Space Wars: Circa 1959 to 2010
I  noted with interest President Obama's April 16 visit to Cape Kennedy to rally the  "workers".  Certain reports  have it that there were few in any "workers" invited to hear the  speech.  There did seem to be a lot of applause  from people who were about to lose their jobs.  Then  on April 22 I noted the launch of an Atlas/X-37 "space  plane" combination on a "secret" mission.
Had I  seen this before?  The Atlas/X-37 stirred my  memory. In June of 1959 the Eisenhower administration awarded  a contract to Boeing for a project called Dyna-Soar.  This  also was an Atlas/Space Plane combination very closely resembling the  current configuration.  The intended offensive  purpose of the 1959 system sounds remarkably similar to the theories put  forth for the X37.  Also remarkable is the  involvement of the same contractor & booster.
But  is there a more over-riding theme in both of these events?
In  1959 the Eisenhower administration was furiously defending against the charge of  there being a "missile gap" leveled by the opposition leading in to the  election of 1960.  The USSR had launched Sputnik in 1957 while the US effort at an earth satellite had  fizzled.  Were the Soviets ahead in missile  development?  A nervous public was easily swayed  by the charge that the country was under a direct unmatched threat by  the Soviets.  The fear was palpable.   Backyard  bomb shelters were for sale on street corners.  Was  the real purpose of the Dyna-Soar project to help alleviate these  doubts & fears?  Eisenhower spoke directly to  the American public assuring them that the nation was adequately  prepared, and that we had solved the critical problem of atmospheric  re-entry.  
The  charge has been leveled that the Obama administration is gutting the  nation's defenses (antimissile systems), and unilaterally granting our enemies an advantage in offensive systems by curtailing our own. The  launch of the X-37 has more than a hint of there being an offensive  mission roll.  Nothing is being acknowledged or  denied.
Is  this Obama's attempt at countering a political opposition charge of  negligence of national defense, and with a system nearly identical in  function some 50 years later?  
Is  this a smoke-screen of "doing something offensive"?  
Do  the Chinese or  the Russians have  a real advantage in space based offensive weapons?  China has already demonstrated the intercept of a satellite.  What about Iran's ambitions?
J.F.  Kennedy found it very useful to level the charge and sway public  opinion.  After assuming office in 1961 he had  defense Sec. Robert McNamara produce a "white paper"  proclaiming that the triad of aircraft, missiles, and sea power was  more than adequate to deter any enemy.  Bomb  shelters gave way to wine cellars, and the nation was at ease once  again.
Is  the X-37 designed to produce the same ease?
 Bryan  Demko




