February 4, 2026

Darth Trump: Pushing to Turn Space Into a War Zone

012719-01-Trump-Space-Force
Darth Trump: Pushing to Turn Space Into a War Zone

Darth Trump: Pushing to Turn Space Into a War Zone


Typical of far-right ideology wanting to turn everything, including space, into a war zone.


Darth Trump: Pushing to Turn Space Into a War Zone

By Dr. Karl Grossman
Professor of American Studies, Media and Communications
Old Westbury College


Beginning to fill in his declaration of last year about turning space into a war zone and establishing a U.S. Space Force, President Trump was at the Pentagon last week promoting a plan titled โ€œMissile Defense Review.โ€

As The New York Times said in its headline on the scheme:: โ€œPlans Evoke 1983 โ€˜Star Warsโ€™ Program.โ€

Bruce Gagnon, coordinator of the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space, called it โ€œprovocative and destabilizing and basically insane.โ€

As Trump stated at the Pentagon on January 17: โ€œWe will recognize that space is a new war-fighting domain with the Space Force leading the way. My upcoming budget will invest in a space-based missile defense layer technology. Itโ€™s ultimately going to be a very, very big part of our defense and obviously of our offense.โ€

The new United States space military plan comes despite the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 that designates space as a global commons to be used for peaceful purposes. The U.S., the United Kingdom and then Soviet Union worked together in assembling the treaty. It has been ratified or signed by 123 nations.

The release of the 100-page โ€œMissile Defense Reviewโ€ follows the Trump announcement, also at the Pentagon, in June, that he is moving to establish a U.S. Space Force as a sixth branch of the U.S. armed forces. He stated then: โ€œIt is not enough to merely have an American presence in space, we must have American dominance in space.โ€

The component of the โ€œMissile Defense Reviewโ€ that closely resembles the โ€œStar Warsโ€ program of President Reagan involves what it describes as โ€œspace-based interceptors.โ€

As The Times said: โ€œIn the most contentious proposal, the report embraced Reaganโ€™s Star Wars plan of putting weapons in space to shoot down enemy missiles during ascent.โ€ The Times also noted that โ€œthe document was careful to describe the step as largely a research projectโ€”for now.โ€

Of this component, the โ€œMissile Defense Reviewโ€ states: โ€œThe space-basing of interceptors also may provide significant advantages, particularly for boost-phase defense. As directed by Congress, DoD will identify the most promising technologies, and estimated schedule, cost, and personnel requirements for a possible space based defensive layer that achieves early operational capability for boost-phase defense.โ€

The Reagan Star Wars program also utilized a defense rationaleโ€”it was formally called the Strategic Defense Initiative. It was based on orbiting battle platforms with nuclear reactors or โ€œsuperโ€ plutonium systems on board providing the power for hypervelocity guns, particle beams and laser weapons. Despite its claim of being defensive, it was criticized for being offensive and a major element in what the U.S. military in numerous documents then and since has described as โ€œfull spectrum dominanceโ€ of the Earth below that the U.S. is seeking in taking the โ€œultimate high groundโ€ of space. 

Gagnon, whose Maine-based organization has been a world leader since its formation in 1992 in challenging the weaponization of space, said: โ€œThe new Trump space proposal is a key element in Pentagon first-strike attack planning sold to the public as ‘missile defense’. The system is not actually designed to protect the U.S. from every nuclear missile launched at usโ€”that would be a mathematical impossibility. This Star Wars system would only work as the ‘shield’ to be used to pick off Russian or Chinese retaliatory responses after a U.S. first-strike sword is thrust.โ€

He said โ€œwe know this because the Space Command,โ€ the division of the U.S. Air Force which Trump seeks to have succeeded by a separate Space Force, โ€œhas been computer war gaming such a scenario for yearsโ€”they call it the ‘Red team’ versus the ‘Blue team.โ€™โ€

โ€œThe kickerโ€ regarding the U.S. space military plans, said Gagnon, โ€œis that the costs would be colossalโ€”what the aerospace industry has long said would be the ‘largest industrial project in human history.โ€™ The only way the U.S. can pay for it is by cutting Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and by twisting the arms of NATO members to pony up more money.โ€

The Outer Space Treaty was spurred, as Craig Eisendrath, who had been a U.S. State Department officer involved in its creation, noted in the 2001 TV documentary that I wrote and narrate, โ€œStar Wars Returns,โ€ by the Soviet Union launching the first space satellite, Sputnik, in 1957. Eisendrath said โ€œwe sought to de-weaponize space before it got weaponizedโ€ฆto keep war out of space.โ€

It provides that nations โ€œundertake not to place in orbit around the Earth any objects carrying nuclear weapons or any other kinds of weapons of mass destruction, install such weapons on celestial bodies, or station such weapons in space in any other manner.โ€

In recent decades, Canada, Russia and China have been leaders in pushing a treaty that would broaden the Outer Space Treatyโ€”the Prevention of an Arms Race in Outer Space (PAROS) Treaty. This treaty would not only ban nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction but any weapons in space. But U.S. administration after administration, Democrat and Republican, have refused to support the PAROS Treaty, thus providing a veto of its passage at the United Nations.

The new โ€œMissile Defense Reviewโ€ is explicit in how the U.S. โ€œwill not accept any limitation or constraint on the development or deployment of missile defense capabilities.โ€

The announcement of the new U.S. space plan came a day after the U.S. confirmed it would initiate under the Trump administration a withdrawal from another treaty, this one between the U.S. and the then Soviet Union, limiting nuclear missiles, the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty of 1987.

Russia is warning that the โ€œMissile Defense Reviewโ€ will fuel an arms race in space. An Associated Press story out of Russia last week reported: โ€œThe Russian Foreign Ministry described the new U.S. strategy as a proof of โ€˜Washingtonโ€™s desire to ensure uncontested military domination in the world.โ€™โ€

โ€œIt warned that the expansion of the U.S. missile defense system โ€˜will inevitably start an arms race in space with the most negative consequences for international security and stability.โ€™โ€

The โ€œโ€™implementation of its plans and approaches will not strengthen security of the U.S. and its allies,โ€™ the ministry said in a statement. โ€˜Attempts to take that path will have the opposite effect and deal another heavy blow to international stability.โ€™โ€

The AP story said: โ€œThe Russian Foreign Ministry described the review as an attempt to reproduce President Ronald Reaganโ€™s โ€˜Star Warsโ€™ missile defense plans on a new technological level and urged the Trump administration to โ€˜come to its sensesโ€™ and engage in arms control talks with Russia.โ€

Meanwhile, Defense News last week questioned whether Congress will fund the โ€œMissile Defense Reviewโ€ proposals. It said that โ€œunless Congress approves the major funding increases that will be required to make it a reality, many of those programs may fall by the waysideโ€”and questions are emerging over whether these systems will be funded by the Democratic House of Representatives that is looking to cut defense spending.โ€

Professor Francis A. Boyle, professor of international law at the University of Illinois College of Law, who has long written about space military and weaponization issues, ties the new space plan to where the Reagan Star Wars plan got its name: โ€œWell Lucas Films and its successors,โ€ stated Boyle, โ€œhave done all they can to keep their Star Wars franchise alive for the past four decades and milk it for all itโ€™s worth. And now the Pentagon will be keeping their Star Wars franchise and milking it for all its worth.โ€

This is being done, of course, with the zealous promotion of Darth Trump.


Originally published by Common Dreams, 01.26.2019, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.