Consider the Air Force's new slogan: "Air Force -- Above All."
Okay,
I admit it's catchy, even cute, if, that is, you can get past the "high
ground" conceit and ignore the Germanic über alles overtones. Its
literal meaning is obvious enough and it does fit with the Air Force's
most basic precept, that mastery of the air means mastery of the
ground. Yet today's Air Force seeks more than that. It wants to extend
its "mastery" to space ("the new high ground") and even to cyberspace.
This is yet another disturbing manifestation of our military's quest
for "full spectrum dominance," achieved at debilitating cost to the
American taxpayer -- and a potentially destabilizing one to the planet.
Striving to be "above all" everywhere is ambitious to the point
of folly. By comparison, the slogans of the Air Force's sister services
seem modest. The poor, embattled Army is simply "Army Strong." The Navy
now promises to "Accelerate Your Life." Yawn. The Marines, always
faithful, refuse to tinker with their slogan, which remains: "The Few.
The Proud. The Marines." Meanwhile, the Air Force soars above such
slavish adherence to tradition -- as well as any reasonable sense of
boundaries or restraint.
The new slogan may also serve as a
reminder to airmen to keep their service branch "above all" in their
hearts and minds -- despite the fact that the Air Force is currently
shedding 40,000 airmen as it tries to pay for a new generation of
high-tech fighter jets. It most certainly is a measure of the service's
determination to deny the use of space to powerful rivals, whether
China, Russia -- or the U.S. Navy.
Perhaps the slogan even
expresses a certain moral superiority -- as in an Air Force pilot's
comment I once overheard that, when aloft, he felt "morally superior"
to the little people scampering around on the ground below him. High
ground, indeed.
Flying and Fighting, Everywhere!
So much for slogans. The Air Force's new mission statement begins -- and do bear with me for a moment --
The
Mission of the United States Air Force is to deliver sovereign options
for the defense of the United States of America and its global
interests to fly and fight in air, space and cyberspace.
Flying
and fighting in cyberspace sounds exciting -- think Neo in The Matrix.
And flying and fighting in space -- which might yet come to pass -- is
so Star Wars, especially if the "good" side of the Force is with you,
which it must be if you're defending America.
But wait. The
Air Force mission statement makes an instant, and anything but
defensive u-turn, and promptly lays out a "vision" of "Global
Vigilance, Reach and Power," which, it claims, "orbits around three
core competencies: Developing Airmen, Technology-to-Warfighting and
Integrating Operations." How a vision can orbit three cores I don't
know -- and I once completed the "Space Operations Short Course" at the
U.S. Air Force Academy. Nonetheless, this trinity of core competencies
somehow enables six "capabilities," which are unapologetically
offensive.
The first of the six is "air and space superiority"
with which we "can dominate enemy operations in all dimensions: land,
sea, air and space." Capability #2 turns out to be "global attack,"
enabling us to "attack anywhere, anytime and do so quickly and with
greater precision than ever before." (In Bush-speak, we'll kill them
there, so they don't kill us here.)
And when we attack,
capability #4, "precision engagement," theoretically ensures that we
put bombs on target, as we used to say in simpler times. Today's
"precision" vision is more prolix: "the essence [of precision
engagement] lies in the ability to apply selective force against
specific targets because the nature and variety of future contingencies
demand both precise and reliable use of military power with minimal
risk and collateral damage."
I pity the recruits who have to
recite that mouthful of gobbledygook. As bloodless and evasive as such
prose may be, however, the mission statement doesn't pull punches about
just what "above all" really means. It wields words like "attack,"
"force," "power," and, most revealingly, "dominate." They reflect what
matters most in the new Air Force vision -- and by extension, of
course, that of our country. And if you don't believe me, go to the Air
Force website and click on the icons for "air dominance," "space
dominance," and "cyber dominance."
Death at a Distance
Our
capability to deliver damage and death across the globe -- at virtually
no immediate risk to ourselves -- gives extra meaning to the words
"above all." But with great power comes great responsibility, a tagline
I learned as a teen from Spider-Man comic strips, but which is no less
true for that. The problem is that our "global reach" often exceeds the
grasp of our collective wisdom to employ "global power" responsibly.
Listen
to the Air Force's own pitch for its "global reach" and "global power,"
and you know that today's service is indeed an imperial instrument
focused on "power projection" and "dominance" (with nary a thought of
how others may respond to being dominated). Worse yet, our
"capabilities" have so detached us from delivering death that it's
become remarkably close to a video-game-like exercise.
Twenty-five
years ago, I watched a recruiting film that predicted the coming age of
remote-control warfare. And where would the Air Force find its new
"pilots," the narrator asked rhetorically? The film promptly cut to a
1980s video arcade, where young teens were blasting away with abandon
in games like "Missile Command."
I remember the audience
laughing, and it tickled my funny bone as well, but I'm not so amused
anymore. For what was prophesied a generation ago has come true. Using
unmanned drones, armed with missiles and "piloted" by joystick-wielding
warriors, often thousands of miles away from the targets being
attacked, the Air Force need not risk any aircrew in "battle." Our
military speaks blithely, even with excitement, of "killing 'Bubba'
from the skies"; but, in actuality, what that means is: from air bases
tucked safely far behind the lines, whether in Qatar on the Arabian
peninsula or outside of Las Vegas. (In this case, what happens in Vegas
definitely does not stay in Vegas.)
I'm not suggesting that
our Global Hawk, Predator, and Reaper (What a name!) pilots are
anything less than dedicated to their assigned missions, including
minimizing "collateral damage." Rather, the technology of unmanned
aerial vehicles itself serves to detach them from their targets.
Tracking the enemy, often with infrared sensors that show people as
featureless blobs of heat-light, how can they not become human versions
of the ruthless alien hunter that blasted its way through Arnold
Schwarzenegger's unit in a movie coincidentally named Predator?
As
our weapons technology weakens ground-level empathy and understanding,
it simultaneously emboldens the Air Force to seek (deceptively) "clean"
kills. It's well known, for example, that, in the opening days of the
invasion of Iraq, in March 2003, the Bush administration tried to
"decapitate" Saddam Hussein and his inner circle with precision
weapons. (In fact, only Iraqi civilians were killed in these
coordinated attacks aimed at the Iraqi leadership as the war began.)
Terrorist
networks like Al Qaeda provide even fewer and more elusive "high-value"
targets than do organized governments. Yet, when the U.S. succeeds with
"decapitation" strikes against such networks, new heads often emerge,
hydra-like, especially when "collateral damage" includes dead civilians
-- and live avengers.
Control Fantasies in Space
The
Air Force's vision of total domination used to stop at the
stratosphere. Yet, according to its grandiose website, it now extends
"to the shining stars and beyond." I hesitate to ask what lies beyond.
God? Certainly, there's something unbounded, almost god-like, in the
Air Force's space fantasy.
When it turns to space, the Air
Force readily admits its desire to dominate all potential foes. As
Peter B. Teets, a former Air Force undersecretary and director of the
National Reconnaissance Office, declared back in 2002: "If we do not
exploit space to the fullest advantage across every conceivable mode of
war fighting, then someone else will -- and we allow this at our own
peril."
There's nothing surprising about this "king of the
hill" mentality. A decade ago, as a uniformed officer, I attended a
space conference in Colorado Springs. Major topics of discussion
included space weaponry already on the drawing board and being funded.
Included were space-based directed energy weapons ("ten to twenty years
away" was the prediction back then) and "Brilliant Pebbles," a
constellation of thousands of miniature killer-satellites, proposed in
the 1980s, that would be used to intercept ballistic missiles and
which, fortunately, went unfielded, though not for want of lobbying to
revive the project.
Much of the argument then -- undoubtedly
abstruse to outsiders -- was about whether space represented a
"revolution in military affairs" or a "strategic center of gravity." It
turned out that it didn't matter. Either way, we clearly had to seize
it and dominate it first, since space, as "the ultimate high ground,"
was going to be critical in future wars.
Several enthusiasts
called for a new, separate, and independent space force, a fifth
service, with its own unique doctrine -- an idea the Air Force has, so
far, fought off valiantly. Among my notes from the occasion was a
statement by General Howell M. Estes III, then Commander-in-Chief, U.S.
Space Command, that the Air Force simply couldn't afford to lose the
space mission -- not just to "the enemy," but to the dreaded U.S. Navy
and U.S. Army, both of which were, he claimed, already exploiting space
assets more skillfully than the Air Force.
Dominating space
(and again the other services) certainly sounds seductive. Having
worked in the Space Surveillance Center in Cheyenne Mountain, however,
I can tell you that near-earth orbital space is already overcrowded
with satellites and space junk -- and the delicate sensors on these
satellites are highly vulnerable to space shrapnel traveling at 17,000
miles per hour. Explosive battles in space would degrade, rather than
enhance, any existing advantage in space-based intelligence and
communication the U.S. does have. Demilitarizing space is the only
sensible strategy, yet it's the one that promises few lucrative
contracts for aerospace firms and no new command billets for an Air
Force seeking global (and supra-global) dominance.
Closing the Empathy Gap
As
the Air Force flexes its earth, space, and cyber muscles, we rarely
stop to think of the asymmetrical advantages enjoyed by the military --
the overwhelming advantage in firepower, mobility, and technology. This
has created what can only be called an empathy gap.
Fortunately,
Americans have never been on the receiving end of a sustained bombing
campaign in this country. Two shocking days excepted -- December 7,
1941 at Pearl Harbor (where my uncle dodged aerial strafing at
Schofield barracks), and September 11, 2001 in New York City and
Washington -- the skies have always been friendly to us, even the
repository of our hopes and dreams. When fighter jets scream overhead,
our first thought isn't "death," it's display. We look up in curiosity
or wonder; we don't panic and run for our lives. We expect the opening
of a sporting event or aerial acrobatics, not the arrival of "precision
guided munitions."
As a result, we have trouble realizing that
our ability to soar "above all" and rain death from the skies generates
resistance and revenge, rather than awe and retreat, or submission and
rapprochement. We marvel that our enemies just don't get the message --
but our signals are mixed, and our receivers flawed.
Flying
and fighting so far above it all has proven deceptive indeed. It leaves
us with little idea of the new realities we are creating down below,
and blind to the disturbing inequities and resentments generated by our
global/galactic/cyber power.
It turns out that the higher you
soar -- the more "above all" you perceive yourself to be -- the less
likely it is that you'll understand the little people beneath you, and
the more likely it is that those same "little people" will resent being
dominated. And the solution to that problem lies not in dominating the
stars or some other higher physical realm, but in looking within to a
higher moral realm. "Above All" in moral courage -- now there's a
slogan toward which I'd willingly soar.