'Black World' Space Shuttle: Air Force Raises the Stakes for a New Arms Race
Print This
By Tom Burghardt
Antifascist Calling
Thursday, May 13, 2010
It's not as if things aren't bad enough right here on planet earth.
What
with multiple wars and occupations, an accelerating economic meltdown,
corporate malfeasance and environmental catastrophes such as the
petroleum-fueled apocalypse in the Gulf of Mexico, I'd say we have a
full plate already.
Now the Defense Department wants to up the
stakes with new, destabilizing weapons systems that will transform low-
and high-earth orbit into another "battlespace," pouring billions into
programs to achieve what Air Force Space Command (AFSPC) has long dreamed of: "space dominance."
Indeed,
Pentagon space warriors fully intend to field a robust anti-satellite
(ASAT) capability that can disable, damage or destroy the satellites of
other nations, all for "defensive" purposes, mind you.
Back in 2005, The New York Times
reported that General Lance W. Lord, then commander of AFSPC, told an
Air Force conference that "space superiority is not our birthright, but
it is our destiny. ... Space superiority is our day-to-day mission.
Space supremacy is our vision for the future."
Five years on,
that "mission" is still a top priority for the Obama administration.
While some might call it "net-centric warfare" on steroids, I'd choose
another word: madness.
Air Force X-37B
On
April 22, the U.S. Air Force (USAF) successfully launched its robot
space shuttle, the X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle (OTV), from Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.
Sitting atop a Lockheed
Martin Atlas V rocket, the unmanned, reusable space plane roared into
orbit after more than ten years of development by Boeing Corporation's
"Phantom Works" black projects shop.
The successful orbital
insertion of the X-37B was the culmination of a decades' long dream by
the Department of Defense: to field a reusable spacecraft that combines
an airplane's agility with the means to travel at 5 miles per second in
orbit.
From the Pentagon's point of view, a craft such as the
X-37B may be the harbinger of things to come: a johnny-on-the-spot
weapons platform to take out the satellite assets of an enemy de jour,
or as a launch vehicle that can deliver bombs, missiles or kinetic
weapons anywhere on earth in less than two hours; what Air Force wags
refer to as "operationally responsive space."
Prior to launch,
Air Force Deputy Undersecretary of Space Programs, Gary Payton,
ridiculed speculation that the X-37B is the prototype for a new
space-based weapons system. Payton told reporters, "I don't know how
this could be called a weaponization of space. Fundamentally, it's just
an updated version of the space shuttle kinds of activities in space."
Needless to say, such denials should be taken with the proverbial grain of salt.
The highly-classified program has a checkered history. According to GlobalSecurity.org,
the project is envisaged as a "reusable space architecture" that would
provide "aircraft-like operability, flexibility, and responsiveness,
supporting AF Space Command mission areas."
While early examples
such as the Dyna-Soar/X-20 program of the 1950s-1960s never panned out
due to technological constraints, the Air Force never stopped trying.
Programs such as the X-40 Space Maneuver Vehicle (SMV) and the X-41
Common Air Vehicle (CAV), a hypersonic craft intended to serve as a key
component in developing the off-again, on-again "Prompt Global Strike"
project, demonstrate continuing Air Force interest in "high frontier"
weapons programs.
The X-40 project eventually merged with the
Air Force's X-37B program and the X-41 CAV program has been absorbed by
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's (DARPA) Falcon Hypersonic Technology Vehicle (HTV-2).
Last
month, the first test of the Falcon (apparently) ended in failure when
DARPA researchers claimed they had lost contact with the craft moments
after take-off from Vandenberg Air Force Base. The Falcon was supposed
to demonstrate the feasibility of launching a vehicle to the edge of
space and then have it come "screaming back into the atmosphere,
maneuvering at twenty times the speed of sound before landing north of
the Kwajalein Atoll, 30 minutes later and 4100 nautical miles away,"
according to Wired.
Did
the HTV-2 mission fail? Since misdirection and disinformation have long
been staples of Pentagon black world projects, most likely we'll never
know one way or the other.
Inevitably, even if these projects
amount to no more than monumental failures, their intended target
audience, China, Russia or any other nation viewed as a "rogue state"
by the imperialist hyperpower, in all likelihood would be drawn in to
an expensive, and deadly, contest to devise countermeasures.
In this light, Space.com
reporter Jeremy Hsu wrote May 5, that ambiguities in devising
militarized space technology "can make it tricky for nations to gauge
the purpose or intentions behind new prototypes." And such
uncertainties are precisely the fodder that fuel an arms race.
According
to GlobalSecurity.org's John Pike, the U.S. military "could even be
using the cloak of mystery to deliberately bamboozle and confuse rival
militaries." Pike told Space.com that "the X-37B and HTV-2 projects
could represent the tip of a space weapons program hidden within the
Pentagon's secret 'black budget,' or they might be nothing more than
smoke and mirrors."
Pike said that current work "leaves plenty
of room for misinterpretation or even outright deception, which could
be a ploy to distract other nations with military space projects."
"'One
of them could be a deception program and the other could be the
spitting image of the real thing,' Pike noted. He said that such
misdirection could force other nations' militaries to waste money
chasing down dead ends."
While Pike's assertions sound
plausible, given the Pentagon's track record and an annual $50 billion
black budget directed towards research on new weapons and surveillance
systems, the X-37B, the Falcon HTV-2 or other systems on the drawing
board would certainly be useful assets if the military chose to deploy
them as offensive weapons.
A Space Bomber?
Less ambitious perhaps, but potentially more
destabilizing than unproven hypersonic technology, the X-37B was
originally designed by Boeing for NASA in 1999 as an emergency escape
vehicle for the International Space Station.
The civilian agency
once viewed the craft as a potential lifeboat that could rescue
stranded astronauts from the ISS. However, with Russia's Soyuz space
capsule doing yeoman's work for just such a contingency, NASA no longer
saw the need for an expensive winged re-entry vehicle and dropped the
program.
But, as with all things having to do with the
Military-Industrial Complex's insatiable appetite for new weapons,
DARPA, the Pentagon's "blue sky" geek shop, picked up the slack in 2004
when NASA headed towards the exit.
After further testing and
design enhancements by DARPA, the project was handed off to the Air
Force in 2006. The program is now run by the USAF's secretive Rapid
Capabilities Office (RCO)
and spokespeople there have been tight lipped, refusing to say how much
the vehicle costs; a sure sign that funds for the robot shuttle come
from the black side of the budget where new weapons systems spawn and
metastasize.
A tip-off to the covert nature--and militaristic
intentions--of the program, comes from the office running the show.
According to an Air Force Fact Sheet,
the RCO "responds to Combat Air Force and combatant command
requirements" and "expedites development and fielding of select
Department of Defense combat support and weapon systems by leveraging
defense-wide technology development efforts and existing operational
capabilities."
According to investigative journalist Sharon Weinberger, the author of Imaginary Weapons and A Nuclear Family Vacation, her recent piece in Popular Mechanics,
revealed that prior to the Pentagon assuming ownership of the X-37
project, "the spacecraft was regarded as just another experimental
prototype." Today however, Weinberger wrote, "Air Force officials are
skittish to mention even the smallest details."
When Air Force
chief scientist Werner J.A. Dahm was asked by Weinberger "what he could
say about the X-37B," he replied, "'Nothing very useful,' before
quickly changing the subject."
In a 2006 piece in Air Force Print News (AFPN)
however, we were informed that the X-37B will "will serve as a test
platform for satellites and other space technologies. The vehicle
allows satellite sensors, subsystems, components and associated
technology to be transported into the environment where they will be
used--space."
With information scarce on what the OTV's current
mission is, the Air Force has said that after the first few flights (a
second test in slated for 2011), "you get into the realm of using it as
a reusable space test platform--putting space components into its
experimental bay and taking them to space for testing," RCO's X-37B
program manager Lt. Col. Kevin Walker told AFPN.
While the Air
Force has denied that the X-37B is the vanguard for a space-based
system to be deployed for spying or as an orbital weapons' delivery
platform, and while this may be technically accurate in so far as the mini-shuttle is a prototype, the vagaries of the project raise intriguing questions.
This is borne out by an April 22 announcement
by the 45th Space Wing Public Affairs office at Patrick Air Force base.
Deputy Undersecretary Payton said "if these technologies on the vehicle
prove to be as good as we estimate, it will make our access to space
more responsive, perhaps cheaper, and push us in the vector toward
being able to react to warfighter needs more quickly."
This was
seconded by Col. André Lovett, 45th Space Wing vice commander: "This
launch helps ensure that our warfighters will be provided the
capabilities they need in the future."
Nothing ambiguous in
these statements as to how the USAF views the future role for the
system, nor do they bear a relationship to Payton's earlier claim to
reporters that the X-37B is "just an updated version of the space
shuttle kinds of activities in space."
Weinberger notes that
"the most daring job of a space plane, and the one least discussed, is
the role of a bomber." According to Weinberger, the X-37B "could fly
over targets within an hour of launch to release cone-shaped re-entry
vehicles that would both protect and guide weapons through the
atmosphere." Equally destabilizing, a craft such as the X-37B "could
carry 1000- or 2000-pound re-entry vehicles armed with precision
munitions like bunker-busting penetrators or small-diameter bombs, or
simply use the explosive impact of kinetic rods cratering at hypersonic
speeds to destroy targets."
Joan Johnson-Freese, a Professor of National Security Studies at the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, told Space.com
journalist Leonard David last month that "other countries" will likely
view the X-37B "as another capability intended to assure the United
States will be able to dominate access to and the use of space."
William Scott, coauthor of the militaristic novel Counterspace: The Next Hours of World War III,
told David that a reusable space plane "could deliver small satellites
having specific, limited roles to bridge critical capabilities gaps."
The former bureau chief for Aviation Week & Space Technology
told David that amongst the most vital characteristics for fielding a
weapons' platform such as the X-37B is surprise: "On the first orbit, a
space plane could capture data, before the 'target' knew it was
coming." Since a space plane could be "launched into any orbit, at any
inclination, providing prompt 'eyes-on' of virtually any area of the
world," unlike a satellite with known, predictable trajectories, it
could also be used as a surveillance platform or even as a means to
surreptitiously "kidnap" or disable an adversary's satellite.
Seconding
Weinberger's assessment, Scott told Space.com that "ultimately, weapons
could be delivered from a space plane in low Earth orbit." As noted
above, these could come in the form of "precision" munitions or insane
hypervelocity rod bundles, so called "Rods from God," tungsten
projectiles lobbed from space at 36,000 feet per second that can "hit a
cross-haired target on the ground."
"I did a story about the
rods concept in 1994 or 1995, based on concepts being discussed in the
U.S. Air Force at the time," Scott said. "Fifteen years later, maybe
they're ready for testing."
This view is shared by Everett
Dolman, a professor of Comparative Military Studies at the School of
Advanced Air and Space Studies at the Maxwell-Gunter Air Force Base in
Montgomery, Alabama.
"Regardless of its original intent, Dolman
told Space.com, "the most obvious and formidable is in service as a
space fighter--a remotely piloted craft capable of disabling multiple
satellites in orbit on a single mission and staying on orbit for months
to engage newly orbited platforms." A project such as the X-37B, more
advanced systems still on the drawing-board or in development in any
number of Air Force black sites such as Groom Lake (Area 51) "would be
a tremendous tactical advantage," Dolman said.
Even were the
system not to be transformed into a space bomber, Dolman theorized that
the X-37B could be maneuvered close to an adversary's satellite and
capture details in the form of signals intelligence. "With the
anticipated increase in networked-microsatellites in the next few
years, such a platform might be the best--and only--means of collecting
technical intelligence in space."
While the system may evolve
into a destabilizing new weapon, Dolman said that "all of the
information leaked about the X-37B suggests its primary function will
be as a test platform, but a test platform for what?"
Regardless
of how the X-37B prototype pans out, we can be certain that as the U.S.
imperialist empire continues its long trek on the road towards failed
statehood, the Pentagon, always eager to expend the blood and treasure
of the American people on endless wars of conquest, will continue to
build new and ever-more destabilizing weapons.
Antifascist Calling
Print This
|