OMAHA
SOS
(Speak Out at Stratcom)
August 5 Through August 9
Speak Truth to Power
at the Gates of Stratcom
The Most Dangerous Place on Earth
· Aug 5 – Tuesday
Evening – Vigilers arrive in Omaha set up base in the basement of St. John’s
Church – Creighton University, 2500 California Plaza, Omaha, NE 68178. http://www2.creighton.edu/maps/
There is plenty of floor space for any and all who wish to attend from out of
town. Anyone needing a bed or any
other special accommodations please contact Jerry Ebner and the folks at the
Omaha Catholic Worker House (CW).
cwomaha@gmail.com
402-502-5887
· Aug 6 – Wednesday
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Vigil at Offutt/Stratcom, the Kenny Gate
(http://dodlodging.net/VT_Offutt_Map.htm#)
7 p.m.
Movie – “The Day After Trinity: J Robert Oppenheimer and the Atomic Bomb”
http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/74400/The-Day-After-Trinity-Oppenheimer-the-Atomic-Bomb/overview
McFoster’s Natural Kind Café, 302 S 38th St. – between Harney (one
way going East) and Farnam (one way going West)
http://mcfosters.com/index.html
· Aug 7 – Thursday
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Vigil at Offutt/Stratcom, the Kenny Gate
(http://dodlodging.net/VT_Offutt_Map.htm#)
6 p.m.
Mass and Potluck at the Omaha CW -
Contact Jerry Ebner at Omaha CW
1104 N. 24th St. Omaha, NE 68102
cwomaha@gmail.com
402-502-5887
· Aug 8 – Friday
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Vigil at Offutt/Stratcom, the Kenny Gate
(http://dodlodging.net/VT_Offutt_Map.htm#)
7 p.m.
PowerPoint Slide Show – “The Story of Stratcom at Offutt, Its New Mission and
Our Resistance to It” by Frank Cordaro. Basement of St. John’s Church at
Creighton University.
· Aug 9 – Saturday
8 a.m. to 11 a.m.
Vigil with closing ceremony and prayer (and line crossing if anyone is up to
it.)
6 p.m.
Peace Seekers and Pizza
7 p.m.
Discussion, reflection and leadership support at 4924 Chicago Street. Contact person is Jo Peterson at 350-3019
Co-Sponsored by:
Nebraskans For Peace http://www.nebraskansforpeace.org
Des Moines Catholic Worker http://desmoinescatholicworker.org
Omaha Catholic Worker http://www.no-nukes.org/cwomaha/
Contact People for more info:
Jerry Ebner, cwomaha@gmail.com, 402-502-5887
Frank Cordaro, frank.cordaro@gmail.com,
515-282-4781
Elaine Wells, mmwells1@cox.net, 402-573-1702
Strategic Space:
U.S. Bid for Planetary Dominance Comes to Omaha
Arms Contractors Woo
Stratcom
by Tim Rinne & Frank
Cordaro

The greeting for corporate and military delegates to the
Strategic Space and Defense conference in mid-October was chilly in more ways
than one. As rain and cold gusts of wind greeted the conference
attendees at opening ceremonies Oct. 10, Frances Mendenhall and other members
of "Speak Out at Stratcom" handed out prescriptions suggesting
"More Talk. Less Terror."

Representatives from the U.S. Space Foundation were quick to tell local media
that the conference at Qwest Center had "nothing to do with nuclear
weapons," a particularly sensitive subject in the aftermath of North
Korea's alleged nuclear test the day before. The claim was only
partially true, as Strategic Command at Offutt AFB, which is at the heart of
the conference, jointly manages nuclear and conventional weapons in the
post-Cold-War environment, in ways that actually increase the likelihood of
nuclear weapons being used.
But in any event, members of SOS, Green
Party, and Nebraskans for Peace weren't there just to challenge StratCom on
its nuclear policies. Instead, the groups were protesting the widened
missions of StratCom, the same missions that the conference was glorifying.
"Lab for Future Wars"
"StratCom is a
laboratory for the future of warfare," Space Foundation Chairman Robert
Walker said at the opening of the conference. Since 2002, StratCom has new
"Functional Component Command" missions such as space control,
global strike, C4ISR (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence,
Surveillance, and Reconnaissance), missile defense, and net warfare. The
fourth annual Strategic Space and Defense conference claimed that these
missions were critical to protecting the homeland. Opponents argued that
these missions put StratCom in the central position of ensuring planetary
dominance by the United States.
Four days before the conference opened, the
White House's Office of Science and Technology Policy released a revised
"National Space Policy," the first new one since 1996, which had
been delayed since May 2005, when the New York Times leaked excerpts
suggesting the U.S. was ready to take war into space. This document was
discussed at length in the Omaha conference.
The polished new document (an unclassified
version is available at http://www.ostp.gov/html/US%20National%20Space%20Policy.pdf
) tried to use diplomatic language in its opening paragraphs. But burrowing
further into the policy goals reveals that the United States wants to
preserve fair and peaceful access to space provided a nation is
willing to concede a U.S. primary right to manage the planet from
space. If a nation does not do so, it is considered an adversary.
This kind of subtle semantic shifting was
prevalent throughout the conference. Given the new activity of North
Korea, the Army's role in managing ballistic missile defense was touted as a
positive by Lt. Gen. Larry Dodgen, commander of the Army's Space and Missile
Defense Command. He explained how well the new missile-defense
infrastructure in Fort Greely, Alaska and Vandenburg Air Force Base tracked a
North Korean Taepodong missile last July, but then went on to say that going
"global" with new space capabilities meant erasing geography around
the world. With the new fast-assault vehicles sought by the Air Force,
missile defense walks hand in hand with global strike.
Faster
attacks, Global attacks, Attacking satellites
The conference had special panels on
"operationally responsive space," referring to fast and global
attacks from space, and on global strike missions. This is why the
Washington DC NGO efforts to ban weapons in space solve only half the
problem. The main goal for StratCom these days is to use space as a
force multiplier, to make better use of navigation and intelligence and
communications satellites to improve war operations globally, particularly in
first-strike scenarios.
In fact, Lt. Gen. William Shelton, the new
StratCom functional component commander for space, said he sees true space
warfare as a very unlikely final step in a struggle for space. The
biggest threat StratCom anticipates in the near future is radio jamming of
satellites. Jamming and many other threats could be solved by bombing or
taking out a ground station for a satellite, Shelton said, though StratCom
must be prepared to use anti-satellite or other space weapons if necessary.
There is a perception in Washington that
Donald Rumsfeld would like to take more money out of high-tech space projects
in the Air Force and National Reconnaissance Office, and shift that money to
Army ground operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. As a result of the
whispers that space warfare may be "gold-plated," StratCom made
special efforts to bring representatives from the Army, Navy, and Marines, in
addition to its own Air Force officers, to make the case that precision space
satellites are absolutely necessary to fight 21st century war.
A Navy representative from the NRO, the
nation's largest intelligence agency that works on spy satellites, talked
about two NRO programs that could help in land and sea battles. A new
program called Quickbolt puts receivers for spy satellites on board the
High-Speed Anti-radiation Missiles, or HARM missiles, regularly used on the
battlefield. Perhaps more ominously, the NRO started a special program
in late summer to put as many space receivers as possible on the USS
Eisenhower, the aircraft carrier that was "called up" in
mid-September for Persian Gulf service. While no one said so out loud at
the conference, it is possible this electro-enhanced USS Eisenhower would be
at the forefront of possible naval assaults on Iran nuclear sites.
The "Operationally Responsive
Space" (ORS) mission of StratCom will focus on small satellites, and
many private companies are expected to provide prototype mini- and
micro-satellites to compete with the government satellites that come from
every agency from the NRO to a cadet-led program at the U.S. Air Force
Academy. Undersecretary of the Air Force Ron Sega told the conference
that the Space and Missile Systems Center in California has opened a new
Space Development and Test Wing, across the street from the Air Force Weapons
Lab at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, which will test small
satellites to prepare for an eventual "ORS SmallSat Squadron."
Corporate involvement in space dominance was
evident everywhere on the show floor, spanning from large players like
Lockheed-Martin and Boeing, to innovative space startups who might have begun
as commercial players, but who quickly realized where the purse-strings were
controlled. For example, representatives of the commercial
communication-satellite companies Americom and Intelsat were at the
conference. Since the National Security Agency built special bases in
Yakima, Washington and Sugar Grove, Virginia, to intercept the commercial
traffic of these satellites, one would think that corporate leaders might
complain about such sneaky behavior.
Bellying
Up to the Trough
Instead, corporate executives like Intelsat
vice president Kay Sears and Americom chief executive David Helfgott
complained they weren't being offered the kind of deals in working with the
Defense Department that commercial imaging satellite companies were
offered. The NRO now gets 30 percent of its images from space from
commercial satellite companies instead of its own spy satellites, and
Intelsat and Americom wonder why more Defense Department space communications
can't be outsourced. Sears said that her company has eight satellites
going up before the Defense Department and NRO finish work on the first
satellite of the Multi-User Objective System. Intelsat would be happy to
provide "surge capacity"� channels for the
warfighter, she said, if the Defense Department would only let companies know
in advance of its needs.
In short, the corporate and military leaders at Strategic
Space were all singing from the same song sheet. All of the Defense
Department's outsourcing partners accept the role of StratCom as the global
enforcer of a dominant hegemony led by the U.S. And it is up to those
outside the confines of the conference, and outside the gates of Offutt, to
let the warfighters know that their mission is not in synch with the goals of
democracy.
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Our
Mission:
- To expose and oppose
Stratcom’s role in promoting and implementing nuclear and space warfare
agendas
Stratcom's
Mission:
- Developing
first-strike strategies (instead of deterrence)
- The militarization of
space
- Increasing the
usability of nuclear weapons
- Developing tactical
nuclear weapons
- Orchestrating command
over defense and retaliation against WMDs
Stratcom's
Expanded Mandate:
Stratcom
has, at the President's discretion, umbrella authority over the traditional
armed forces and the regional commands. Thus, if the President felt the
need to launch an attack very quickly, he could do it with one phone call to
the commander of Stratcom.
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