Issue 3 Summer 2001
We Will Bury You. In Mud.
David E. Brown
Forget Bush's National Missile
Shield. The best military defense is a Russian winter. It got the better
of King Charles XII of Sweden, sent Napoleon packing, and eventually
shooed Hitler away. A few years after that, though, it was the Germans
that were favored by the weather gods—for weeks, Patton's Third Army was
stuck near the edge of Germany, plagued by rain that kept American tanks
and trucks and soldiers in place. The general's solution? A prayer to
those gods:
Almighty and most merciful Father, we humbly
beseech Thee, of Thy great goodness, to restrain these immoderate rains
with which we have had to contend. Grant us fair weather for Battle.
Graciously hearken to us as soldiers who call upon Thee that, armed with
Thy power, we may advance from victory to victory, and crush the
oppression and wickedness of our enemies and establish Thy justice among
men and nations.
Patton was
certainly not the first military leader to beseech His Great Goodness for
favorable conditions. When Hannibal invaded Italy in 217 BC, he waited for
the marshes to freeze so his mounted troops could pour in. In 1776, the
harsh winter helped George Washington's army, letting it move quickly
across the frozen Delaware River. And in 1941, the Japanese essentially
hid their aircraft carriers moving toward Pearl Harbor in a large Pacific
storm.
But, to paraphrase Mark Twain, everybody prayed about the
weather, but nobody did anything about it. That changed in 1946, when
General Electric scientists Vincent Schaefer and Irving Langmuir created
an artificial cloud by introducing dry ice into a freezer, and then
developed a technique for "cloud seeding," still used today.
By
the late 1950s, people began to think about our new ability to alter the
weather in military terms. The Cold War was kicking into high gear, and
the US intelligence community became aware that the Soviets were
experimenting with cloud seeding and other kinds of weather control, such
as cloud dissipation. In 1957, Henry Houghton, chair of MIT's meteorology
department, noted, "I shudder to think of the consequences of a prior
Russian discovery of a feasible method for weather control." That same year, a Presidential Advisory
Committee on Weather Control noted (with perfect deadpan sensationalism)
that, "weather modification could become a more important weapon than the
atom bomb." The weather race, though never
as fierce or as public as the space race or the arms race, was on. (The
Soviets really were working on weather, with the hopes of, among other
things, warming its vast northern regions and removing the ice in the
Arctic Sea.)
That any new technology that could be used as a weapon
would be used as a weapon now seems obvious—a kind of first principle of
warfare—but it is a relatively recent idea, a product of the "total war"
strategy of the two world wars, where tactics and weaponry became
increasingly more destructive. And there was historical precedent for
offensive uses of the environment. During the Franco-Dutch War of 1672-78,
for example, the Dutch breached the dikes around Amsterdam, flooding part
of the low-lying country and putting the French on the defensive. (The
Dutch won.)
With the political and military stage set, the US got
to work on figuring out how to alter the weather, and what to do with that
knowledge. Much of the work seems to have been done at the Navy's China
Lake weapons research center. "Between 1949 and 1978," the base's in-house
newspaper, The Rocketeer, reported, "China Lake developed
concepts, techniques, and hardware that were successfully used in
hurricane abatement, fog control, and drought relief."
"Drought relief" is an interesting way
to put it. China Lake's research caught the eye of the CIA in the early
1960s, which saw the potential of weather control in the rapidly expanding
conflict in Vietnam. The CIA's first use of the Navy's technology was
crowd dispersal. "The Diem regime was having all that trouble with the
Buddhists," an agent told Seymour Hersh in 1972. "They would just stand
around during demonstrations when the police threw tear gas at them, but
we noticed that when the rains came they wouldn't stay on. The agency got
an Air America Beechcraft and had it rigged up with silver iodide. There
was another demonstration and we seeded the area. It rained."
In 1966, the idea of raining on Vietnam
became the top-secret Project Popeye, which ran for some seven years and
included more than 2,600 cloud-seeding flights over Vietnam and Laos. The
objective was simple: Make rain that would make or keep the Ho Chi Minh
Trail—a main supply route for the North Vietnamese—so muddy that it was
unusable. (Why "Popeye"? The artificially created rain was apparently
called "Olive Oil.")
The story of the top-secret project—flown by
the Air Force but controlled by the CIA and the White House—was broken in
1971 in Jack Anderson's national newspaper column, then, to greater
fanfare, in July 1972, with Hersh's front-page story in The New York
Times. And while there were no rules at the time about weather
modification—or any environmental warfare, for that matter—the Nixon
administration was not happy with Hersh's revelations. The White House and
the State Department declined comment, and one unnamed official said,
"This is one of those things where no one is going to say anything." (People said even less about CIA
weather-modification in Cuba. During 1969 and 1970, planes from China Lake
seeded clouds that rained over non-agricultural regions of Cuba, leaving
at least some of the country's sugar cane fields dry.)
The eventual
response was an international treaty, the Convention on the Publication of
Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification
Techniques, or ENMOD, which was ratified by the US in 1977. The main tenet
of the treaty, which stands today, is this: "Each State Party to this
Convention undertakes not to engage in military or any other hostile use
of environmental modification techniques having widespread, long-lasting
or severe effects as the means of destruction, damage or injury to any
other State Party."
Weather-control
activities seem to have quieted down after ENMOD, but fortunately for the
US military, the treaty has a loophole big enough to drive a truck
through: It prohibits only action with "widespread, long-lasting or severe
effects." When Air Force intelligence analysts turned their thoughts to
the weather in the mid-1990s, they made up their own definition of these
limits: widespread means affecting more than several hundred kilometers;
long-lasting means for a period of months; and severe "involves serious or
significant disruption or harm to human life, natural or economic
resources, or other assets." Which is to
say that, except for the human life part, most military applications,
which tend to be short-term and localized, are allowed. These analysts'
conclusions are contained in an extraordinary report, published in 1996,
called "Weather as a Force Multiplier: Owning the Weather in 2025." If the
US intelligence community did ignore the weather for a while, "Owning the
Weather" certainly made up for it. Envisioning a world where technology
has made control over the local weather phenomena much more precise—and
where a global network of sensors has greatly increased available
atmospheric data—the writers declare that in three decades time, "US
aerospace forces can 'own the weather'," and "shape the battlespace in
ways never before possible."
While
"Owning the Weather" relies primarily on extensions of existing weather
modification techniques, the authors strike more boldly into the future
with speculation about nanotechnology-based "artificial weather." "A
cloud, or several clouds, of microscopic computer particles," they note,
"all communicating with each other and with a larger control system could
provide tremendous capability. Interconnected, atmospherically buoyant,
and having navigation capability in three dimensions, such clouds could be
designed to have a wide-range of properties."
At times, the Air Force report reads
like a declaration to violate the ENMOD agreement. The authors even note
that the only reason they don't discuss more serious weather
control—made-to-order weather, large-scale climate modification, control
of storms, etc.—is that it won't be technically feasible by 2025. "Such
applications would have been included in this report as potential military
options," they note, "despite their controversial and potentially
malevolent nature and their inconsistency with standing UN agreements to
which the US is a signatory."
Why
is the United States so interested in the weather that it would violate
international treaty? The answer may lie more in the psyche of the
government than in specific tactical advantages. The US military has long
been used to having a stacked deck. The US Navy once owned the seas;
later, the Air Force had the run of the skies. For a while, our sole
possession of the atomic and hydrogen bombs gave us the "ultimate" weapon.
Dominion over the atmosphere might be the next "ultimate" weapon, proof
not only of military invincibility but perhaps, finally, of Divine Right.
David E. Brown is an editor and artist living in
Brooklyn. He is the author of Inventing Modern America: From the
Microwave to the Mouse (MIT Press, forthcoming) and a co-founder of
Place magazine.