But darker dreams surfaced in America's military universities. The
theorists of the "revolution in military affairs" predicted that
technology would lead to easy and perpetual US dominance of the world.
Lieutenant Colonel Ralph Peters advised on "future warfare" at the Army
War College - prophesying in 1997 a coming "age of constant conflict".
Thomas Barnett at the Naval War College assisted Vice-Admiral Cebrowski in
developing "network-centric warfare". General John Jumper of the air force
predicted a planet easily mastered from air and space. American forces
would win everywhere because they enjoyed what was unashamedly called the
"God's-eye" view of satellites and GPS: the "global information grid".
This hegemony would be welcomed as the cutting edge of human progress. Or
at worst, the military geeks candidly explained, US power would simply
terrify others into submitting to the stars and stripes.
SHOCK AND AWE: ACHIEVING RAPID DOMINANCE - a key strategic document
published in 1996 - aimed to understand how to destroy the "will to resist
before, during and after battle". For Harlan Ullman of the National
Defence University, its main author, the perfect example was the atom bomb
at Hiroshima.
But with or without such a weapon, one could create an illusion of
unending strength and ruthlessness. Or one could deprive an enemy of the
ability to communicate, observe and interact - a macro version of the
sensory deprivation used on individuals - so as to create a "feeling of
impotence". And one must always inflict brutal reprisals against those who
resist. An alternative was the "decay and default" model, whereby a
nation's will to resist collapsed through the "imposition of social
breakdown".
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1674184,00.html
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