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Space Science

'Satan' Missile Now Launches Satellites 538

colonist writes "The Russian intercontinental ballistic missile known to NATO as SS-18 Satan was converted to a launch vehicle (called Dnepr) and is now launching American communications satellites for profit. 'The giant rocket boasted up to 10 Multiple Independently-Targeted Reentry Vehicles, or MIRVs, each of which would have a carried a hydrogen bomb thermonuclear warhead to incinerate a different North American or Western European city. Even more terrifying, some of them were believed to have been fitted with aerosol warheads to spray smallpox virus over their U.S. targets.' However: 'With the Space Shuttle still grounded, the new generation of American boosters still being developed, and demand for reliable launching rockets building up around the world, the prospect of having a huge already-constructed supply of giant boosters built by the most experienced and reliable rocket engineers on earth has been embraced around the world.'"
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'Satan' Missile Now Launches Satellites

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  • Careful! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:33AM (#9580204)
    Let's hope they load the right payload. Nothing like accidentally sending up a bunch of hydrogen bombs!
    • Re:Careful! (Score:4, Funny)

      by networkBoy ( 774728 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @10:40AM (#9582011) Journal

      UP is not what worries me ;) -nB
    • Korea (Score:4, Insightful)

      by einhverfr ( 238914 ) <chris DOT travers AT gmail DOT com> on Thursday July 01, 2004 @12:07PM (#9583205) Homepage Journal
      Actually my first thought was that I could see a Korean reunification being a good thing for the South Korean economy for a similar reason. S. Korea has little to no launcher technology, and the ballistic missile program in N. Korea could serve as a starting point for a commsat (or any other satalite) launcher program. Sure not quite the same, but close enough to make the problem much easier.

      Of course, the conservative think-tanks here are generally opposed to Korean reunification (as they fear that it could lead to a standoff between China and Japan) but it will happen, and when it does, I hope that we in the US have helped the process along rather than stalled it (stalling it would alienate us and make a China/Japan standoff scenario more likely IMHO).
  • Not the first post (Score:5, Insightful)

    by julesh ( 229690 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:33AM (#9580206)
    Sorry, am I the only one here who doesn't think a virus for which a vaccine exists is a worse threat than an H-bomb?
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:37AM (#9580236)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by Big Nothing ( 229456 ) <tord.stromdal@gmail.com> on Thursday July 01, 2004 @09:04AM (#9580899)
        "I also seem to remember the vaccine being a HUGE pain in the ass, and many soldiers complaining about the care it took and getting sick because of it."

        To paraphrase grandparent post:

        While you're chewing on an H-bomb, I'll try to manage coping with the smallpox vaccine.
      • by rxmd ( 205533 )
        Actually, over here in Germany it was pretty common to vaccinate against smallpox until well into the seventies, and in East Germany into the eighties. Not that the Soviets would have dropped smallpox on East Germany. It's quite funny, if you go to a club you can tell if a girl is from West or East Germany simply because of the scar from the vaccination.

        I was born in West Germany in 1977 and I've got a vaccination certificate by the WHO.

        (On the other hand, it made sense for the East Germans to vaccinate

      • by Rahga ( 13479 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @09:09AM (#9580952) Journal
        I don't know how it is outside the US, but since when did the general population over the age 40 count as being "nearly nobody" ...?
        • by nickco3 ( 220146 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @09:59AM (#9581448)
          For maximum effectiveness smallpox vaccine needs to be readministered every 3 - 5 years. All those over 40 that were once vaccinated will derive very little benefit from it now.
        • If only people over 40 live, that's kinda it... if all children die and you are left with only women over 40, repopulating the species is a bit tough...

          Note: I don't AGREE with the Slashdot crowd, I think that we would survive a Smallpox attack, and I also think that the bio-engineered smallpox would never launch... it's not a USEFUL weapon (the goal of a weapon is to defeat the otherside), it's a doomsday weapon... i.e. If a US First Strike annihilates EVERYTHING (cities, military bases, missile silos,
      • by Anonymous Coward
        I also seem to remember the vaccine being a HUGE pain in the ass, and many soldiers complaining about the care it took and getting sick because of it.

        If it was a pain in the ass, then the doctor administered the vaccine to the wrong part of the body.
    • by philntc ( 735836 )
      IANA-Doctor, but I've read that the majority of people vaccinated against small pox more that a couple of decades ago are not nearly as immune anymore. Furthermore, I don't think they've done smallpox vaccinations in quite a while. You don't see those two little scars on one arm of kids less than 30 years old.

      Speaking of which, is anyone over the age of 30 just amazed at what a different world this is from the 80's? Sure, communist menace is substituted by 'terrorist menace' but at least MAD is less l
      • by solarrhino ( 581267 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:54AM (#9580354) Homepage Journal
        Speaking of which, is anyone over the age of 30 just amazed at what a different world this is from the 80's? Sure, communist menace is substituted by 'terrorist menace' but at least MAD is less likely.

        Why do you think Reagan's funeral got such reverent coverage? I was against him at the time, but I was wrong, and he was right. He truly changed the world for the better. Personally, I believe that in 20 years, we'll look back and say the same for W.

        • by booyah ( 28487 )
          Personally, I believe that in 20 years, we'll look back and say the same for W.

          that i truely doubt... I pray that my children will learn in their history class what a horrible beast he really is...

          If they dont learn that, odds are they will learn that the "party" invented the airplane, and that oceania is always at war with terrorism...

        • by cOdEgUru ( 181536 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:19AM (#9580521) Homepage Journal
          Reagan didnt get any coverage other dead Presidents didnt enjoy. How about Kennedy? Also, its been a while we lost a President and a Republican one at that, during a Republican administration, at these times of turmoil.. Ofcourse, half the country would want to show their respect.

          Now, I disagree about the part about him changing the world for the better. Rest of the world really doesnt care when he was alive, far less now that he is dead. The only time that I ever heard of him was his name associated with the infamous "Starwars" and Reagan-omics. Both really bad ideas (ofcourse can be disputed). But the fact of the matter is Gorbachev had more to do about putting things in order than Reagan purely because (1) Russia was already crumbling (2) Gorbachev was more far sighted than all the Russian presidents before him and (3) Gorbachev realized the world was changing and he had to lead his country to change with it.

          The only smart thing Reagan did was he realized what Russia was up to and instead of thwarting their efforts (and making sure Cold war stayed the same), he realized his legacy would be remembered for ending it, and helped Gorbachev speed things up. Also like how Clinton is remembered for not screwing things up when the economy was in an upswing, Reagan will be remembered for not screwing things up. You cant measure a president and his legacy especially when he passed away recently, especially when his memories are fresh and emotions supercede reason and logic, but for definite, years from today, he will be known as a president who was sensible and farsighted enough to let Russia and Communism die a slow death and not for being a visionary neither a statesman.

          Now your thoughts about W just plain out scares me. W is neither a statesman nor a visionary. He spoke of bipartisanship and pledged compassionate conservatism but showed neither. The country is more divided than ever and we are at war with different enemies and the army is stretched thinner than butter on whitebread. What were to happen if a new adversary emerges, taking advantage of this situation? How would the world respond? No Sir, these are troubled times and instead of being fortunate enough to be led by a president who were a true leader, a free thinker, an optimist and a realist, what we have here is a fragile humanbeing who is being manipulated by his cohorts, by the religious right, by the same people who should keep his course straight, but instead choose to lead him astray. No Sir, W will be known as a president who could have achieved far more, but fell far short of his goals and led the country through a path of gloom, down a road littered with the corpses of its own soldiers and its shattered dreams.
        • by paiute ( 550198 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:21AM (#9580536)
          Why do you think Reagan's funeral got such reverent coverage? I was against him at the time, but I was wrong, and he was right. He truly changed the world for the better. Personally, I believe that in 20 years, we'll look back and say the same for W.

          Man, we don't do history very well, do we. Please RTFHB. Just 35 years before the Gipper was elected, Soviets suffered 19 million civilian deaths out of a population of 194 million and lost 9 million killed and missing in an army of 27 million. So yeah, they were pussies who rolled over when faced with a little adversity from a B-list actor.

        • by LizardKing ( 5245 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:24AM (#9580557)

          I believe that in 20 years, we'll look back and say the same for W.

          The difference between Reagan and Bush junior, is that Reagan's anti-Soviet rhetoric was mostly for public consumption. Behind the scenes, there was a great deal of diplomacy going on which ultimately lead to the arms limitation treaties. The Reagan and Bush senior regimes were much more pragmatic than the Rumsfeld / Cheney / Bush junior regime. We'll look back on the Bush junior regime in 20 years time with as much disgust as most people look at it now.

          The belligerent attitude of the current regime comes as no surprise to those of us who kept up with what the various neo-con think tanks that influenced the current regime were saying in the mid-1990's. Cheif amongst their suggestions was that Saddam Hussein should be given a whipping for going against the wishes of the last Republican regime. Saddam had been the pet Middle-East strongman of the US throughout the 1980's, but he overstepped the mark by invading Kuwait. Having glossed over his previous gassing of Kurds, the Bush senior regime was thrown into turmoil by the Kuwait invasion. This is why there was a lack of firm comment on the situation from the Whitehouse in the immediate aftermath.

        • by Ami Ganguli ( 921 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:24AM (#9580559) Homepage

          Hmm. To me it seems a bit of revisionist history to credit Reagan with ending the cold war. It was Gorby who made all the peace overtures and changed things in the Soviet Union. Remember "Perestroika"?

          Reagan, reluctantly, went along for the ride.

          Here's an interesting article by Gorby in The International Herald Tribune [iht.com]. It's very generous to Reagan, but even in saying nice things about the late president, you can read between the lines that Reagan's attitude to the Soviets changed fundamentally between his first and second term. It was Gorby's reforms that forced the U.S. to acknowledge that the Soviets really wanted peace.

    • a virus does have the advantage of not creating a giant glass carpark devoid of life...
    • A vaccine that hasn't been used in 40 years. So you're left with a bunch of healthy retirees and no children to take care of them?

      It'd be like living in florida, everywhere. I'd personally take the H-bomb.
    • by martinde ( 137088 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:45AM (#9580297) Homepage
      > Sorry, am I the only one here who doesn't think a virus for which a vaccine exists is a worse
      > threat than an H-bomb?

      Well, if a vaccine exists you'd be right. There was an article in some magazine I read - Discover, Scientific American, IEEE Spectrum, or possibly Newsweek, a few years back about the USSR's now-defunct bioweapons program. There were some US scientists who visited one of the main labs where the work had taken place. They were looking at some large apparatus where they would test biological agents on various animals and the US scientist asked if he could take samples from inside of this thing. The Russian scientist giving the tour said something like "I would let you but your vaccinations would be no good on some of the strains of smallpox tested in there." The article also talked about how much of this stuff they had manufactured - I recall the measurement being in tons...
    • I certainly do not agree. I would think that small pox would have a dramatic death toll... initially. A hydrogen bomb thermonuclear warhead would not only vaporizes thousands on explosion, and kills thousands (or millions) more in hours/days after the hit, but also implant radiation into the environment to cause a dead zone for years to come. No, I think that the thermonuclear warhead wins in the contest of "Greater of Two Evils".
    • by TGK ( 262438 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:50AM (#9580335) Homepage Journal
      Saddly no, and they're all wrong too.

      The smallpox strain the Soviets put in ICBMS was called India1. It's an extrodinarily "hot" strain of pox gathered in India shortly before eradication was complete.

      The Soviets then "heated" the India1 Strain up, probably by introducing the human IL4 gene to it. IL4 acts as a jammer against the human immune system, as the pox replicates it generates a huge volume of human immune signal chemicals.

      A independent tests have shown IL4 mousepox to blow through vaccinations that in mice as well as natural immunity to the virus. The only mice that survived an IL4 mousepox were naturaly immune mice that had been infected with a less dangerous strain of the pox within a week or two.

      Because mice and mousepox are reasonable models for humans and smallpox, this is terrifying.

      Furthermore, WHO stocks about 1 dose of smallpox vaccine for every 17,000 people on earth. Since smallpox has a multiplication rate of somewhere between 10 and 30 (i.e. each patient infects between 10 and 30 other people) a massive infection such as an ICBM delivery of the disease would be completely uncontainable using the ring vaccination methodology employed by the WHO eradicators.

      For more information on smallpox check out Richard Presonton's "The Demon in the Freezer."

      India 1 is still out there by the way, and the Russians have told us they know that Iran and North Korea have it as well as a few other countries.

      • by lawpoop ( 604919 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:59AM (#9580389) Homepage Journal
        So it would be time for cowpox again? Milkmaids used to catch cowpox, and then people noticed that they wouldn't come down with small pox. Threads from the sores of people with cowpox was used to infect others, which was the first vaccination.
        • by 0prime ( 792333 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:57AM (#9580843)
          IANAD BIDSAAHILN (but I did stay at a Holiday Inn last night)

          No, a vaccination against small pox is simply a matter of being infected with the vaccinia virus. This virus has a similar makeup to smallpox, but is not nearly as deadly or infectious. A "heated up" strain of India-1 (which is already extremely virulent) would blow through any vaccination that is out there.

          Smallpox comes in several "colors". You have your Variola minor (chicken pox style 1-3% fatality), your Variola major (pustule style 30-50% fatality), Hemorrhagic (shudder, just hope you don't get it), and Flat (another deadly strain). The occurrence of the last two in individuals with Variola major is about 7% combined. This is the average run of the mill smallpox. A heated up strain of India-1 would have a much higher fatality rate and a much higher occurrence of Hemorrhagic smallpox. And as TGK mentioned, it probably has been modified to carry the IL-4 gene, which would cause your body to go into a cytokine storm before your internal organs liquefy.

          It is a slow and painful death that you are conscious through for the greater extent. I never understood how hateful it was to wish a pox upon someone until I learned about how horrible smallpox can be.

      • This is a great post and refers to a great book. I've OCR scanned Preston's 'The Demon in the Freezer' and try to keep it available on Kazaa.

        Since smallpox is so dangerous, so contagious, and has been erraticated from the earth, anyone who generates stockpiles of the virus outside of a stongly supervised international research study is committing a crime against humanity. They should be standing trial in The Hague, regardless of their national or religious justification.

        The difference between ato
    • why would you care about a virus more than being vaporized?

    • Quite Honestly, No.

      Any bug of that nature can only kill so many and then it has run its course. There will always be some segment of the population that is immune to the virus. Let's assume that 99% if wiped out (way too high of a number). We currently have something like 6 billion on this planet. If only 1% remains, then you still have 6 million. Basically, the population continues. Most importantly, the virus is then pretty done. This assumes that it is not sticking around due to shifts.

      Besides, one of
  • I am okay with this (Score:3, Informative)

    by mirko ( 198274 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:34AM (#9580210) Journal
    IIRC, the first NASA rockets were invented by the German scientist who invented rockets, so, it's just happening again decades later.
  • by eclectus ( 209883 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:35AM (#9580221) Homepage
    Ahhh, swords into plowshares....

    It makes even this harden cynic smile a bit.
  • If the SATAN missiles allow for organizations to get their satellites into orbit at a cheaper price, this is a very good idea.
  • by LordPixie ( 780943 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:40AM (#9580258) Journal
    Must every slashdot article mention MicroSoft in the headline ?!?


    --LordPixie
  • Obligatory (Score:3, Insightful)

    by aussie_a ( 778472 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:40AM (#9580259) Journal
    Why must we have the cliche Russia jokes? No-one finds them funny. So just quit it. But this does sound great. Another case of people working together when it comes to space. Can there be any negative posts about this story?
  • Demon in the Freezer (Score:5, Informative)

    by Gothmolly ( 148874 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:43AM (#9580274)
    Highly recommended book specifically discussing the Soviet (and many many others') smallpox warfare plans. The Russians made smallpox by the tank-truck-load, and as late as the early 90's, had missle test programs where ICBMs launched, MIRVed, then little bomblets with parachutes descended. Where did it all go when the USSR broke up? How about places like North Korea, China, Iran? The US maintains stockpiles as well, don't let the glasses fool ya'.
    Very good book.
  • by grunt107 ( 739510 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:43AM (#9580275)
    This is an interesting method to disarm rival countries - buy them out!!! Here's $10M - how 'bout you unscrew that nuclear warhead and attach our new On-Star sattelite? Would you turn that old T35 into a water fountain for $1000? $10k for a MiG crop-duster? This does extrapolate a little from Sun Tzu and Zhuge Liang's theories on conflicts. Get your enemies to see the benefits of working with you and the 'war' is won without firing a shot. A bit flamey, but if the billions used to 'pacify' Iraqi unrest were partially paid to the Iraqi citizens, would the current chaos be quelled? If only me magic 8-ball still worked!!.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:44AM (#9580292)
    The SS-18 is now the cheapest ride into space. The AMSAT-NA (Radio Amateur Satellite Corp. - North America) OSCAR - Echo
    (Oribiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio) was launched June 29 by SS-18 (also the Italian Amateur UniSat-3) as secondary payloads.

    http://www.amsat.org

    73 de w0uhf
  • by robnauta ( 716284 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:44AM (#9580293)
    The USA does the same thing, Lockheed Martin converts old Titan missiles for satellite launching purposes. See this story [bowlingfortruth.com] for some pictures.
    Michael Moore featured this plant in his movie, calling it a weapons factory that makes weapons of mass destruction. When someone challenged him about this, he said that such a rocket could launch a spy satellite that could be the one that starts a war, so he still thinks it's justified to call satellite-launching rockets "weapons of mass destruction".
    • what's your point? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by dekeji ( 784080 )
      I fail to see what your point is or why you are dragging Moore's film into this.

      So, yes, Russia converts weapons into civilian launch capacity because they desparately need money and because they know that they simply aren't the superpower they once were.

      What does that have to do with the US? The US isn't giving up on being a superpower. I don't know why the US converts Titan missiles for satellite purposes, but it clearly isn't because of any serious attempt to reduce US military dominance.

      The US cont
  • Shelf life (Score:5, Interesting)

    by RogerWilco ( 99615 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:50AM (#9580330) Homepage Journal
    I suppose these missiles were made in the USSR days, and as even missiles probably have a limited 'shelf life' and they must be 15+ years old
    I think it's just common sense to use them while they still are in working order, and make some hard needed cash in the process. I suppose Russia will them build some new ones for they still remaining WMD with the cash they earned this way, or have a completely different delivery system altogether.
    Isn't this the same reason the USA are/were using redstone's as launch vehicules?
  • MIRV (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Beolach ( 518512 ) <beolach@juMONETno.com minus painter> on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:51AM (#9580338) Homepage Journal
    Is the first thing that comes to anyone else's mind when they see MIRV Scorched Earth [classicgaming.com]? Man that was a fun game... now I'm going to have to dig it out & get it running again.
  • SS-18 Satan (Score:3, Funny)

    by ThisIsFred ( 705426 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @07:54AM (#9580361) Journal
    Gotta love those NATO designations. Imagine what would happen if a bunch of Fundies found out their latest religious program was made possible via a satellite that was launched by Satan. And from the heart of the former [atheist] "Evil Empire" no less.
    • by JosKarith ( 757063 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:00AM (#9580396)
      "Riding to heaven on Satan's mighty thruster..."

      Please, please, please God I don't care which fundie says it but please let the world have that soundbyte to cherish foever.
    • NATO codenames (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Oxygen99 ( 634999 )
      Something I've been wondering for a while, who dreams up those oddball NATO designations? How the hell do we get from 'Flanker' (SU-27), 'Badger' (TU-16) and 'Fishbed' (Mig-21) to 'Satan' 'Havoc' and 'Foxbat'?!

      Did the old guys get fired for not taking it seriously enough?
  • Poisonous fuel (Score:4, Informative)

    by Maimun ( 631984 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:07AM (#9580437)
    The article at www.globalsecurity.org says that the fuel is
    dinitrogen tetroxide (N2O4) and heptyl (a UDMH [unsymmetrical dimethyl hydrazine] compound)
    Dinitrogen tetroxide is poisonous [umn.edu] and so is Unsymmetrical Dimethyl Hydrazine - UDMH [unicef.nl] (look near the bottom). See also [unl.edu]. I doubt that the chemicals produced in the burning of those two are not poisonous.
    • Re:Poisonous fuel (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Johan Veenstra ( 61679 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:40AM (#9580684)
      Na and Cl are both nasty chemicals, but I eat NaCl every day.
    • Re:Poisonous fuel (Score:5, Interesting)

      by GileadGreene ( 539584 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @09:21AM (#9581067) Homepage
      Uh, hate to break it to you, but plenty of US satellites (and probably launch vehicles as well) use those exact same chemicals. They are the classic propellant mixture for high performance bi-propellant propulsion systems. There's been a push lately to move to so-called 'non-toxic storable propellants', such as high-concetration hydrogen peroxide. But there's a slight performance hit involved, plus a lot of cost in process changes, so it hasn't really caught on so far.
    • Re:Poisonous fuel (Score:3, Informative)

      by MtViewGuy ( 197597 )
      Yes, the fuels are quite toxic, but nitrogen tetroxide and UDMH are used on military ballistic rockets because of two primary reasons: 1) they can be stored at room temperature (with the right safety measures) for long periods of time, and 2) these two fuels are hypergolic (e.g., they will burn when mixed without an external ignition source), so the rocket design can actually be simpler.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:11AM (#9580470)
    This is nothing new.
    The russians have been launching small payloads on their submarine-launched Volna and Shtil [fas.org] for years.

    More info on the R36 family of rockets is available here [astronautix.com]
  • MX (Score:5, Informative)

    by Baldrson ( 78598 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:28AM (#9580597) Homepage Journal
    The US has been doing this all along of course, starting with the liquid fueled ICBM's of the 1950s such as the Atlas, which became General Dynamics' workhorse launch vehicle for commercial satellites.

    The military went away from liquid fuel for logistical reasons and the Minuteman missle series, using solid boosters, were deployed. The Minuteman 3 evolved into the MX Missile aka Peacekeeper, which required only a small crew and was portable making it a "mobile missle" in some deployments.

    This logistical advantage was the basis of was the basis of E'Prime Aerospace's proposed launch vehicle series [eprimeaerospace.com] in the late 1980s. Through an effort with the Reagan Administration they acquired rights to acquire the existing assembly lines, 2 of which were still packed up in crates, and managed to cut preliminary deals with the contractors for the parts. The design mods included stripping off the radiation hardening, saving substantial weight, and replacing the kevlar fiber with graphite fiber in the tankage windings, something the Air Force had already funded at about the time the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty [state.gov] put an end to their further development. The launch site preferred was Ascention Island due to its location near the equator, ease of access from Florida (where the production lines were to exist) and a landing strip there that could receive the stages of the rockets in separate shipping containers via DC-3 transport, and launch from a cliff to the east. There was also a problem with the upper stage of the MX containing nitroglycerine, and that stage was eliminated or modified in E'Prime's designs.

    It was a good idea. Something not quite as radical was, later, picked up by Orbital Sciences Corporation in their Taurus launcher, which used some surplus MX segments. E'Prime didn't want to do that due to quality control problems on stages that had been stored -- and indeed I was told that when O.S. procured their first MX stage, it had already been rejected by E'Prime due to a huge occlusion in the X-Ray image. They obviously could never have flown stage in any mission and it is unclear why they procured it.

    The company had management as well as funding problems, and when I came on board in late 1991 as VP for Public Affairs, it was a few weeks from closing its doors. I really thought the idea of putting the MX into commercial production for satellite launches was a good one and hated to see it die, especially since I had just testified before Congress regarding commercialization of space technology on the day SALT was put into action [slashdot.org]. I was already broke due to the grassroots lobbying efforts but decided to go on my credit cards and take an unpaid job at E'Prime to help save the company. While there we managed to get the first Ka band license put through the FCC for one of E'Primes potential customers (Norris Communications' NORSTAR satellite [lta.com]), and as a result the stock, by then it was a pink sheet penny stock, had a rebound, going from a low of fractional cents per share to 30 cents a share. I had to leave E'Prime when after a few months they still were unable to pay a salary and I was at the end of my rope. The IRS had a lot of fun with me during a subsequent audit, and they're after me again subsequent to another effort of mine [geocities.com], but that's another story to be written. still being written. Suffice to say I'm getting really sick of the way the US government acts toward inventors and technologists -- most of whom need to be tax lawyers these days in order to avoid prisoner gang rape these days due to the incomprehensible statutes written by tax lawyers for the rest of us to follow.

    PS: For more information you may be able to get the article I wrote for "Space Technology International" annual edition in 1992, from interlibrary loan.

  • by jazman ( 9111 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:33AM (#9580636)
    > Even more terrifying

    Ok, I've got to ask this question. What exactly do you Americans think the rest of the world thinks when you announce a new form of destruction?

    Seems you guys think it's ok if you have big guns, but it's not ok if others do. Here's a clue for you: this is why you're a terrorist target.
    • by Shivetya ( 243324 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @10:01AM (#9581466) Homepage Journal
      It is not because we have big guns that we are a terrorist target.

      The US is a terrorist target because our way of life threatens their way of life. In other words, we seek freedom for ourselves and believe others should have the same choice. Most of these terrorist are from oppresive regimes that require terror and force to remain in power, hence we are a threat to them and they are using the only means they know how to react.

      For your information all coutries are terrorist targets. The US just happens to have the highest profile because other that Israel and Russia very few countries are actively trying to combat terrorism.

      What will your claim be when Terrorist bomb the summer olympics? You know its a target, I don't think athletes have guns.

      • by dekeji ( 784080 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @11:19AM (#9582620)
        For your information all coutries are terrorist targets. The US just happens to have the highest profile because other that Israel and Russia very few countries are actively trying to combat terrorism.

        European nations have been the target of modern-day terrorism for decades. It's just that many Americans (you are an example) have been living in such ignorance that they never noticed that, either domestic or elsewhere. Only when terrorists struck a bunch of iconic buildings did the general US population finally notice, and the reaction has been paranoid and ineffective so far. It's been paranoid because, despite all the fear mongering by politicians, terrorism remains a negligible cause of death in the US.

        As for why the US is the target of Islamic terrorism, that shouldn't be a mystery to anybody: it's because of US middle-east policies, foremost support of Israel. Those policies may or may not be justified, but whether they are doesn't change the fact that they are the cause of terrorism.

        If other nations had done to the US what the US has done to a country like Iran, Americans like you would be literally up in arms: you'd be the terrorists. Those people are pretty much of the same mindset as you.

        The US is a terrorist target because our way of life threatens their way of life.

        That is true, but not in the way you intended. The US way of life threatens "their" way of life because of the voracious American appetite for natural resources and military influence. If the US stopped engaging in the Middle East, there would be no Middle Eastern terrorism against the US. Oh, sure, those people would still not like the US, but they wouldn't bother coming here to bomb us.

        In other words, we seek freedom for ourselves and believe others should have the same choice.

        Nations like Switzerland and Sweden are highly tolerant, open, and free societies, far more liberal socially and far less religious than the US. If terrorists acted because they felt threatened by political freedoms, sexuality, and godlessness, as you suggest, they'd pick Switzerland and Sweden as their primary targets. But, in reality, those countries are largely being left alone by terrorists.
  • by KavanaghNY ( 246972 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @08:47AM (#9580735) Homepage
    "With the Space Shuttle still grounded"

    The grounding of the space shuttle has nearly no effect on the demand for space launches. It was forbidden from carring commercial payloads after the Challenger disaster. Additionally, almost any payload that the Shuttle has to carry to the International Space Station for the next few years can *only* be carried by the shuttle.

    However, space station material resupply is shuffled over to Soyuz launchers.

  • by GileadGreene ( 539584 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @09:17AM (#9581035) Homepage
    The article says:
    With the Space Shuttle still grounded, the new generation of American boosters still being developed, and demand for reliable launching rockets building up around the world, the prospect of having a huge already-constructed supply of giant boosters built by the most experienced and reliable rocket engineers on earth has been embraced around the world.

    I say: Yeah right! The shuttle hasn't launched a satellite in years, let alone a commercial payload. And the 'new generation' of American boosters aren't 'still being developed', they exist right now: the Pegasus and Taurus (Orbital Sciences Corp) at the low end of the market, and the EELVs, i.e. Delta IV and Atlas V (Boeing and Lockheed respectively), at the high end of the market (NASA 'next-gen' launch vehicle will most likely be one of the EELVs). Yet Boeing and Lockheed both claimed they couldn't get sufficient commercial launch contracts for their EELVs, and thus jacked the price up on the DOD launches they were slated to do. Even Pegasus and Taurus launches are rare. Why? Because the cost a crapload! Launch costs can be a significant fraction (up to 50%) of the cost of a satellite. Commercial contractors are launching on Russian rockets because they can do it for 1/5 to 1/10 of the price of a US launch.

    The only 'next-gen' launch vehicle likely to put a dent in that anytime soon is SpaceX [spacex.com]'s Falcon, which promises launch costs on the order of $6M. If they can actually pull it off, Falcon has the potential to be a game changer in the launch market. Until then, cheap Russian launches are the way to go.

  • Aerosol warheads? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Phurd Phlegm ( 241627 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @09:27AM (#9581112)
    Anyone else think this sounds a little unlikely? It seems like you would get--you should excuse the expression--much more bang for your buck by using a low-tech dispersal mechanism (e.g., losers with aerosol cans in bus stations and airports) than by using a costly mechanism that allows the target to tell exactly who infected them.

    Plus, you're probably going to get a launch at one of your cities for each of your launches before the target finds out that you aren't using nuclear warheads.

    This isn't to say it's impossible--it sounds technically doable--but under what cases would it make any sense? The referenced article had as much techical detail as the Slashdot article--one sentence. A Google search for "aerosol warhead" suprisingly produces only a single reference. I didn't know there was and query that would produce a single response, unless you just copied the whole document into the search box . . . .

  • all in the name (Score:3, Insightful)

    by JungleBoy ( 7578 ) on Thursday July 01, 2004 @10:49AM (#9582118)

    I find it amusing that if the missile is pointed at us we call it 'Satan [globalsecurity.org]'. If we point it at them, its called a 'Peacekeeper [globalsecurity.org]' whose role is 'Nuclear Deterence'.

Ocean: A body of water occupying about two-thirds of a world made for man -- who has no gills. -- Ambrose Bierce

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