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Bushs nominee to head Joint Chiefs promotes militarization
of space
By Joseph Kay
30 August 2001
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President George W. Bush announced August 24 that he was nominating
Air Force General Richard B. Myers to be the next chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the top military position in the United
States. The administrations selection of the former head
of the US Space Command underscored its determination to build
a national missile defense system and extend American military
capabilities into space.
The Joint Chiefs coordinates the activities of the Army, Navy,
Air Force and Marine Corps, and works closely with the Defense
Department in formulating military strategy. Myers will be the
first chairman to have headed the Space Command, and the first
in more than a decade not drawn from the Army. He will replace
Army General Henry H. Shelton, who is scheduled to retire on September
30 of this year.
Myers long history in the Air Force makes him an ideal
candidate for pushing through the administrations plans
to increase American military might, particularly in the realm
of space. He was a fighter pilot in Vietnam, after which he climbed
the ranks of the military bureaucracy, leading US air forces in
Japan from 1993 to 1996 and heading forces in the entire Pacific
region from 1997 to 1998. He served as the head of the Space Commandwhich
coordinates military activity in spacefrom 1998 to February
of 2000, and then took over as vice-chairman of the Joint Chiefs,
the position that he currently holds.
His experience as chief of the Space Command is of particular
significance, because it fits in with the Bush administrations
plans to refocus military strategy toward a greater emphasis on
high-technology weapons and space dominance. This strategy includes
national missile defense (NMD), but proposals are also being advanced
for everything from anti-satellite weapons, to missiles in space,
to space-based lasers.
Of prime importance for American military strategy, moreover,
are satellite communications systems such as those used extensively
for targeting in the 1999 bombing of Serbia. The US government
sees control of space as an increasingly critical aspect of military
dominance in general, known within military and strategic circles
as total spectrum dominance.
The US Space Command during Myers tenure became the most
consistent advocate of the militarization of space. In a speech
to the United States Space Foundation in April 1999, Myers said,
Space ... is increasingly the center of our national and
economic security.
He further argued that it was necessary to develop both offensive
and defensive space capacities. The US would seek in the coming
period to ensure use of space on our terms, Myers
declared.
More recently, in a speech in February of this year, Myers
asserted that many of those capabilities critical to ensuring
our security in tomorrows environment will come through
our use of space-based capabilities. He continued: Thats
why were working to fully integrate space capabilities into
the weapons systems, processes and doctrine of all the Services.
These conceptions have become an important component of Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfelds plans to reorganize the American
military. In addition to aggressively pursuing NMD, the Pentagon
has revived a whole series of Reagan-era star wars
programs. John Pike, an analyst with Globalsecurity.org, a defense
think tank, noted, Space weapons are the administrations
most identifiable military agenda and they have here [in Myers]
the leading uniformed proponent of it.
Over the past several months Myersand not, notably, Sheltonhas
been closely involved with Rumsfeld and Deputy Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz in formulating the Quadrennial Defense Review,
a periodic reassessment of military strategy. The review, due
out on September 30, will provide more details on Rumsfelds
plans, which have encountered considerable resistance from sections
of the military brass, particularly the Army.
Certain areas of the military face cutbacks if Rumsfelds
transformation is carried out. As White House spokesman Ari Fleischer
pointed out, Myers is one of the key people involved in
the military transformation, and he will be tasked with
overcoming opposition within the military bureaucracy.
In addition to his experience with space-based weapons, Myers
has been involved in the development of high-tech computer attack
systems, which seek to disrupt enemy computer systems without
direct physical destruction. These new technologies have not received
as much attention as space weapons, but are bound to play an increasing
role in military planning as Rumsfeld attempts to increase the
technological sophistication of American militarism.
Another aspect of Myers past experience played a role
in his nominationhis experience as commander of Air Forces
in the Pacific region. The Bush administration has taken a more
confrontational posture towards China and North Korea, and has
tended to emphasize the importance of Asia over Europe with regard
to American military presence.
During his tenure as commander of the Pacific Air Forces, Myers
stressed the importance of maintaining a strong American military
presence in the region, especially given the instability resulting
from the economic crisis that engulfed the region at that time.
The current Asian economic crisis, he noted in 1998,
and the potential unrest merely reinforce the argument that
for peace and prosperity to continue, it is vital that the United
States and the United States Air Force remain engaged in the Asia
Pacific well into the 21st century.
Michael OHanlon, a military affairs expert at the Brookings
Institute in Washington, noted: For an administration thinking
about military uses of space and missile defense on the one hand,
China on the other, and then dealing in the Washington political
and budgetary context, the experience of Myers is optimal.
The selection of Myers is a further indication that Bush is
determined to carry out his military and foreign policy plans
despite widespread oppositionfrom China, Russia and Europe,
as well as from sections of the political establishment within
the United States.
These plans include the abrogation or abandonment of all treaties
that limit the development of American military might. In a speech
in May, Myers stated that the United States must take control
of our path and walk away from the Cold War forever. He
went on: We must get rid of the stove pipes that, while
useful during the Cold War, serve today only to tie our hands
in the new environments we face.
The nomination comes in the wake of comments by Bush that are
the most clear indication yet that the US has decided to withdraw
from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty, in order to begin
the construction of NMD. On August 23 Bush stated that the US
would withdraw from the treaty at a time convenient to America.
Bushs policy is fueling antagonisms among the worlds
major powers. Russia and China see these steps as a direct threat,
but the administrations moves to ensure control of space
are also increasing strains within the NATO alliance. In the May/June
issue of the journal Foreign Affairs, William Wallace,
a professor of international relations and Liberal Democrat Spokesman
on Defense in the British House of Lords, noted: Greater
US emphasis on space and NMD, armored divisions, and large scale
carrier groups [will] widen the transatlantic strategic gap; more
flexible forces with lighter equipment would bring American and
European thinking closer together. The former is seen by
European governments as a move toward even more extreme unilateralism
and military bullying on the part of the United States. With Myers
as head of the Joint Chiefs, these strains are bound to increase.
See Also:
Bush administration renews
US drive to militarize space
[25 July 2001]
Bush pushes rapid development
of US missile defense
[17 July 2001]
US Militarism
& Military
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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