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space.
(source: http://www.envirovideo.com/starwars.html)


Air Force plans for future war in space - Leonard David, Feb. 23, 2004

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4353309/

A few of the most frightening programs have been listed below:

An Air Force space program, nicknamed Rods From God, aims to hurl cylinders of tungsten, titanium or uranium from the edge of space to destroy targets on the ground, striking at speeds of about 7,200 miles an hour with the force of a small nuclear weapon.

A new Air Force strategy, Global Strike, calls for a military space plane carrying precision-guided weapons armed with a half-ton of munitions. General Lord told Congress last month that Global Strike would be "an incredible capability" to destroy command centers or missile bases "anywhere in the world."

Pentagon documents say the weapon, called the common aero vehicle, could strike from halfway around the world in 45 minutes. "This is the type of prompt Global Strike I have identified as a top priority for our space and missile force," General Lord said.

A third program would bounce laser beams off mirrors hung from space satellites or huge high-altitude blimps, redirecting the lethal rays down to targets around the world. A fourth seeks to turn radio waves into weapons whose powers could range "from tap on the shoulder to toast," in the words of an Air Force plan.

Air Force Seeks Bush's Approval for Space Weapons Programs, NY Times 5-18-05

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051805C.shtml

And he (Bush) is funding the resurrection of laser battle stations in space, weapons which pass over every city on earth and can incinerate them much more easily than they can destroy even a few boosters.  Robert M. Bowman, Lt. Col., USAF, ret. http://www.rmbowman.com/ssn/SW2.htm

EnviroVideo Documentary:  Star Wars Returns!
This powerful documentary reveals how the United States is moving to make space a new arena of war. It presents military documents declaring the U.S. intention to "control space" and from space "dominate" the world below.
http://www.envirovideo.com/starwars.html
Listen to the film's producer, Karl Grossman on COUNTERSPIN!
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2521

Listen to Dr. Helen Caldicott on Pacifica's FLASHPOINTS!
http://flashpoints.net/#2005-05-19

Read info about the
documentary "ARSENAL OF HYPOCRISY"
which deals with the space
program and the military industrial complex:
http://www.arsenalofhypocrisy.com/


Why they say they want it:
The Air Force believes "we must establish and maintain space superiority," Gen. Lance Lord, who leads the Air Force Space Command, told Congress recently. "Simply put, it's the American way of fighting." Air Force doctrine defines space superiority as "freedom to attack as well as freedom from attack" in space. 
Air Force Seeks Bush's Approval for Space Weapons Programs, NY Times 5-18-05
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051805C.shtml

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has long advocated sending arms into orbit. Just before taking office in 2001, he chaired a commission on space and national security that warned that the country could face a "space Pearl Harbor" in the years to come. This calamity must be avoided, the commission declared, asserting that the best way to do that is to "vigorously pursue the capabilities ... to ensure that the President will have the option to deploy weapons in space." 
Pentagon Preps for War in Space Noah Shachtman, Wired News 02/23/2004
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,62358,00.html

"We haven't reached the point of strafing and bombing from space," Pete Teets, who stepped down last month as the acting secretary of the Air Force, told a space warfare symposium last year. "Nonetheless, we are thinking about those possibilities." 
Air Force Seeks Bush's Approval for Space Weapons Programs, NY Times 5-18-05
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051805C.shtml

“We are not prepared to negotiate on the so-called arms race in outer space. We just don't see that as a worthwhile enterprise.”
John R. Bolton, Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security
G8 Senior Group Meeting Geneva, Switzerland, September 10, 2004
http://www.us-mission.ch/press2004/0910BoltonTrans.htm


How much of your money will be spent on it:
The Air Force does not put a price tag on space superiority. Published studies by leading weapons scientists, physicists and engineers say the cost of a space-based system that could defend the nation against an attack by a handful of missiles could be anywhere from $220 billion to $1 trillion. 
Air Force Seeks Bush's Approval for Space Weapons Programs, NY Times 5-18-05
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051805C.shtml

Bush's total concept is still being developed, but it will not cost the $60 billion to $200 billion the Clinton system would have cost. If ever built, it will cost more like a trillion dollars, maybe much more. 
http://www.rmbowman.com/ssn/SW2.htm

With little public debate, the Pentagon has already spent billions of dollars developing space weapons and preparing plans to deploy them.  The Air Force's drive into space has been accelerated by the Pentagon's failure to build a missile defense on earth. After spending 22 years and nearly $100 billion, Pentagon officials say they cannot reliably detect and destroy a threat today. 
Richard Garwin, widely regarded as a dean of American weapons science, and three colleagues wrote in the March issue of IEEE Spectrum, the professional journal of electric engineering, that "a space-based laser would cost $100 million per target, compared with $600,000 for a Tomahawk missile."
Air Force Seeks Bush's Approval for Space Weapons Programs, NY Times 5-18-05
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051805C.shtml


What the consequences are of war in space:
Violation of International Treaties - The Outer Space Treaty at a Glance:

The 1967 Outer Space Treaty bans the stationing of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in outer space, prohibits military activities on celestial bodies, and details legally binding rules governing the peaceful exploration and use of space. Ninety-seven countries are states-parties to the treaty, while another 27 have signed it but have not yet completed ratification. North Korea is the only state with potential space-launch capabilities that has not signed the treaty.

Fueled by concerns about U.S. missile defense plans and space policy, many countries support negotiation of additional outer space agreements. China is pressing the 66-member UN Conference on Disarmament in Geneva to negotiate a treaty on the prevention of an arms race in outer space. The United States, however, claims no additional outer space treaties are needed because there is currently no arms race in outer space.

The treaty's key arms control provisions are in Article IV. States-parties commit not to:
  • Place in orbit around the Earth or other celestial bodies any nuclear weapons or objects carrying WMD.
  • Install WMD on celestial bodies or station WMD in outer space in any other manner.
  • Establish military bases or installations, test "any type of weapons," or conduct military exercises on the moon and other celestial bodies.
Other treaty provisions underscore that space is no single country's domain and that all countries have a right to explore it. These provisions state that:
  • Space should be accessible to all countries and can be freely and scientifically investigated.
  • Space and celestial bodies are exempt from national claims of ownership.
  • Countries are to avoid contaminating and harming space or celestial bodies.
  • Countries exploring space are responsible and liable for any damage their activities may cause.
  • Space exploration is to be guided by "principles of cooperation and mutual assistance," such as obliging astronauts to provide aid to one another if needed.
—Researched by Ben Rusek, September 2003
http://www.armscontrol.org/factsheets/outerspace.asp

Despite such… hurdles, space-based arms are legal. The Outer Space Treaty of 1967 only bans nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction from orbit.
Pentagon Preps for War in Space, Noah Shachtman, Wired News 02/23/2004
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,62358,00.html

The Threat of Space Debris:
What effects could introducing weapons into space have on the largely benign uses of space?

Debris is paramount—because of the high speeds in orbit, a collision with even a tiny particle can devastate a satellite.   Both destruction's of satellites and missiles in space can create lots of little particles that would have a negative impact on other users.  Especially for space-based ballistic missile defense cluttering up space at valuable altitudes are problems. I remind you that space-based BMD would require deployment hundreds or thousands of satellites in orbits near earth.  Such clutter would have an impact on other users, but requiring a more complicated space traffic system to make sure satellites did not collide during launches and while orbiting.  Drastically increasing the number of satellites in low-earth orbit would increase interference on communications systems.  We want to be very sure that we want to go down this road.  There is a lot to lose.
Dr. Laura Grego, Union of Concerned Scientists October 21 , 2004
http://www.ucsusa.org/global_security/space_weapons/page.cfm?pageID=1716

An issue that affects both the military and the civilian sectors is space debris, which results from all space activities. A failure to mitigate the accumulation of debris will have devastating effects on both communities. With more than 9,000 objects over 10 centimeters in size already being tracked in various orbits by U.S. Space Command, the debris problem is an increasing concern. The expected overall growth in space activity, and possible U.S. and foreign ASAT tests, will further heighten the danger of collisions that could be fatal to satellites or spacecraft. Even the United States lacks the capability to track "micro-debris"--particles that can do considerable damage but are less than 10 centimeters in length (and which may now number more than 100,000).
Arguably, the lack of enforceable international debris mitigation rules represents the most serious long-term threat in space. There are emerging domestic and international efforts to address this problem, which--in contrast to almost all other areas of proposed space regulation--are supported by the Bush administration and the Pentagon.

A domestic effort to create new rules governing license holders for commercial satellites would require them to de-orbit old satellites (or boost them into parking orbits) once their service lives have been completed, as well as practice other debris mitigation techniques as a condition of gaining a license to launch a commercial satellite. Given U.S. dominance in the satellite market, these rules would contribute significantly to minimizing debris from commercial satellites. A second effort is taking place in the U.N. Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS). A draft convention is being crafted that may be available for approval within the next two years. This agreement would help to create international rules for debris mitigation, but would apply to peaceful activities only, leaving a potentially dangerous loophole for military programs.
Reining in the space cowboys - James Clay Moltz January/February 2003  pp. 61-66 (vol. 59, no. 01) © 2003 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
http://www.thebulletin.org/article.php?art_ofn=jf03moltz

The Beginning of an Arms Race in Space:

"I don't think other countries will be taking this lying down," said Theresa Hitchens, the vice president of the Center for Defense Information.  "This will certainly prompt China into actually moving forward" on space weapon plans of its own, she added. "The Russians are likely to respond with something as well."
http://www.defensetech.org/archives/000783.html

Senior military and space officials of the European Union, Canada, China and Russia have objected publicly to the notion of American space superiority.

They think that "the United States doesn't own space - nobody owns space," said Teresa Hitchens, vice president of the Center for Defense Information, a policy analysis group in Washington that tends to be critical of the Pentagon. "Space is a global commons under international treaty and international law."

No nation will "accept the U.S. developing something they see as the death star," Ms. Hitchens told a Council on Foreign Relations meeting last month. "I don't think the United States would find it very comforting if China were to develop a death star, a 24/7 on-orbit weapon that could strike at targets on the ground anywhere in 90 minutes."
Air Force Seeks Bush's Approval for Space Weapons Programs, NY Times 5-18-05
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051805C.shtml

"…(P)ursuing such a strategy may actually put the United States in greater jeopardy, argues David Wright, with the Union of Concerned Scientists.  "You're opening a door you might rather not have opened," he said.
"America is the country with the most satellites, he explained. By developing anti-satellite weapons, "it legitimizes systems that the U.S. has the most to lose from." Other countries could start pursuing long-taboo space weapons efforts. And while countries like China don't have the technical sophistication of the United States, they already have the capabilities to hurt us in space -- medium range missiles, and nuclear warheads.  Wright added, "This could trigger a backlash that actually leaves the U.S. worse off."  Pentagon Preps for War in Space, Noah Shachtman, Wired News 02/23/2004
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,62358,00.html

But General Lord said such problems should not stand in the way of the Air Force's plans to move into space.  "Space superiority is not our birthright, but it is our destiny," he told an Air Force conference in September. "Space superiority is our day-to-day mission. Space supremacy is our vision for the future."
Air Force Seeks Bush's Approval for Space Weapons Programs, NY Times 5-18-05
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051805C.shtml

The great irony is that, while "Star Wars" weapons are useless against terrorists (in fact useless as a defense of any kind), by increasing apparent U.S. military superiority and invulnerability, these weapons actually increase the fear and hatred of people in the developing nations toward our government and therefore increase the terrorist threat.
Robert M. Bowman, Lt. Col., USAF, ret. Star Wars Weapons Jeopardize the War on Terrorism 
http://www.rmbowman.com/ssn/SW-Terror.htm


This does not mean that Star Wars II won’t do anything. It will. It will ensure the Pentagon the mastery of space it desires. It will line the pockets of the weapons manufacturers for decades to come (at the expense of "optional" domestic programs like education, health care, social security, the environment, and the rebuilding of our crumbling infrastructure). It will guarantee the multinational corporations and banks the protection of an unconstrained gunboat foreign policy, backed up by absolute military superiority. It will reverse decades of progress in arms control with the Russians. It will cause the Chinese to greatly increase their nuclear capability. It will drive a wedge between the United States and our allies. It will enormously increase the terrorist nuclear threat to the people of this country. And it will practically guarantee eventual nuclear disaster.
STAR WARS II:  GEORGE II REINVENTS NATIONAL MISSILE DEFENSE by Dr. Robert M. Bowman, Lt. Col., USAF (ret)
http://www.rmbowman.com/ssn/SW2.htm


The inescapable conclusion:

Space weapons are expensive, unproven and could lead to a new pursuit by nations across the globe to develop their own space weaponry.  In the end, weapons in space will not make us safe.  Only dialogue, diplomacy and the outlaw of all WMD worldwide will let all human beings live in peace.

To demand NO WEAPONS IN SPACE and to keep all uses of outer space peaceful, please contact these organizations:



St Pete for Peace
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