Transcripts from I-Bomb
Back in 1970, Alvin and Heidi Toffler wrote Future Shock, an influential and as it turned out correct vision of the impact information-age technology was having on the world. Twenty-five years later they turned their attention to the effect the same changes are having on war, in a book called War and Anti-War (see Further Reading). This book led us to make The I-Bomb, but even if it is as influential as Future Shock, this time I hope the Tofflers vision is less accurate.

The scenario they depict is one of more and more lethal weapons in more and more hands, the increasing power of propaganda to intensify ethnic and religious rivalry, and the use of information as a weapon and target in economic warfare. This against a background of social and national disintegration and a growing divide between rich and poor.

The other scenario they outline, though, is less bleak. It is that technological advance will bring riches, non-lethal weapons and the knowledge that will liberate people from totalitarian government. This vision of the future is just as plausible as the first, for these possibilities are also inherent in the microchip.

As with most scenarios, the future no doubt will consist of something between the two, with everything else thrown in. Perhaps the only thing that does emerge clearly as we move into the information age is that nothing is clear. This is why in The I-Bomb we present a collection of thinkers, the most interesting we could find in their field, and leave the audience to make up their own minds as to what the future of war will consist of.

   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   Were living through the greatest upheaval, the greatest social,
   technological and economic upheaval, since the industrial revolution.
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   We are already beginning to see the decline of the nation-state and
   ironically, at the same time, the rise of nationalism.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   You see giant corporations, some of the biggest in the world, having
   been turned into dinosaurs.
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   Today we have family forms in infinite varieties.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   The way we work, the way we create wealth . . .
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   Were seeing much more individuality and much more freedom for the
   individual.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   The technology is changing rapidly; social institutions are changing
   rapidly; values are changing rapidly; and, not inconsequentially, the
   entire concept of military action is also changing.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU (Author, Information War)
   Modern society is wired.
   
   NARRATOR (ZAM BARING)
   Wired  and therefore vulnerable to a new kind of war.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   With over a hundred million computers tying our communications,
   finance, transportation and power system together, we face a potential
   electronic Pearl Harbour.
   
   NARRATOR
   A threat that challenges all the traditional notions of warfare.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   If the information warrior comes at our computers, our networks and
   our communication systems, the modern military has very little
   recourse.
   
   NARRATOR
   War is changing. (Archive: smart bomb hitting target) This is one
   image of its future. In 1991 the world thrilled to the range, speed
   and accuracy of war in the Gulf. It was a war that the United States
   armed forces were trained and equipped to fight, but unlike some of
   the enemies they may face, they had the technology to beat Saddam
   Hussein.
   
   COLONEL JOHN A. WARDEN III (Gulf War air planner)
   The most important technology that we had in the Gulf War was almost
   certainly precision projectiles.
   
   COLONEL ALAN D. CAMPEN (Editor, The First Information War)
   Cruise missiles . . .
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   GBU27, a 2,000 lb bomb . . .
   
   COLONEL CAMPEN
   They had laser technology, stealth technology.
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   The 117 stealth fighter was able to penetrate some of the most
   extensive, even heaviest air defences in the world.
   
   NARRATOR
   But the planes and the bombs are not what made the Gulf War different.
   Alvin and Heidi Toffler have been writing about the future for the
   past 30 years. Now they have turned their attention to war. They
   believe Desert Storm was different because it provided the first
   glimpse of how the basic currency of war may be changing.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   The Gulf War will never be repeated. It is not a model of wars of the
   future, but it is an extremely important war in the history of
   warfare, because it represented both the past of warfare and the
   future of warfare. For example, when I say the past: Saddam Hussein
   took his troops, lined them up on the border  masses and masses of
   troops, masses and masses of tanks. This is the way wars have been
   fought ever since the industrial age dawned. And indeed the US and the
   coalition responded. They used traditional, industrial-style mass
   destruction. They tried to destroy everything in sight. What you saw
   in Baghdad was the beginnings of the warfare of the future.
   
   US ARMY INFORMATION FILM INFORMATION WARFARE
   Persian Gulf, 1991: the first outbreak of third-wave warfare,
   information-age warfare.
   
   COLONEL CAMPEN
   It was the first information war. Not that information hasnt always
   been a key element of war, it has been  the Battle of Britain being
   one example of the use of radar information to position a virtually
   destroyed Royal Air Force. But the use of information was
   serendipitous. If it was there and if it was correct, it was used.
   Information war uses information in a very fundamental way.
   
   NARRATOR
   This concept was central to the strategy created by Colonel Warden for
   the air war in the Gulf.
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   The most important part of the battle plan, the first part of it, was
   designed heavily to take away the Iraqis complete set of information.
   
   COLONEL CAMPEN
   Information was a target.
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   We didnt want Saddam Hussein to be able to see what was happening, so
   we hit the strategic air defence system, the radars.
   
   COLONEL CAMPEN
   Without information, weapons will not achieve the accuracy they have.
   The forces will not be in the right place.
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   We didnt want Saddam Hussein to be able to talk, to give people
   instructions as to what to do, so we took away the telephone system
   from him. We didnt want Saddam Hussein to be able to gather with his
   staff, so we took away the primary command centres that Saddam Hussein
   and his generals and his political cronies were inclined to use.
   
   COLONEL CAMPEN
   It was the first war with a notion that an enemy could be brought to
   his knees by denial of information. It was actually tested and proven
   on the battlefield.
   
   CNN ARCHIVE: PETER ARNETT
   . . . and I think, John, that air-burst took out the
   telecommunications  you may hear the bombs now.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   What is happening now is the emergence of a new, third-wave war form
   that has its own special characteristics and is highly dependent upon
   the application of knowledge. It embodies the concept of deep battle
    that the battle is not waged where the soldiers are, necessarily, or
   where the front lines are; the battle may be waged a thousand miles
   behind that.
   
   NARRATOR
   And it was this strategy of deep battle that made the Gulf War
   different from any that preceded it.
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   The technology of precision, of stealth, of rapid information movement
   enabled us to do something that had never been done before: to wage an
   entirely different kind of a war for the first time in history.
   Literally in a matter of hours we were able to impose shock on the
   entire Iraqi system. We were able to do it from the inside to the
   outside, as opposed to the old-style Clausewitzian attrition approach
   of coming from the outside to the inside. We were able to fight all of
   the key battles of the war almost within the first 24 hours, and after
   that first 24 hours, even after the first hour, there was almost
   nothing that Iraq could do from a military standpoint to get itself
   out of the impossible problem in which we had put it.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   Lets go back a bit to 1956 when Khrushchev said: We will bury the
   West. What he was really saying was that the military industrial
   complex of the Soviet Union would win out over the military industrial
   complex of the West  and note that its industrial. What Khrushchev
   didnt understand was that 1956 was the first year in the United
   States that white-collar and service employees outnumbered blue-collar
   workers.
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   We had the introduction of the birth-control pill; we had the
   introduction of mass television; it was the year of the spread of jet
   aviation. The industrial complex, military or not, was at its end
   point.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   The industrial revolution gave rise to mass societies. This was not a
   question of East or West. Wherever you had the industrialisation
   process, you created societies based on mass production, assembly-line
   production. They were brute-force machines for the purpose of
   manufacturing millions of identical objects. Parts were
   interchangeable  lives became interchangeable.
   
   NARRATOR
   This was true in the military, too. Chief of Staff of the United
   States Army, General Sullivan:
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   The assembly line is probably the perfect metaphor. You had men, you
   had warriors, that you would mobilise, put into units, equip, and it
   was all a linear process.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   You had mass media, the newspaper, you had television, you had mass
   education, you had mass entertainment, mass recreation; and as far as
   warfare was concerned, you had, for the first time in history, mass
   destruction.
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   Both the First and Second World Wars were characterised by
   industrial-age warfare: lots of munitions, lots of men just
   pulverised, no manoeuvre, no movement, just industrial warfare,
   grinding each other into the ground.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   The third wave brings with it a fundamental change in the structure of
   our societies  we move from the mass, industrial society that arose
   during the last 200 or 300 years to a new kind of society in which
   more and more things are demassified. In the factory, instead of
   long production runs of the same product, we see more and more
   customised production. In distribution we see more and more speciality
   stores and boutiques. In communications, instead of two or three
   networks, or one or two giant networks, we see more and more different
   channels. The same thing is true in the military  more and more
   different functions within the military, more and more diversity up
   and down the line.
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   What were talking now is simultaneity. (Archive: Panama City, 20
   December 1989) In my view the first war of the 21st century was
   operation Just Cause. What you saw there was the United States of
   America seizing 26 to 28 objectives from midnight until daylight. We
   simultaneously shot the enemy down with parachutists from the air,
   with Special Operations forces, marine forces on the ground, naval
   forces off the ocean, all leveraged by the microprocessor.
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   The chief characteristics of the third wave or information age are
   destandardisation, . . .
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   Now what were faced with  purify water, distribute water in Goma,
   Zaire for instance  is not war as we know it . . .
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   . . . demassification, . . .
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   Up to about 500,000 people have been released from this organisation .
   . .
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   . . . desynchronisation.
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   The United States Army has soldiers in 70 countries a day.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   And as we move towards the third wave, and societies become more
   internally complex, more and more information is needed to handle
   routine events. Information is the central resource of the third-wave
   economy. It is the oil of the future. You cant manage a society any
   longer in the way you did before  whether youre running a company,
   running a government or running an army. You now have far more complex
   problems, you need more information, and that cant be done on the
   back of an envelope.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   At the other end of a telephone you have access to the largest
   computer system in the world. There are switches all over the United
   States, all over Europe, all over Eastern Europe, Russia, southern
   Asia that connect over one billion people to each other, allowing them
   to speak to each other. At the other end of the computer today I can
   access over 35 million people, over three million different computer
   systems, in 167 different countries. Its like having the combined
   information wealth of the planet at the end of your computer, at your
   fingertips.
   
   GENERAL HARTZOG
   One of our big challenges today is to prepare the army for the 21st
   century. What has changed in the last five or six years that makes
   that different is the information explosion.
   
   NARRATOR
   And this explosion means that the US military are not just attacking
   enemy information systems, theyre revolutionising their own. General
   Sullivan, General Salomon and General Hartzog are leading the charge.
   Their war cry: digitise the battlefield.
   
   GENERAL HARTZOG
   I was involved in the 1989 operation in Panama, and the command
   centres were noisy places where a lot of people ran around and there
   were little sticky things that were put on acetate maps. Well, I was
   just involved last year in the assistance to Haiti. The commands were
   issued over video links, there were a number of sources that you could
   ask for information and get it in near real time, by video or audio.
   It was instructive to me that all this change had occurred in the last
   five years.
   
   COLONEL CAMPEN
   The information age has altered the whole nature of time and space and
   distance. Weapons can be launched from any place on the globe, in the
   air or on the sea. The information will flow over electronic means.
   The commander can sense the battlefield regardless of where hes
   located.
   
   GENERAL HARTZOG
   The way that we are doing this is through a digitisation process.
   
   INFORMATION WARFARE
   . . . harnessing the power of the microprocessor to put battlefield
   information in the computer, and digitally pass it between battlefield
   systems.
   
   GENERAL HARTZOG
   The turf, the ground, the environment is all put into a digital
   reality and simulated within an electronic box.
   
   INFORMATION WARFARE
   Information: it makes you more efficient, more effective, able to do
   more with less.
   
   NARRATOR
   Harnessing this power, the armys Materiel Command, led by General
   Salomon, is concentrating its efforts on:
   
   GENERAL SALOMON
   Upgrading our existing weapon systems to make sure that we get this
   information technology embedded in all of our weapon systems  so you
   can hear the Bradley, that can talk to the Abrahams, that can talk to
   the Apache, that can talk to the Paladin. So we have this horizontal
   technology integration to get this common view of the battlefield.
   
   NARRATOR
   There is some doubt though about the militarys approach to
   digitisation. Former math prodigy, Martin Libicki:
   
   MARTIN C. LIBICKI (Senior Fellow, National Defense University)
   Digitising the battlefield might be necessary for the way that we
   might want to fight future wars, but if were still thinking of
   fighting wars around very visible platforms, such as tanks, in fact we
   may be putting our money in the wrong direction. Perhaps we should be
   thinking about not necessarily how we make the tanks smarter, but how
   we use information warfare to conduct operations without having to use
   the tank at all.
   
   NARRATOR
   In the age of deep battle the same question might be asked about the
   soldier.
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   I see absolutely no way that information-age technology can replace
   the soldier.
   
   GENERAL HARTZOG
   War is a dirty, personal thing, and the soldier is at the centre of
   that.
   
   GENERAL HARTZOG
   The soldier has to be able to link into and perform in an environment
   in which information moves rapidly. So the soldier is getting all of
   the same attention that every other part of the battlefield is
   getting.
   
   SPECIALIST JACKSON (US Army)
   My weapon is the modular weapon system. This system has been designed
   to allow me to mount various types of weapons and sights according to
   our mission. Im currently equipped with the M203 grenade launcher, a
   daylight camera and a thermal weapons sight.
   
   GENERAL SALOMON
   Give the soldier a small television camera, and then that information
   that the soldier gathers can be transmitted back to his operation
   centre.
   
   SPECIALIST JACKSON
   These sights, along with the helmet-mounted display, will allow me to
   engage targets on the battlefield, day or night, in any weather
   conditions, without using the current cheek-to-stock aiming method.
   
   INFORMATION WARFARE
   Our 21st-century land warriors move in to clear out bypassed pockets
   of resistance.
   
   SPECIALIST JACKSON
   In my pack Im carrying the soldiers computer. This computer will
   have an integrated global positioning system, which will allow the
   soldier to know his position on the battlefield at all times. The
   computer will also have several preformatted reports, which will allow
   the soldier to send his reports in a more reliable and efficient
   manner.
   
   GENERAL SALOMON
   Information assists in the prosecution of the war.
   
   SPECIALIST JACKSON
   The computer will be connected to a radio, which will allow me to
   receive both digital and voice-message traffic.
   
   GENERAL SALOMON
   It is not an end to itself, but it is a supporting technology that
   improves all aspects of war fighting.
   
   SPECIALIST JACKSON
   With my present combat ensemble I am the land warrior.
   
   NARRATOR
   But just as the army is changing, so are the threats  new threats
   that may challenge the relevance of the military itself.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   The shift to third-wave information warfare is not just a question of
   plugging a computer into an existing weapon system, for example, or
   giving everybody a computer. What it is, ultimately, is a battle for
   control of the information flows of the world. In the Gulf War you saw
   classic examples of the use of propaganda and perception management,
   by both sides. In Washington, there was this stunning example of a
   traditional form of propaganda: the atrocity story. There you had a
   young woman appear before television cameras and talk about babies
   being ripped out of incubators in Kuwait, and this horror story, of
   course, struck everybodys heart. It later turned out that she was
   related to the Kuwaiti embassy and that she was really apparently
   following a script prepared by a public-relations agency, and that
   this was not necessarily true. On the other hand, at the very same
   time, there was Saddam holding hostages and patting the children on
   the head in front of the television camera to convey an avuncular
   image of himself, what a nice guy he is, to the rest of the world. In
   the era of information warfare, all of that is going to become far
   more important and be managed with far more sophistication.
   
   NARRATOR
   At Leeds University Dr Phil Taylor has studied how the military manage
   the media, and why they think its so important.
   
   DR PHIL TAYLOR (Institute of Communication Studies)
   Most of the senior American personnel in operation Desert Storm were
   Vietnam veterans. They were deeply influenced by that experience,
   including the media experience that they had. They believed that they
   had lost the war in Vietnam almost because of television, not through
   any of their own failures, which has been used as a justification for
   imposing restrictions on media coverage of battles ever since, right
   the way up to operation Desert Storm.
   
   PETE WILLIAMS (Former Pentagon spokesman)
   In all the discussions about the policy for accommodating reporters in
   the Persian Gulf, I never heard anybody say that we had to be worried
   about losing the war on television.
   
   PHIL TAYLOR
   They arranged journalists into pools which were attached to the troops
   in the field. The journalists in the pools, of course, were dependent
   upon the military not just for their safety, but for access to the
   story.
   
   The second element was back in Riyadh and Dhahran, where the vast
   majority of journalists were holed up in hotels. They were called
   hotel warriors because their ability to report the war was limited
   to the official briefings that were held by the Americans and the
   British, the Saudis and the French.
   
   NARRATOR
   Former CNN correspondent, wild man Chuck de Caro, thinks this
   reliance on the military compromised the journalism.
   
   CHUCK DE CARO (President, Aerobureau Corporation)
   The media, by entering into the pool system with the governments,
   wound up as so many obsequious yuppies looking for hand-outs and
   calling the reading of those hand-outs news. It wasnt news; wasnt
   even bad journalism. It was PR.
   
   NARRATOR
   Testing this view, Phil Taylor recorded the global television output
   during Desert Storm.
   
   PHIL TAYLOR
   This was not a war which was a bloody, brutal war  according to the
   television images. This was a smart, clean war. It was precisely that
   image of the war that the American military wanted to project, which
   was why it allowed crews to film Patriot missiles intercepting the
   indiscriminate Scuds. I think that the media image helped to sustain
   public support for the war. We were treated to a war as infotainment.
   
   PETE WILLIAMS
   I think most military people are sophisticated enough to understand
   that you cant really tell the American people what to think about an
   operation, and our experience, once it got started, was that the
   biggest concern of Americans was that nothing would be done to
   jeopardise American lives.
   
   PHIL TAYLOR
   The real war was not really the Scud/Patriot duel, or the smart
   missiles. They were military side-shows, but they were central to the
   media war. The real war was being fought between soldiers, in a brutal
   way, far away from the prying gaze of television.
   
   NARRATOR
   But just as the armed forces are becoming more sophisticated in their
   management of the news, so are the media in how they gather it. Since
   leaving CNN, Chuck de Caro has been developing the latest in
   journalistic technology.
   
   CHUCK DE CARO
   This is Aerobureau 1. Aerobureau integrates all the things necessary
   to do journalism  everything  into an aircraft that can land on
   3,000 feet of gravel. That means the Aerobureau crew can travel 4,250
   miles unrefuelled, land in a dirt strip, open up the door, push out a
   helicopter, remotely piloted vehicles, and all kinds of other things
   necessary to operate for one week, and then begin doing news as any
   full-scale news bureau would in any city in the world, except we can
   do it in the middle of a jungle or a desert or on a glacier in Canada
   if we need to. The advance of these technologies means that the
   ability of a government or governments to control access is being
   rapidly eroded. As a result, the media becomes a prime player in
   international dynamics.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   We go into Somalia, we see a dead soldier dragged through the streets
   on the screens of America.
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   And the world.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   The next day, practically, Congress says: out of Somalia. And
   meanwhile in Haiti, Cédras is watching all of that, and he comes to
   the conclusion that the Americans have no resolve, that they can be
   easily . . .
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   Cédras has his goons on the dock, and says, Youre going to have to
   kill us in order to . . . So thats what stopped the invasion.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   And indeed Clinton, in what I regard as one of the stupidest moves,
   sends a warship off the coast of Haiti and withdraws it because these
   hundred guys were on the dock  all tracing back to the use of
   television.
   
   ARCHIVE MONTAGE
   (John Holliman, CNN, Baghdad:) Wow, holy cow! . . . (President Bush:)
   This will not be another Vietnam . . . (President Clinton:) Tonight I
   can tell you that they will go . . . (Martin Fletcher, BBC, Tel Aviv,
   wearing gas mask:) We dont know if theres a chemical warhead there
   or not . . .
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   The interesting thing is the media are, in fact, becoming almost as
   powerful as governments in some issues, in some respects, and yet
   nobody ever elected the media. Who elected you and your camera?
   
   CHUCK DE CARO
   The power of global television has already changed the nature of war.
   In the last century, and to this day, in our military schools were
   taught the Clausewitzian definition of war, that is the extension of
   politics that uses violence to constrain the enemy to accomplish our
   will. But now, with global television, reaching all those various
   bodies politic around the world, it is possible to fight a different
   kind of war. Its called soft war. Soft war is the hostile use of
   global television to shape another nations will by changing its view
   of reality.
   
   NARRATOR
   At least one part of the US Army is taking this alternative definition
   of war to heart. At Fort Bragg in North Carolina the Fourth Division
   of Psychological Operations have always recognised the power of
   information. Colonel Geoffrey B. Jones is the commanding officer.
   
   COLONEL JEFFREY B. JONES
   Psychological Operations [Psyop] is basically the use of information
   to effect attitudinal and behavioural change in a foreign audience.
   
   SERGEANT CALLAIS
   One of the products we developed and disseminated before we got to
   Haiti was this leaflet. On the back it says: The road to prosperity
   begins with democracy, and on the front we have a sign with little
   stick figures walking up towards the sun and along the road  it
   begins with democracy, the next word is education, then
   opportunity, propriety, and it ends with happiness.
   
   COLONEL JONES
   In the Gulf Psyop was loudspeaker teams with all of the coalition
   forces.
   
   SERGEANT DAVIS
   The speakers are located on top of the HUMV. Theres a microphone, for
   live broadcast, and a Walkman for pre-recorded messages. The range on
   this is about two and a half kilometres. They were used in Saudi
   Arabia during operation Desert Storm to broadcast surrender appeals.
   
   COLONEL JONES
   We also dropped, floated leaflets up in plastic water-bottles on the
   coast.
   
   SERGEANT RON WELSH
   During Desert Shield, Desert Storm, I was a Psyop liaison to the
   theatre army headquarters. One of the ideas I came up with was putting
   Psyop leaflets in little water-bottles like this and they were dropped
   off the coast of Kuwait. The Iraqis did get them. The intent of the
   leaflets was to mislead the Iraqi forces to believe that invasion was
   coming from the coast, and it worked rather effectively.
   
   NARRATOR
   With the arrival of the information age, Colonel Joness good
   old-fashioned propaganda can also be used to wage soft war.
   
   COLONEL JONES
   Commando Solo is an Air Force EC130. It provides a broadcast
   platform for radio and TV: they can broadcast AM, FM, short-wave and
   colour TV worldwide. Theyve participated in virtually every operation
   in Just Cause, in the Gulf, and most recently in Haiti.
   
   SERGEANT PARLER
   I was one of the combat production specialists at Port au Prince,
   Haiti, and my primary mission in Haiti was to go into the Haitian
   community and document all accessible aspects of Haitian life. I would
   then take these products and produce radio spot announcements,
   programmes and audio products for video and loud-speaker. The content
   of these messages was designed to do three things: calm the Haitians,
   prepare them for the return of their president, and reassure them that
   the Americans will stay to help them, and I believe they were very
   effective.
   
   COLONEL JONES
   For sure, Psyop is most often thought of in terms of combat, and I
   think Sun Tsu, the Chinese visionary in 500 BC, captured it best when
   he said: To win a hundred victories in a hundred battlefields is not
   the acme of skill, but to subdue the enemy without fighting is the
   acme of skill.
   
   NARRATOR
   And it was just this skill that was used in the 1980s to subdue the
   biggest enemy of all.
   
   ARCHIVE: PRESIDENT REAGAN
   . . . Ill bet on American technology any day.
   
   JANET MORRIS (Center for Strategic and International Studies)
   Even in the Cold War era, psychological operations have been
   phenomenally effective. The announcement of Star Wars faced the
   Soviets with a new spending cycle they knew they couldnt endure. The
   very announcement brought them back to the bargaining table, without a
   single weapon being built.
   
   NARRATOR
   But it is since the end of the Cold War that bloodless victory has
   become vital to the US military, if they are fighting completely
   different types of battle. Policy analysts Christopher and Janet
   Morris:
   
   JANET MORRIS
   US and other Western governments today face entirely new kinds of
   missions, operations other than war, humanitarian assistance, actions
   below the threshold of war as we knew it in the Cold War era.
   
   CHRISTOPHER MORRIS
   We need to arrive at a geopolitically acceptable means of projecting
   force to contain conflict.
   
   JANET MORRIS
   We require two new abilities: (1) the ability to project a credible
   deterrent; (2) the ability to operate quickly and effectively with the
   minimum number of casualties and minimum destruction of property.
   Psychological operations will play a critical part in these new
   missions.
   
   NARRATOR
   And just how critical can be seen in the Gulf War, where the Iraqi
   troops were bombed with 29 million Psyop leaflets.
   
   COLONEL JONES
   Through our campaign we were able to convince some 17,000 Iraqis to
   defect, over 44 per cent of the Iraqi units in the Kuwaiti theatre of
   operations to desert, and over 87,000 to surrender.
   
   CHRISTOPHER MORRIS
   Management of an aggressors perception of you is very important.
   
   JANET MORRIS
   But psychological weapons are only one part of a new arsenal that may
   well be considered our peace dividend. We will have weapons that make
   things sticky, weapons that make things slippery, weapons that act as
   the old Roman nets acted to ensnare a convoy, a tank, a rioting crowd.
   The arsenal of new tactics and options that these weapons will provide
   are called non-lethal.
   
   NARRATOR
   Tactics that are a far cry from the days in which destruction was
   mutually assured. But these options meet with a mixed reception from
   the army and the air force.
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   The non-lethal technology should give us the opportunity to achieve
   large political military objectives without the necessity to shed lots
   of blood.
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   People think that because we are in a new age war will be bloodless.
   War will not be bloodless. There is no silver bullet. Were not
   talking about some magic weapon that has now appeared on the
   battlefield.
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   Theoretically weve always understood that going out there and having
   two armies fighting was merely a means to an end. However, as a result
   of a lot of history, including Karl von Clausewitz and others, we
   really began to see this actual clash as being the essence of war. And
   it isnt, it never has been. Always the essence of war should have
   been more of a Sun Tsu kind of a thing, where you get the other guy to
   do what you want him to do.
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   War will mean putting your soldiers on the ground and fighting each
   other  with weapons which may be leveraged and more effective because
   of information-age technology, but youve got to get out there and
   impose your will on the enemy.
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   If you can get the other guy to do what you want him to do without
   killing a lot of people, without destroying a lot of things, that
   certainly has got to be better. A simple example: we figure out a way
   to destroy the central processing unit, the chip in a computer, as
   opposed to blowing up the whole computer, because we simply dont care
   about the majority of the computer.
   
   NARRATOR
   Some would argue that there is no need to destroy anything at all. The
   targets of the future will not be computers, but the world they give
   access to.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   One significant way in which the proliferation of technology has
   changed the world is that war will be fought in the battlefields of
   cyberspace, that place which connects all of the computers world-wide.
   
   JANET MORRIS
   In an electronically interdependent world a virtual act of war may be
   taken as seriously as a bomb might have been 50 years ago. If we use
   electronic technology to zero Gaddafis bank account, is that an act
   of war?
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   The new battlefield is the battlefield for knowledge. If you have
   adequate and appropriate knowledge you can also wage conflict outside
   war, you can wage economic warfare.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   This is it: the wired city, an infinite number of fragile,
   spider-web-like connections gluing us all together into modern
   society, yet ready to fall like a house of cards. A bank  how many
   vulnerabilities does the bank have? Eavesdropping, surveillance,
   software  bad software.
   
   WILLIAM J. MARLOW (Science Applications International Corporation)
   Im setting up to attach to the Internet. Now that Im on the network
   itself Im choosing to access a remote network. Once on that network
   Im going to install whats called a sniffer programme. That sniffer
   programme is a piece of software that monitors all the information
   that gets transferred electronically on that network. That information
   includes passwords. Im going to capture a password, and then use it
   to log on and pretend to be an authorised user. And Im going to
   monitor all the information thats going on in the remote computer.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   Not too long ago the military and the intelligence community had
   exclusive control over the domain of information. With the
   proliferation of technology and the Internet, theyve lost the control
   that they once had, and today we find that information weapons systems
   are being developed outside of the control of the military, and
   virtually anybody with a little bit of technical knowledge has access
   to those weapons.
   
   WILLIAM MARLOW
   What Im going to do now is set up to actually do some damage to the
   other computer system. Im going to send a electronic mail message;
   attached to that mail message is whats called polymorphic code  the
   slang term is software bomb.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   Everybody has access to computer equipment, whether its the hacker or
   the information warrior or just anybody at home, but the true
   information warrior is also going to want to be able to provide
   cellular interception, telephone and fax interception, or other types
   of video and audio surveillance equipment such as is available here.
   
   SURVEILLANCE EQUIPMENT SALESMAN
   This is a wireless miking system which is designed out of
   state-of-the-art surface-mount technology. It will transmit a signal
   up to a mile away. This particular device attaches to a phone line and
   has the ability to record six hours of conversation off of one tape.
   It comes telephone ready. This is a wireless video transmitting cap.
   It will wireless remote video back to a viewing post.
   
   WILLIAM MARLOW
   The software bomb  polymorphic code  is a type of code that
   propagates itself. It attaches itself in the computer system and then
   starts writing over all the files that are on the disc, all the
   application files, data files and communications files.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   Information warfare is also about transportation systems. Think about
   it. On aeroplanes you cannot use your lap-tops or CD players under
   10,000 feet. The planes themselves are susceptible. The air traffic
   control systems use land-based communications, they need to be
   protected. Information warfare is about national economic protection.
   
   WILLIAM MARLOW
   . . . and here we go. Thats it, the bomb is now executed and working.
   
   MICHAEL R. HIGGINS (Chief, Counter Measures Division)
   Theres a natural reluctance to admit when your computer system has
   been broken into. Examples of that might be the banking industry.
   Theres a reluctance for the banking industry to admit that their
   business functions, funds transfers, might be compromised by some
   outsider. Not to say that happens, but last year 255 incidents were
   reported to us from the Department of Defense. Were a microcosm,
   were a small portion, we have less than a million computers in the
   Department of Defense. There are 30 million plus systems within the
   Internet community. So if we have 255 incidents, theres a lot more
   activity that we believe is going on out in the global community that
   just is not being reported.
   
   NARRATOR
   At the Defense Information Systems Agency, Mike Higginss job is to
   maintain the security of all the military networks  the encrypted,
   classified networks, the unclassified and the communications
   infrastructure that connects them. It is where the Department of
   Defense defends itself from attacks by information warriors.
   
   MICHAEL HIGGINS
   If you view our network like a building, like the Pentagon for
   instance  the Pentagon, the largest building in the world, has
   hundreds of windows and doors in it that I have to protect, and I have
   to make sure that every single one of those doors and every single one
   of those windows is locked. An intruder only has to find one opening.
   
   NARRATOR
   To protect the virtual Pentagon, Defense Information Systems Agency
   staff spend their time trying to hack into it through the Internet, to
   identify the open windows. If there is an intrusion, they give help
   down a hotline. The defences, though, are constantly being breached.
   
   MICHAEL HIGGINS
   Two of the most widely reported incidents within the Department of
   Defense over the past year have been, first of all, the sniffer
   incident  its commonly referred to as the Internet sniffer. People
   penetrated over 200 systems  were talking about payroll systems,
   were talking about personnel systems, medical systems, logistic
   systems and transportation systems. The other incident would be the
   16-year-old out of London that penetrated an air force computer system
   here in the United States. A small group of dedicated individuals, we
   believe, today, can disrupt national security. This is the cutting
   edge, and this is exactly where the Department of Defense needs to
   address the warfare of tomorrow.
   
   NARRATOR
   For other defence commentators it is not so much that the information
   age is increasing the dangers of war in cyberspace, but that the
   global traffic of information is increasing the dangers of real war.
   Carl Builder is an analyst at the Rand Corporation.
   
   CARL BUILDER
   I have a particular concern that the information revolution may spread
   the availability of nuclear devices or weapons very widely. I have
   that concern because the materials for nuclear devices are
   increasingly in commerce, and all that lies between the taking of
   those materials and making nuclear devices is information. I was so
   concerned about this when I was responsible for nuclear safeguards
   that we called in some nuclear bomb makers and they told us
   hair-raising recipes: If you really want to make a crude nuclear
   explosive, here is how you could do it, and do it very simply on your
   kitchen table, with materials that are available in the hardware
   store.
   
   NARRATOR
   It is not only a matter of DIY nuclear bombs. The weapons of the
   information age are advertised on global television and can be bought
   off the shelf.
   
   MARTIN LIBICKI
   Countries around the world have seen what we did with information
   technologies in the Gulf War, and many of these information
   technologies are available in the commercial market. Computers are
   available in the commercial market; 30 countries make unmanned aerial
   vehicles; access to space imagery is becoming available in the
   commercial market. The result is that I believe that our platforms,
   particularly our larger platforms, such as surface ships, will be a
   lot more visible in the future than they were during the Gulf War. And
   because we will be a lot more visible the next time around, we will be
   much more likely to be targets the next time around.
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   I think its illustrative to point out something which I bought in
   Mogadishu. Its a camel bell, and this is made out of wood. Its got a
   couple of wooden clackers in it. So here you are dealing with
   something which is pre-Bronze-Age. Interestingly enough, the reason
   that we didnt fly our soldiers out of Mogadishu by air was because we
   figured that they had some kind of a surface-to-air missile. So here
   you have someone who is living, really, in a different age, using
   information-age weapons systems.
   
   NARRATOR
   And just as control of information-age bombs is sliding away from the
   old centres of power, so is control of information itself.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   It used to be that either the government controlled the media, or some
   giant corporations controlled the media. Well thats fine. They were
   the producers of the message and therefore could control what was in
   the message. But now there is a breakdown, or a blurring of the line
   of who is the producer and who is the consumer, because the consumers
   have cameras and copying machines and PCs . .
   
   . CARL BUILDER
   And fax machines, and fax machines in the hands of people are power as
   we saw in the uprising in China in Tiannamen Square. We saw in Los
   Angeles where video camera . . .
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   . . . just shook up the country, and indeed parts of the world, by
   showing the police beating unmercifully a black man  who should not
   have been doing what he was doing at the time, but thats beside the
   point. It was the use of a citizen . . . the citizens eye altered
   government action.
   
   NARRATOR
   The use of the citizens computer may well have the same effect.
   
   TIMOTHY C. MAY (Computer Consultant)
   Im a cypher punk . . .
   
   CARL BUILDER
   The old organising principles and controls which weve had in the past
   for societies will be under massive assault.
   
   TIMOTHY MAY
   . . . Im connected. Enter my password  Im into the system; Im now
   on the Internet. Im now going to show how to send a piece of mail
   through whats called a remailer. This is software which takes
   incoming messages into a site, rebatches them up, takes off the outer
   envelope, if you will, and resends them to the next destination. By
   chaining a series of these remailings a message can be sent from one
   person to almost any other person on the planet without the identity
   of the sender being known, and this offers amazing possibilities for
   free speech, for whistleblowing . . .
   
   CARL BUILDER
   Were likely to see people forming interest groups, common-interest
   groups, to challenge their institutions, to challenge their own
   society and to challenge their governments.
   
   TIMOTHY MAY
   This is the message I sent out in that earlier example. Comments: this
   message did not originate from the above address, it was automatically
   remailed by an anonymous mail service. Heres the body of the message
    This is a test message sent to Digital Mixes. And I have an
   example of items for sale on Blacknet. This might be how to obtain
   RU-486, the abortion pill; Banned Books R Us, a bookstore
   specialising in banned books; and the largest collection of surplus
   military equipment in the world.
   
   CARL BUILDER
   What is happening is that the information devices are putting power in
   the hands of the individual rather than in the hands of new élites.
   
   TIMOTHY MAY
   This is a system in which no government can control what people say.
   People can communicate anonymously, untraceably and securely, and
   thats civil liberties through complex mathematics.
   
   JANET MORRIS
   Ideology can no longer be enforced through control of information.
   
   MICHAEL HIGGINS
   One hundred and eighty-six per cent growth annually is what the
   Internet is experiencing.
   
   CHUCK DE CARO
   This is terrific. Weve now got more information than weve ever had
   about anything before.
   
   COLONEL WARDEN
   The potentials are terribly exciting.
   
   COLONEL JONES
   To keep the peace . . .
   
   COLONEL CAMPEN
   Non-lethal weapons.
   
   COLONEL JONES
   . . . resolve the crisis . . .
   
   CHRISTOPHER MORRIS
   Weapons of mass protection.
   
   COLONEL JONES
   . . . to help contain the conflict.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   Realistically, what are the dangers?
   
   MARTIN LIBICKI
   Violence.
   
   CARL BUILDER
   Dissidence and terrorism.
   
   CHRISTOPHER MORRIS
   Mass destruction.
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   Battles to control information.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   Fought in the battlefields of cyberspace.
   
   CHUCK DE CARO
   On global television.
   
   GENERAL HARTZOG
   Pushed to the outer limits.
   
   GENERAL SALOMON
   Ten billion dollars.
   
   PHIL TAYLOR
   Propagandists.
   
   CHUCK DE CARO
   Soft war.
   
   COLONEL JONES
   Information.
   
   JANET MORRIS
   Information.
   
   GENERAL HARTZOG
   Information.
   
   COLONEL CAMPEN
   Information.
   
   CARL BUILDER
   Information.
   
   WILLIAM MARLOW
   Information.
   
   MARTIN LIBICKI
   Information.
   
   WINN SCHWARTAU
   Information.
   
   ALVIN TOFFLER
   Information.
   
   HEIDI TOFFLER
   Information.
   
   GENERAL SALOMON
   Information.
   
   GENERAL SULLIVAN
   There is no bloodless war, and in my view, there are no silver
   bullets.
   
  FURTHER READING
  
   
   
   Alvin and Heidi Toffler, War and Anti-War (Littlebrown 1993)
   
   Winn Schwartau, Information Warfare (Thunders Mouth Press 1994)
   
   Peter G. Neumann, Computer-Related Risks (ACM Press 1995)
   
   Col. Alan D. Campen, The First Information War (AFCEA International
   Press 1993)
   
   Martin Van Creveld, Proliferation and the Future of Conflict (Free
   Press 1993)
   
   Produced by Broadcasting Support Services for BBC Horizon.
   
   Edited by Peter Millson
   
   This text is also available, as a booklet, from:
   
          The I-Bomb
          PO Box 7
          London W3 6XJ
          
   (Priced GBP 2 including postage and packing, cheques payable to BSS.)
   
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