- It was issued quietly: 5 p.m. on the Friday before the
long Columbus Day weekend, a release seemingly designed to get little notice.
But what it involved deserves major attention: a new U.S. National Space
Policy that could set the stage for the heavens being turned into a battleground.
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- For decades, the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 has shaped
how nations approach space. Developed by the United States, United Kingdom
and Soviet Unionand now ratified essentially by all the world's countriesthe
landmark agreement sets space aside for peaceful purposes.
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- But the United States became uncomfortable with the treaty
in the 1980s during President Ronald Reagan's "Star Wars" program.
That discomfort was marked in the 1990s by U.S. opposition to efforts (still
ongoing) led by Canadaand including Russia and Chinato ban all
weapons in space; the treaty only bans weapons of mass destruction.
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- There were bellicose declarations in the 1990s, too,
from the U.S. Space Command speaking of "dominating the space dimension
of military operations to protest U.S. interests and investment."
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- Moreover, as George W. Bush took office, a commission
chaired by his defense secretary-to-be, Donald Rumsfeld, spoke of how "in
the coming period the U.S. will conduct operations to, from, in, and through
space to support its national interests."
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- Then the Bush administration began revising the U.S.
National Space Policy as issued by President Bill Clinton. A front-page,
lead article in "The New York Times" last year reported that
the U.S. Air Force was "seeking President Bush's approval of a national-security
directive that could move the United States closer to fielding offensive
and defense space weapons." It told of how one "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."
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- The new policy does not explicitly declare the United
States will now move ahead with such space weapons but it opens the
door.
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- "Freedom of action in space is as important to the
United States as air power and sea power," it asserts in its introduction.
Under "National Security Space Guidelines," it says, "United
States national security is critically dependent upon space capabilities,
and this dependence will grow." So the United States will "develop
and deploy space capabilities that sustain U.S. advantage."
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- Also, the 10-page policy says the United States "will
oppose the development of new legal regimes or other restrictions that
seek to prohibit or limit U.S. access to or use of space."
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- Further, the policy authorizes the use of nuclear power
overhead to "enhance space exploration or operational capabilities.The
use of space nuclear power systems shall be consistent with U.S. national
and homeland security, and foreign policy interests."
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- Bruce Gagnon, coordinator of the Global Network Against
Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space, speaks of the document's "very
provocative language.This is the kind of talk that will create a new arms
race in space, clearly just what the military-industrial complex wants."
And, he says, "Bush's new space policy enshrines the rejection of
an international treaty to ban weapons in space."
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- The vision of the Outer Space Treatyto set aside
space as a global commons and to prevent the armed conflict that has marked
human history on Earth from extending into the heavenswould be altered
by the new U.S. policy.
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- The United States sees its potential military supremacy
in space and seeks to take advantage of this. But that's similar to
the U.S. attitude in 1945 when we had the atomic bomb and no one else did.
It will not take long if space is opened up to war for other nations, notably
Russia and China, to meet the United States in kind. We still have an opportunity
now to adhere to and strengthen the Outer Space Treaty and, with verification,
continue to keep space for peaceful purposes.
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- Or, we can turn the heavens into a war zone and a place
for nuclear activity. We are at a crossroads. The policy must not be slipped
through quietly. The people of the United States must have a voice and
there should be wide public discussion on this fateful decision.
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- Karl Grossman, journalism professor at the State University
of New York/College at Old Westbury, wrote and narrated the award-winning
TV documentary: "Weapons in Space: The Nuclearization and Weaponization
of the Heavens" (www.envirovideo.com) -
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