Captain America: Superhero of the Military-Industrial Complex
by
Tom Engelhardt and Nick
Turse
by Tom Engelhardt and Nick Turse
The
year is 2030 and President
Pierce Bush addresses the nation:
"My
fellow countrymen, in the past, enemies of America required massed
armies, and great navies, powerful air forces to put our nation,
our people, our friends and allies at risk. What has changed in
the first four decades of the 21st century is that, in the hands
of terrorists, weapons of mass destruction have become a first
resort the preferred means to further their ideology of suicide
and random murder. These terrible weapons are becoming easier
to acquire, build, hide, and transport.
"We're
determined to confront those threats at the source. We will stop
these weapons from being acquired or built. We'll block them from
being transferred. We'll prevent them from ever being used. America,
and the entire civilized world, will face this threat for decades
to come. We must confront the danger with open eyes, and unbending
purpose. I have made clear to all the policy of this nation: America
will not permit terrorists and dangerous regimes to threaten us
with the world's most deadly weapons.
"Thanks
to the vigilance of the Central Intelligence Agency, news has
reached us that, on the Central Asian black market, the Uzbekistan
branch of al-Qaeda has acquired a single antimatter weapon small
enough to fit into the palm of your hand but powerful enough to
destroy a major city. Armed with such a weapon, small groups of
fanatics, or failing states, could gain the power to threaten
the cities of great nations, threaten the world peace, or our
very existence.
"So,
my fellow Americans, I have today ordered our Special Forces X-Force
of Super Cyborg Soldiers to spearhead an invasion of Uzbekistan
to wrest that antimatter bomb, perhaps the most dangerous weapon
on a planet of dangerous weapons, from the hands of the terrorists.
I thank you and may God bless you all."
(Adapted from President
Announces New Measures to Counter the Threat of WMD, February
11, 2004)
Sound like a post-governorship Schwarzenegger movie, a selection
from one of Philip K. Dick's nuttier novels, or maybe an offshoot
from Star
Trek III: The Search for Spock? Hmmm. Well, not exactly.
Let's start with that antimatter weapon. It turns out, according
to San Francisco Chronicle Science Writer Keay Davidson,
that the Pentagon, "is quietly spending millions of dollars investigating
ways to use a radical power source antimatter, the eerie 'mirror'
of ordinary matter in future weapons… for example, antimatter
bombs small enough to hold in one's hand, and antimatter engines
for 24/7 surveillance aircraft." And here's the good news: The hope
is that our scientists can create "a new generation of super weapons…
[including] a so-called 'clean' superbomb that could kill large
numbers of soldiers without ejecting radioactive contaminants over
the countryside."
Gee, sounds like a real advance. And, as Dr. Seuss might once have
said, that is not all, oh no, that is not all. It may be true that,
when it came to post-invasion Iraq, the Bush Pentagon was incapable
of planning its way out of yesterday, no less into tomorrow, but
when it comes to imagining global domination by force into the wee
distant future, it's the undisputed global planning champ. Nothing
is too sci-fi to be on the drawing boards for America's future war-fighters:
paralyzing
microwave rays from the heavens for use in crowd control; ray
guns (familiarly called "pain rays") for deployment here on
Earth; laser
beams to destroy incoming missiles; anti-satellite
weaponry for the sort of space wars that once were the province
of science fiction. You name it and someone somewhere in the military-industrial-academic
complex is probably at work on it or it's already a weapons system
heading for deployment.
Recently there's been a good deal written about "peak
oil" (beyond which the curve of global oil production must descend);
but perhaps another term should enter our language, "peak military."
Whether or not Hubbert's Peak proves a "law" of global oil production,
there has to be some kind of similar law of advanced weaponry production.
Perhaps it could be described something like this: Sooner or later,
any weapon system you create for yourself will become available
to others. This law would have the following corollary: Whatever
you create for brain-numbing sums will someday be available cheaply
enough so that even small groups of fanatics can obtain it. "Peak
military" would then be the self-annihilating point whether already
reached or not beyond which we descend into the hell of planetary
destruction or its local equivalent.
The United States, once locked in a fierce, spiraling arms race
with the Soviet Union, now finds itself in a mad arms race of one.
It stands almost alone on the planet in creating ever more frightening
and destructive weapons systems for the coming decades and beyond.
From new generations of nuclear weapons to initial generations of
space weaponry, the Bush administration has only accelerated this
process. Sooner or later, however, there are always others ready
to tango.
Oh, and as for those X-Force Super Cyborg Soldiers a
future President Bush might send into Uzbekistan to secure that
antimatter weapon (and maybe a crucial Central Asian oil source
too)… well, let Nick Turse, Tomdispatch's military-industrial-academic-entertainment
complex reporter, explain… ~ Tom
Captain
America:
Superhero
of the Military-Industrial Complex
By
Nick Turse
Even if you never read the comic book or watched the hopelessly
low-production-value 1960s cartoon, chances are you've at least
seen the image of Captain
America the slightly ridiculous looking superhero in a form-fitting,
star-spangled bodysuit. If you're still hazy on "Cap," he was Steve
Rogers, a 4-F weakling during World War II who, through the miracle
of "modern science" (a "super soldier serum") became an Axis-smashing
powerhouse the pinnacle of human physical perfection and
the ultimate American fighting-man.
In the 1940s comic, Rogers had taken part in a super-soldier experiment,
thanks to the interventions of an Army general and a scientist in
a secret government laboratory. He was to be the first of many American
super-soldiers, but due to poor note-keeping methods and the efforts
of a Nazi assassin, he became the sole recipient of the serum. Today,
however, the dream of Captain America turns out to be alive and
well and lodged in the Pentagon. The U.S. military aims to succeed
where those in the four-color comic book world failed. By using
high technology and cutting edge biomedicine, the military hopes
to create an entire army of Captain Americas a fighting force
devoid of "Steve Rogers" or any other "Joe Average," and made up
instead of super-soldiers whose human-ness has been all but banished.
24-Hour
Soldiers
The military has long been interested in creating an always-on,
24-hour fighting man. During the Vietnam War, the Army undertook
extensive studies on the effects of sleep deprivation. At the time,
however, all the military could offer was copious amounts of amphetamines
to keep men wired for combat.
As in the Vietnam era, the military is again stretched thin and,
with National Guard recruiting having fallen 12%
below goal in the first three quarters of 2004, in need
of troops. What better way to forestall future manpower crises
than by creating two-for-the-price-of-one soldiers who never need
to sleep?
To this end, the Department of Defense's blue-skies research outfit,
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), currently
has a "Preventing
Sleep Deprivation Program." Its aim is to work on ways to enable
a pilot "to fly continuously for 30 hours," Green Berets to carry
out 4872 hours of sustained activity, or "advancing ground
troops [to] engage in weeks of combat operations with only 3 hours
of sleep per night" all without suffering from cognitive
or psychomotor impairments.
Scientists in the military-industrial-academic complex are hard
at work for DARPA on this line of research. At Wake Forest University,
for instance, researchers are studying a class of medicines known
as "Ampakines" which are thought to be protective against the cognitive
deficits ordinarily associated with sleep deprivation. At Columbia
University, new imaging technologies are being employed as part
of a program to study the "neuro-protective and neuro-regenerative
effects" of an anti-oxidant found in cocoa. (In low-tech World War
II, they just gave the grunts chocolate bars.) Who's conducting
this line of research for DARPA? Why, researchers at the Salk
Institute and also at that all-chocolate-all-the-time company
Mars Inc. yes, the folks who bring you M&M's and Snickers!
At the same time, the Air Force Research Laboratory's Warfighter
Fatigue Countermeasure program is looking into a drug known as Modafinil
which can reportedly keep people awake for up to 88 hours without
sleep; while researchers at the Naval Health Research Center (NHRC),
the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center (SPAWAR), the Walter
Reed Army Institute of Research, and the U.S. Army Aeromedical Research
Laboratory, among others, are working on sleep-(or-lack-thereof)-related
projects.
Major
Morality, You're Demoted. We're Promoting Corporal Punishment!
Sleepless soldiers are all well and good while the fighting goes
on; but how does one prevent sleepless, anxiety-filled nights after
those missions end? Once upon a time, it seems, most soldiers had
a great revulsion against close-quarters killing. During World War
II, it has been estimated that as few as 1520% of American
infantry troops actually fired their weapons at the enemy. By the
Vietnam years, the military had managed to bring that number up
into the 9095% range! Obviously, the armed forces had found
ways to turn American men into more efficient killers. But how to
deal with the pesky problems of regret, remorse, and post-traumatic
stress disorder?
Well, last year, writing in the
Village Voice, Erik Baard raised the specter of the creation
of a "guilt-free soldier," noting that researchers from various
universities across the U.S. (including Harvard, Columbia, NYU,
and UC-Irvine) were working on various methods of fear-inhibition
and also memory-numbing by using "propranolol pills… as a means
to nip the effects of trauma in the bud." He further reported that
at Columbia, the lab of Nobel laureate in medicine Eric Kandel had
"discovered the gene behind a fear-inhibiting protein, uncovering
a vision of 'fight or flight' at the molecular level." When asked
by Baard if he was funded by DARPA, Kandel answered, "No, but you're
welcome to call them and tell them about me."
Will DARPA take Kandel up on his tacit offer? It seems only natural
that a soldier unburdened by morals, ethics, or remorse would be
the military's dream. But for now, DARPA seems fixated on another
long-term project creating cyborg soldiers which might make
an anti-morality morning-after (combat) pill superfluous.
Remote-Controlled
soldiers?
As noted recently in the pages of the New
Yorker, searching for perks to retain troops, the military is
offering free cosmetic surgery (funded by taxpayer dollars) to "[a]nyone
wearing a uniform." So right now "bigger
breasts" are the type of implants the U.S. military is specializing
in. (Military doctors performed 496 breast enlargements between
2000 and 2003.) However, if DARPA scientists have their way, the
implants du jour of the future may be the product of the
"Brain Machine Interface Program" which seeks "new high-density
interconnects for brain machine interfaces that will allow [researchers]
to monitor the brain patterns associated with a wide variety of
behaviors and activities relevant to DoD [the Department of Defense]."
Monkeys, with electrodes implanted in their brains, have already
been taught to use thought-power to do such things as move a robotic
arm. But why stop there? A few years back, DARPA scientists succeeded
in creating a "ratbot"
a living, breathing rat with electrodes implanted in its brain
that could be controlled using a laptop computer. Today, DARPA researchers,
not exactly heading up the evolutionary scale but evidently proceeding
toward larger sized natural fighting machines, are working on a
remote-controlled
shark. And how long will it be until some researcher gets the
bright idea of a remote-controlled soldier; short-circuiting free
will altogether? The technology isn't there yet, but what happens
when it is?
DARPA already has all sorts of programs designed to use high-tech
means to prevent humans from "becoming the weakest link in the U.S.
military." Take the "Neovision Program" whose goal is "using synthetic
materials for a retinal prosthesis to enable signal transduction
at the nerve/retina interface"; that is, creating devices to technologically-enhance
or even re-conceptualize human vision as we know it. Or how about
the Biologically Inspired Multifunctional Dynamic Robotics (BIODYNOTICS)
Program, which aims to develop "robotic capabilities," inspired
by biology –such as the movements of arms and legs "for national
security applications."
Foodless
Fighters? Water-free Warriors?
But what good is an always-on, morals-free cyborg soldier if s/he's
caught in the classic quagmire of having recurring desires to eat
and drink which simply must be met? How pathetically human! Not
to worry. Today's soldiers might complain about choking down MREs
(Meals Ready to Eat) but, if all goes well, tomorrow's might not
have such worries.
Typical adults require about 15002000 calories per day, but
Special Forces' troops may require as many as 6,0008,000 calories
per day while in the field. Taking time to eat, however, cuts into
time that could be spent identifying targets or killing people,
so DARPA's "Peak Soldier Performance Program" is investigating ways
of "optimizing metabolic performance" to achieve "metabolic
dominance" and so to allow future soldiers to operate at "continuous
peak physical performance and cognitive function for 3 to 5 days,
24 hours per day, without the need for calories."
At the same time, the DARPA crew has instituted a "Water
Harvesting Program" which seeks to "eliminate at least 50 percent
of the minimum daily water supply requirement (7qts/day) of the
Special Forces, Marine Expeditionary Units, and Army Medium-Weight
Brigades" through initiatives such as deriving "water from air."
And when it comes to their meals, perhaps someday soldiers will
be able forgo water altogether for long periods of time thanks to
the efforts of the Combat Feeding Directorate of the US Army Soldier
Systems Center in Natick, Massachusetts. Yes, the lab that created
the "indestructible sandwich" (which boasts a three-year shelf life)
has now come up with a dried-food
ration that troops can hydrate by urinating on it. And you thought
military food was piss-poor to begin with!
Super-Suits:
Can I Get This in Star-Spangled Spandex?
What can you say about Captain America's outfit? While certainly
distinctive, his red, white, and blue threads were always a bit
light on function. So what can we expect for the real Captain Americas
of the future? They won't be clad in jingoistic jumpsuits. The Army's
Natick Soldier Systems Center is currently supervising a seven-year,
$250 million "Future Force Warrior" program, set to be rolled out
in 2010, which will outfit soldiers with new, lighter body armor,
an on-board computer, "e-textile" clothing (with wiring for computer
systems woven into it), and a helmet with built-in night-vision,
a computer screen monocle, and bone-conduction microphones. Add
a decade onto the Future Force Warrior and the military aims to
be rolling out "The
Vision 2020 Future Warrior system," an all-black, sci-fi, storm-trooper
outfit that looks like it came from a B-movie prop trailer. But
both may seem so last year before they ever have a chance to encase
a military body!
Earlier this year, Dr. Steven G. Wax, the director of DARPA's Defense
Sciences Office (DSO), addressed members of the academic, corporate,
and military communities and told them that the mech-suit worn by
Sigourney Weaver in the movie Alien was fast becoming a reality.
While various clunky
exoskeletons have been produced since the 1960s, Wax indicated
that "breakthroughs in structures, actuators and power generation
with a bit of help from advanced microelectronics" left DARPA
capable of creating a workable "external structure that can move
unobtrusively with a soldier and still carry more than 100 pounds
with no effort by the wearer." And through its "Exoskeletons for
Human Performance Augmentation" program, DARPA claims to be en route
to creating even more advanced "self-powered, controlled, and wearable
exoskeleton devices and/or machines" specifically designed, of course,
to "increase the lethality" of U.S. soldiers.
Food
for Thought
In a world where many still lack access to adequate clothing, despite
it being decreed a basic human right in 1948, DARPA is pouring
massive sums into building costly robotic suits. In a world where
800 million people
suffer from malnutrition and 1
billion lack access to potable water, food and water are only
made "sexy" when DARPA researchers figure out how a few (well-armed)
people in the global North can do without them on military missions
(generally in the global South). There's no DARPA-esque organization
involved in actually solving the most pressing problems in the world.
And yes, while some in the developing world could benefit from possible
DARPA spin-off, trickle-down innovations like futuristic prosthetic
limbs, many, many more could benefit from low-cost, low-tech public
health initiatives. Of course, many would have no need for high-tech
prosthetics if, for so many years, the U.S. military hadn't pumped
so much money into weapons, especially landmine research and production.
(In Vietnam, for instance, as many as 3
million landmines and "800,000 tons of war-era ordnance" may
still lie in the ground.)
DARPA's chunk of the vast Pentagon budget is a cool $3
billion, a sizeable hunk of which is now being devoted to creating
real-life Captain Americas or, more accurately Captain DARPAmericas.
Like so many DARPA projects, the agency's efforts to craft the super-soldiers
of tomorrow typify the ultimate in sci-fi thinking. What was once
the stuff of comic books and futuristic movie serials is now assumed
to be America's military future.
In
reality, however, most DARPA projects fail to meet their ultimate
goals. During the Vietnam War, massive amounts of money, firepower,
and high-tech weaponry proved unable to stamp out an enemy that
regularly used punji sticks (sharpened bamboo) as a weapon. Today
in Iraq, billions upon billions of dollars in military and intelligence
spending for satellites, state-of-the-art surveillance devices,
stealth bombers, fighter jets, tanks, Bradley Fighting Vehicles,
Humvees, heavy weapons, night-vision devices, high tech drones,
experimental
weaponry and all the trappings of Technowar, though capable
of killing large numbers of people, are again unable to stop resistance
fighters who lack heavy armor, airpower, spy satellites, body armor,
or high-tech gear and fight with AK-47s a rifle designed in the
1940s pickup trucks, and bombs detonated by garage-door openers.
Captain DARPAmerica an always on, never hungry or thirsty, morality-free,
remote-controlled soldier is a frightening prospect; but odds
are, even if such DARPA projects pan out, the high-tech super-soldier
of our future will fail too, due to underlying conceptual flaws
and the ceaseless hubris of U.S. military planners that typified
the American experience in Vietnam and continues to do so in today's
war in Iraq.
Further,
DARPA imagines the future through the lens of the present. Its projects
are largely typified, at their core, by the very opposite of blue-sky
thinking, being mired in the mindset and premises of today (or even
yesterday). Where Pentagon seers envision an Army of unstoppable
comic-book heroes, they may well find over-wrought, strung-out soldiers,
suffering from the still unknown side-effects that are sure to come
from interfering with basic human functions like sleeping and eating.
They will be clad in temperamental gear that will prove vulnerable
to yet undeveloped, but sure to be cheap, crude, and effective jamming
devices and counter-measures. Odds are, the Pentagon would be better
off investing in Captain America outfits. Not only would it be infinitely
cheaper, but who's gonna mess with a platoon clad in star-spangled
spandex?
October
16, 2004
Tom Engelhardt [send him
mail] is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Nicholas Turse is doctoral
candidate at the Center for the History & Ethics of Public Health
in the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University. He
writes regularly for Tomdispatch
on the military-corporate complex as well as for the
Village Voice.
Copyright
© 2004 Nick Turse
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