SPACE WARRIORS
CALL AGAIN FOR DOMINATION
From: Bill Sulzman,
January 22, 2003
Dear
Folks, A retired Air Force Officer is passing on to me copies of his
Defense Weekly and his monthly Air Force Magazine. It is a chore to
plow through the bellicose rhetoric week after week, but just in case
you might have thought they'd lighten up on world and space domination
themes take a look at Peter Teets remarks at the November conference
of the Air Force Association in Los Angeles as reported in the January
2003 edition of Air Force Magazine.
Here is the report on the speech of Peter Teets past president of
Lockheed Martin and current head of NRO :
The nation must prepare now for inevitable conflict in space, according
to Peter B. Teets undersecretary of the Air Force and director of the
National Reconnaissance Office.
To do that, the Air Force must begin developing space control capabilities,
said Teets, who is also the first undersecretary of the Air Force to
serve as the acquisition authority for all military space programs.
"I believe we not only need to think about the mission and the
implications of space control, but it is fundamentally irresponsible
for us not to do so," he asserted.
If the US fails to take action to secure the high ground of space, a
competitor surely will, Teets emphasized.
"What will we do five years from now when American lives are put
at risk because an adversary uses spaceborne imagery collectors--commercial
or homegrown--to identify and target American forces?" Teets asked.
"What will we do 10 years from now, when American lives are put
at risk because an adversary chooses to leverage the Global Positioning
System or perhaps the Galileo constellation to attack American forces
with precision?"
Although there has not yet been a concerted effort to impair US forces'
ability to use space assets to prosecute warfare, "that will change,"
Teets said flatly.
Her added that the American capability in space "must remain ahead
of our adversaries' capabilities, and our own doctrine and capabilities
must keep pace to meet that challenge."
Teets also suggested that, just as airpower progressed from being a
supporting military capability to one which is now "arguably the
decisive form of combat," so too will space power evolve to the
point where it, too, may someday produce victory singlehandedly.
"This, then, is the principle of applying the capabilities of a
new medium--not only integration into other, existing forms of warfare
but developing of entirely new ones, ones even conceivably capable of
winning wars on its own," Teets said.
"We can no more perceive what such a victory would look like than
the military leaders at the dawn of the first World War could envision
the Kosovo conflict of 1999," he continued. "Everything we've
learned about capabilities in a new medium, especially our own experiences
with airpower, tell us that day is coming."
Teets cautioned that if space is perpetually viewed as an enabler of
other kinds of combat, the US will be outmatched in the next major development
in warfare.
"If we limit our efforts only to application of space technologies
to existing modes of warfighting, we have undershot," he asserted.
Teets said that supplying targeting, navigation, intelligence, surveillance,
reconnaissance and weather data to surface forces will remain a critical
function. However, he added, "if that is all we envision that space
can do over the next few decades, than we've missed the boat."
Teets noted that the nation must "find ways to get a vehicle rapidly
off the pad to any orbit on short notice."
He said, "It is easy to see how such a responsive capability could
be useful for rapid constellation replenishment and sustainment, but
I leave it to your imagination ... to find other ways to employ such
a capability to achieve desired warfighting effects."
In addition, he said, the US must, over the next few years, develop
a new cadre of experienced, intensely knowledgeable people skilled in
applying space to combat.
"We are not talking about the creation of a mere career field or
sculpting a field of expertise," said Teets. "We are talking
about an entirely new breed of warfighters, ones who ultimately transform
the power and scope of warfighting in the same way airpower professionals
have done in the past century."
The United States has a "proud history of successfully wielding
land, sea, and airpower in the protection of our nation and its freedoms,"
he said. "It must be our goal that the United States carry this
legacy of success into the medium of space."
Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 90083
Gainesville, FL 32607
(352) 337-9274
http://www.space4peace.org
globalnet@mindspring.com