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Chapter Twenty-eight
POWER AND CONTROL
THE END OF FREEDOM
The Manhattan Project which developed the first atomic bomb started in
1942. The first atomic bomb was exploded on July 16, 1945 more than 50 years ago.
That project started with a $6,000 funding appropriation to the Uranium Committee
and ended, by 1945, at $1.7 billion ($20 billion today). The total cost of the United
States nuclear weapons program since the Manhattan Project has been $4 trillion -
80% of the entire national debt on the government books in 3995.345 Is HAARP
another program about to plunge the world into a rash of waste and human misery?
The War Against Democracy
"The buzzwords haunting the Pentagon today are 'revolution in military
affairs', The idea, simply put, is that the same technologies that have transformed the
American workplace may have no less profound an effect on the American way of
war. "346
This concept, "revolution in military affairs" (RMA), first emerged in a
document issued by the U.S. Army War College in July, 1994 - The Revolution in
Military Affairs.347 This document said a philosophy of "conflict short of war"
("terrorism, insurgency or violence associated with narcotrafficking") requires new
weapons and a change in public opinion. It asserts that this change in opinion does
not have to evolve naturally, but can be deliberately shaped by the government. The
idea is that belief systems of Americans can be slowly altered to allow the military to
introduce new weapons technology which, at this time, would be resisted by most
Americans.
What this book puts forward is:
"In its purest sense, revolution brings change that is permanent,
fundamental, and rapid. The basic premise of the revolution in military affairs
(RMA) is simple: throughout history, warfare usually developed in an evolutionary
fashion, but occasionally ideas and inventions combined to propel dramatic and
decisive change. This not only affected the application of military force, but often
altered the geopolitical balance in favor of those who mastered the new form of
warfare."
The Revolution in Military Affairs describes "people's wars", which it
limits to Marxist ideologies. The phrase could be equally applied to what occurred in
the Philippines and to Eastern Europe's popular revolutions in the late 1980's. The
345 U.S. News & World Report, "Outlook, Database", July 17, 1995.
346 Eliot A Cohen, "Come the Revolution", Defense and Technology Issue; National Review, July
31, 1995, Vol XLVII, No. 14.
347 The Revolution in Military Affairs, toy Steven Metz and James Kievit, July 25, 1994, U.S
Government Printing Office: 1994-504-111/00089.