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Bush Taking Aim On A Spy Satellite: Shoot To Kill!
By Greg O'Brien, Codfish Press
Tom Clancy couldn’t make this stuff up; even Buck Rogers would be hard pressed to deliver on it: take out a spherical toxic fuel tank–about 36 inches wide in a failing 5,000-pound spy satellite the size of a school bus hurtling toward earth about 150 miles up–with a single shot from a Standard Missile 3 that was initially designed to intercept a ballistic projectile in flight, not a spacecraft. And if you miss, 1,000 pounds of deadly hydrazine, a lethal fuel used to maneuver the errant satellite launched in December, 2006, will be spread out over “an area the size of two football fields, and anyone caught in it could suffer lung damage and possibly die, warns Graham Candler, a University of Minnesota aerospace engineering professor, in a USA Today report.
You won’t have to wait for the DVD. The Pentagon, in spite of international protests and second-guessing in the homeland, plans to fire the intercept this week from a navy cruiser in the North Pacific. Sounding like roughneck Harry Stamper (the indefatigable Bruce Willis), who “never, never missed a depth that I have aimed for, and by God, I am not going to miss this one,” President Bush gave the order Thursday.
“This is all about trying to reduce danger to human beings,” asserted James Jeffrey, deputy national security advisor.
Well, not exactly, say critics, borrowing a line from the movie Independence Day when it was determined the government had lied about an alien presence at Area 51 in Roswell, New Mexico. Detractors and some foreign governments insist the U.S. is just showing off—an excuse to test an emergent anti-satellite weapon, rather than saving innocent lives or shielding classified information, a show of American muscle that could set back disarmament talks the U.S. seems to be resisting. “Similar spacecraft re-enter the atmosphere regularly and break up into pieces,” reports the Associated Press, quoting Ivan Oelrich, vice president for strategic security programs at the Federation of American Scientists.
Perhaps Bush is trying to prove he’s a better shot than Dick Cheney. Be that as it may, there is enough intrigue in this plot over the demise of spy satellite US 193 to spin off sequels in the way of more space junk. While most of the debris, if lightening strikes its mark, is expected to burn up in the atmosphere, some is sure to add to the collateral damage floating in space–estimated at more than a million bits of wreckage with more than 10,000 assorted pieces of junk of all sizes in low orbit whizzing around at average speeds up about 22,000 miles-an-hour. Fast-forward to the next generation of communication and spy satellites and the earth begins to resemble an asteroid belt.
So next time you gaze up at the sky on a starry night, realize you’re looking into the landfill and shooting gallery of the future. Aim straight, George, and you’ll win a stuffed doll.
19 comments
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Vegas would probably give it 10:1.
Not like shooting fish in a barrel. Bush's aim, though, is likely better then Cheney's.
O'B.
Codfish Press
Just another example of the US of A shooting from the hip. There's not even a warhead attached to the missile. It's purely kinetic energy breaking up the Sky Boondoggle, unless they really 'cowboy up' and pack the payload cabin full of Viagra.
However, with regard to the return of Skylab in 1979 and how that story turned out, we're safe. Two will get you three that no high school's football field will see or feel anything.
Tim
Glad to hear from you! I've missing in action. My 86-year-old dad died recently, and my mom has advanced Alzheimer's. I'm not reticent to write of it; many know about it.
As far as shooting from the hip, I hear early reports tonight that Bush hit his target. Guess he's a better shot than Cheney...
Stay in touch.
O'B.
Codfish Press
Stay tuned. Looks like Bush hit his mark tonight (Wednesday), according to early reports!
Still doesn't change anything, Just showing off, I suspect...
O'B.
Codfish Press
Joy in Mudville tonight (Wednesday), it appears.
Film at 11.
Bush will be crowing, I'm sure.
O'B.
Codfish Press
Better duck. They are on their way down!
O'B.
Codfish Press
No argument on Reagan. A great shot and a political hero of mine. I liked his style...
O'B.
Codfish Press
The talking heads (from the liberal left media ABC,CBS,CNN etc and the right wing demagogues on FOX/talk radio) bemoan the current state of affairs and work the frenzied masses into a maelstrom.all an attempt to polarize us and keep us from finding the truth of what our govt is up to..(which we will not find!)
Relax, enjoy life,forget the politicians from both sides as they are in it for themselves/once one looks to the govt to solve their personal or social/economic problems, they are doomed to eternal dissapointment
Our Federal,State, and local govts have become leeches on us working class fools on both sides.Dem/Repub)
Our country is perhaps the greatest experiment ever attempted but,we have allowed,unknowingly ,our system to destroy itself through these political monsters.time for a new party that represents us/the working/retired/military.
Your advice has ring of logic to it: "forget the politicians from both sides as they are in it for themselves."
Not sure a third party wouldn't generate the same.
O'B.
Codfish Press
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About This Blog
Greg O'Brien is editor and president of Codfish Press, a publishing and political /communications strategy company. He is the author/editor of several books, a Boston Metro newspaper columnist, a contributor to New York Metro, a freelance writer for national and regional magazines, a television script writer and a documentary producer.
He has contributed in the past to Boston Magazine, the old Boston Herald American, USA Today, The Arizona Republic, the Los Angeles Times, the Associated Press, UPI, and is former editor and publisher of The Cape Codder newspaper and a former managing director of Community Newspaper Company of Boston.
He comments here about Boston and the world beyond, and about Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket on his local blog, Codfish Press.
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