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THE VIDGEN FILES

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

A House in the FAR EAST*:
Part Two 'The Chronology of Guns for Butter.






Last month in Part One DEADLINE looked at charges of fraud swirling around Alan Hubbard (South Canterbury Finance, Helicopters NZ Mr Apples) and the shady past of a number of Hubbard’s business associates and joint investors that all centered around 254 Montreal St Christchurch. Scales House. These specifically related to number of Russian business tied up with investment in NZ dairy & fishing industry, which could be shown to have ties to activities, which at worse were out right criminal and at best highly unethical including fraud, arms trafficking.


DEADLINE as part of an ongoing investigation in to the underbelly of NZ's business and foreign affairs will now provide a gemstone file style listing of the history of nz covert arms trafficking and ti wider ramifications.

Deadline Investigates.

CAVEAT:The hardcopy version does not contain full sources DEADLINE will however be working on this project in the coming month and be providing full sources bibliography for the online version of this report at its conclusion.

1939-56: British Intelligence begins working with Russian intelligence to establish a maritime arms supply line into Europe ‘The Mid Atlantic Convoy’ involving Scales Shipping 254 Montreal St NZ (opposite the bridge of remembrance). Roger Hollis, the future deputy Director of the British Intelligence, later widely denounced as a “Russian”, spy goes to work in Shanghai for British American Tobacco Company. Hollis’s social circle will include another professional British intelligence officer and Russian mole Kim Philby. The US becomes interested in South East Asia, with assistance and advice of Philly, the head of the CIA James Angleton, begins planning intelligence operations in South East Asia.

1955: NZ helicopters begins operations in Timaru



1956: Beginning of the NZSIS, headed by Brigadier Sir Gilbert Smith a patron of World Wildlife Fund and a Club 1001 member. The original NZSIS officers are handpicked from British Foreign Office by Roger Hollis personally (ref: Michael Parkers SIS) later identified, by Britsh juornalist Chapman Pincher, as double for agent of Soviet Union. Sources within Canadian Intelligence acknowledge that the Russian network may have in fact been controlled intrun via Bejing.

1960: WWII Naval veteran shipping dairy and forestry investment magnate Sir William Douglas Goodwood (Sanford - Kiwi Ice Cream -Forestry Shippers Amalgamated Dairies), an Auckland Grammar old boy, begins importing Russian goods into NZ.

1965-73: ANZAC Special Forces begin classified operations in South East Asia’s Golden Triangle, operating under General Edwin Black - Joint United States Military Command, based in Thailand. Special Forces lliaison’s, between NZ and US forces, is overseen by Colonel Bruce Meldrum, the future head of NZ Defence Forces from 1967-1971.




Australian Special Forces coordinate with mountain tribes in Laos Cambodia Burma to bring down opium and marijuana (woven into “buddahsticks”) into Thailand where they are shipped to the west and begin the largest wave of drug dependency seen since the Dutch East tea company used the forced sale of opium to gain ports and in road into China’s mainland leading to annexation of Macau and Hong Kong.

The opium is either transported by river or flown out by Royal Thai Air Force aircraft working under Air America (the CIA air fleet). In return the CIA Air America transport arms and general aide to the anti communists tribes in the mountain of the Golden Triangle.


NZSAS commandoes engage in Long Range Reconnaissance operations including working with CIA Operation Phoenix assassination teams in Laos Cambodia and deep North Vietnam.

Kiwi soldiers recruited to work with the American’s on Phoenix black bag assassination operations become known as “grey ghosts” their records are expunged from defence personnel logs so they can work on future operations under detected as field operatives. These are not ‘spies’ paid by the NZ government, with acountability, but the creation of an unofficial intelligence assett who will take their order from their former comrades in arms, in some case their whanau elders, and later corporate heads (as many of their former army bosses will later become board of directors or came from the corporate sector to begin with).






1970: NZ Arms brokers NZ SM Andrews (located in same building as the NZ Army recruitment office in Wellington) is incoprorated into nz company files. Until 1995 its board of directors would include Vice Admiral Sir Neil Anderson Chief of Defence, Ian Smith of Mouteka Nelson, Christchurch Businesman Humprey Rolleston (interestes have included NZ Helicopters Scales Corporations South Canterbury Finace Timaru) Les Gandar Minister of Education under prime minister Robert Muldoon and Hugh Templeton minister of foreing Affairs under muldoon and chairman of Russian NZ Business Council.,

Cicra 1972: The head of the CIA’s LAOS station, Theodore “The Blonde Ghost” (Shackly) moves to NZ and works for an aviation crop dusting company based in South Canterbury.

1973: Russian diplomat Andrey Alexeyevich Tatarinov begins his career in North Vietnam where he works until 2204 when he is promoted to the position of Deputy Director of the Department of ASEAN Member States and Common Asian. In 2008 Tatarinov becomes the Russian Ambassador to NZ having foemed close relations with number of NZ Dairy executive including Ian Robertson, Aucklnd Grammar old boy, head of NZ Dairy Boards operation in the Far East and the head of Vostock Service Limited who website advertise that they deal in NZ Icecream, Middle Eastern Oil and Russian Munitions.

1975: Labor MP Colin Moyle questions, in parliament, the conduct of an accounting firm in which Robert Muldoon is a senior partner. Moyle does not get very far before Muldoon reveals publicly that Moyle had been picked up by the police for suspected homosexual activity.

Trans sexual and proprietor of Wellington night spot The Purple Onion is outraged at Moyle’s persecution and threatens to write a tell all book, before she is called before a parliamentary hearing. Shortly afterwards she moves to Sydney and begins work at Les Girl owned by King Cross monster Abe Saffron. Carmen in a 2000 interview maintains she was paid to keep quiet.

Circamid mid 1970’s: NZ Police Intelligence Officer Patrick O’Brien (see Broken Soldiers North & South March 1995) is sent to investigate arms and narcotic smuggling thru Bluff port in Invercargill. According to O’Brien 2000 testimony they were guns and drugs through bluff “by the container load”. O’Brien decided it time to leave the police after he keeps “bumping into too many CIA types”

Undercover detective Tom Lewis from Dunedin claims the police had an opportunity to shot down Mr. Asia early on but police HQ would not seed the funds necessary to shut down Mr ASIA and police informant Terry Clarke. Lewis then had to remind police HQ of the $NZ25, 000 in cash he had in the back of his wardrobe which Police HQ had apparently forgotten.

A founding member of Green Peace and musician is beaten up by a professional boxer and told to leave town in Tauranga. The beating is to serve as a warning after the activist is observed paying too much attention to prominent member of Tauranga’s yacht club who he later recognise in the company of National MP when paying regular gigs at the ‘Wellington Club’ the defacto HQ away from parliament for National.

TVNZ journalist Keith Davies attempts to record a program documenting how drug traffickers had brought NZ politicians and high-ranking officials including judges. The documentary include details on the discovery of large quantity of heroin on board the yacht the Valkray crewed by prominent NZ including the brother of future Minister of Energy, under Prime Minister Robert Muldoon, Barry Brill.

Prime Minister Robert Muldoon (known before WWII by the nick name ‘The Bookie from Te Puke) writes to CEO of TVNZ and has Davies fired. Davies dismissal and the prevention of Davies documentary from being shown on TV is brought up by MP Richard Pebble, one of the future founding members of ACT and is recorded in parliamentary Hansard records.

1977: NZ journalist Pat Booth begins hearing of how prominent Auckland businessmen involved in publishing yachting publications are part of an international drug syndicate he later names the Mr Asia network. The police forces in three nations; NZ, Australia, United Kingdom, move independently against the Mr Asia syndicate, whose front firm include Millstone Charters, Millstone Glass, Millstone Investments and are registered (until shortly after the Moyle incident) by same accountancy firm previously identified by Moyle in 1975 as being involved in “dodgy” practices.

1977: Tri nation investigation, including investigation conducted by three separate police forces in Australia, of Mr Asia led authorities to the money laundering centre of organised crime in the southern hemisphere the Nugan Hand Bank set by Vietnam veteran and former US Special Forces officer Michael Hand and Australian gangster Frank Nugan. The board of directors, for Nugan Hand, is largely made up of ex CIAn Air America and US Military officer, from Vietnam including General Edwin Black, Theodore Shackley, and Admiral Yates.

1977:NZ Dairy Board, led by Sir Goodwood makes its first sales to Russian in more than 23 years. NZ Embassy in Saudi Arabia opens where it principal duties are to act a liaisons for the NZ Saudi Milk Company the export arm of NZ dairy Board.

1977: Petrol crisis begins after OPEC, an Arab based lobbying, group restricts sales to the west in a bid to get higher royalty fee from western oil firms. It’s announced that Hunt Oil won’t be drilling for Oil in NZ Southern Basin near Bluff, in part because Muldoon is asking for an unheard of 25% royalties. As Muldoon visits USA looking for bridging finances for his proposed Think Big ‘NZ Industry and Energy infrastructure development program’ Robert Muldoon is photographed with Robert Anderson the operational head of Los Angeles South Pacific bank owned by arms dealer and World Wild Life Fund Club 1001 member Adnan Kashoggi.

1977 (November): Kashoggi flies into Queenstown with and entourage and a “leggy blonde” who all stay at the Travel Lodge (now known as the Scenic Circle) of which Kashoggi owns more than 34%. On the way to Queenstown Kashoggi tells NZ reporters he’s in NZ to look for partner willing to investing in NZ dairy products forestry meat and shipping industry so as to expand export to Middle East. At this time the entire NZ exports are valued at less than $NZ3 million dollars. In the next four decades Kashoggi will develops extensive business and real estate connection through out the Pacific including NZ, Australia, Cook Island, Tonga and Vanuatu.

1977: Pacific hotel investor, New Zealander, John Victor Evans is identified as the head of first case of organized white collar crime in NZ dubbed by the press the ‘gang of Twenty” affair. Justice Department Investigator Keith Petersen describes the Gang of Twenty as laundering money from Saudi Arab which the Justice Department believed to have come from “either money laundering or arms trafficking”.

1977: Kashoggi found to have laundered money from Saudi arms sales to Yemen via tax haven banks set up on the island of Vanuatu.

1977: Club 1001 member Robert Vesco partakes in a failed coup on the Tongan Island of Minerva organised by group of ex South Vietnam military Veterans, identified as belonging to a political action committee known as the Phoenix Foundation who seek to establish a tax haven and money-laundering hub in the Pacific and US.

1977: Russia indicates to Minister of Foreign, Brian Tallboys, it well recognise NZ’s Economic Exclusion Zone on three conditions;

1. NZ is to remain neutral on Chinese Russian relations.

2. The Russian Fishing fleet must be allowed to develop trade relations in the South Pacific, namely in the nations of Tonga Fiji and Vanuatu, without NZ exerting political on these nations against Russia setting up such deals.

3. NZ must also be willing to allow Russian fishing fleets to form joint venture with NZ firms.

1978: NZ Economic Exclusion Zone is past which permits a foreign fishing firm to access NZ fishing stocks if they are in partnership with NZ. This recognised in turn by the conclusion of a New Zealand-USSR Fisheries Agreement, signed in Wellington by the Soviet Minister of Fisheries. Joint NZ Russian Fishing venture include Fletcher’s plus Sanford Limited and Amalgamated Limited, whose dominant shareholder is Sir William Douglas Goodwood. The venture is later extended to Amcal Fisheries, jointly owned by Talleys of Motueka (and Goodwood) and members of the Yugoslavian fishing family the Velas.

1980: The military of Paua New Guinness with assistance from NZ and Australia quell a coup in Vanuatu brought on by separatist financed and armed by the Phoenix Foundation attempting to set up money laundering hub on the former French colony.

NZ’s foreign intelligence analyst service the External Intelligence Bureau (now known as the External Assessment Bureau) warn of the existence of major drug trafficking hub on Vanuatu servicing organised crime in Australia

Thursday, September 23, 2010

WEATHER WARFAREFROM THEIR OWN MOUTHS

CAPS = AUTHOR NOTES /non caps US airforce studies words

SADLY WE COULD NOT DUPLICATE IMAGES FROM THE ORGINAL DOCUMENT

HOWEVER A COPY HAS BEEN MADE AND I WILL WORK ON THIS ISSUE - AS THE IMAGES IN FACT GO A LONG WAY TO CONFIRMING A LONG TERM SUSPICION OF MINE THAT HAARP IS NOT THE ENGINE BUT SIMPLY THE  CATALYST.

THE IMAGES SHOW THE SIGNAL BOUNCING OFF ARTIFICAL INOESPHERICE MIRRORS WHICH USING MICROWAVE BEAMS PROVIDE PRECISION FOR THE SIGNAL.

IN SHORT HAARP IS SIMPLY PIGGY BACKING OF THE NATURAL ENERGY IN THE IONOSPHERE

INCIDENTS WHERE SUCH AIMS CAN BE IDENTIFIED INCLUDE;

THE MULTISPECTRUM LENS ABOARD THE SHUTTLE ATLANTIST OVER SEEN BY MICHAEL GOOD 2009 & THE FEBRUARY 1 2003 CHALLENGER OVERSEEN BY COLONEL ILAN RAMON, AN ELECTRONIC WARFARE SPECIALIST & PREVIOUSLY THE HEAD OF PROCUREMENT AND WEAPONS TESTING FOR ISRAEL'S AIFORCE.

FOLLOWING IMAGES INCLUDE RAMON SHUTTLE BADGE, AND A PICTURE OF RAMON JUNE 17 1981 (AFTER RETURNING FROM THE RAID (WHERE RAMON OVERSAW THE STRIKE FORCE ELECTRONIC WARFARE AND JAMING COMPONENTS) THAT HIT IRAQ'S OSIRAK NUCLEAR REACTOR)



AND THE SPRITES, WHICH RAMON WAS TRYING TO RESEARCH, 'A FORCE OF ENERGY WHICH CAN BE BEST DESCRIBED AS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN LIGHTENING DOES CRACK.

THE PHOTO IN QUESTION IS ACTUALY AN EARLIER PHOTOGRAPH  (1994) TAKEN AT FAIRBANK ALASKA -- HAARP MOST FAMOUS FACILITY.






THE VIDGEN FILES ALSO RECOMMENDS RESEARCHERS CHECK OUT 'S.F. man's astounding photo Mysterious purple streak is shown hitting Columbia 7 minutes before it disintegrated (Sabin Russell, Chronicle Staff Writer) San Francisco Chronicle February 5, 03. Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2003/02/05/MN192153.DTL#ixzz10P759Kjm



THE PHOTGRAPH (ABOBE) IS ACCEPTED INMAINSTREAM REPORTS
& ACKNOWLEDGED IN THE OFFICAL REPORT (ciab) INTO THE ACCIDENT.

THE PURPLE IMAGE WAS LATER PUT DOWN TO VIBRATION BY NASA INVESTIGATORS THOUGH A SIMILAR TEST CONDUCTED BY THE MANUFACTURES COULD NOT PRODUCE THE SAME EFFECT AFTER 1000 PHOTOGRAPHS WERE TAKEN ON THE SAME MODEL CAMERA. 

 IT ALSO RELEVANT TO NOTE HOW THE ROLE OF SPRITES (AND THE MILITARYS INTERST IN THEM) HAS BEEN DOWN PLAYED THOUGH ITS ALSO ON RECORD THAT A SUSPECTED CATATLYST TO THE FOAM BREAKING OFF (INIATING THE DISASTER) WAS UPSURGE IN ELECTROMAGNETIC ACTIVITY IN THE UPPER ATMOSPHERE, JUST PRIOR TO THE SHUTTLE'S DISTRCUTION.

IN OTHER WORDS THE FOAM BREAKING OFF CAUSED THE CRASH BUT THE FOAM ITS SELF WAS ONLY A SYMPTON.

DR CRAIG ROGERS, OTAGO UNIVERSITY NZ, AN EXPERT OF SPRITES AND BLUE JETS COMISSIONED BEFORE THE DISASTER STATES THE CHANCES OF SHUTTLE BREAKING UP IF IT FLEW THU A SPRITE STORM IS APROX 1:100.  

SEE ALSO:



NOW WITH THAT IN MIND READ ON AS THEY SAY.......

 Weather as a Force Multiplier:


Owning the Weather in 2025

A Research Paper

Presented To

Air Force 2025

by

Col Tamzy J. House

Lt Col James B. Near, Jr.

LTC William B. Shields (USA)

Maj Ronald J. Celentano

Maj David M. Husband

Maj Ann E. Mercer

Maj James E. Pugh

August 1996

ii

Disclaimer

2025 is a study designed to comply with a directive from the chief of staff of the Air Force to examine the

concepts, capabilities, and technologies the United States will require to remain the dominant air and space

force in the future. Presented on 17 June 1996, this report was produced in the Department of Defense school

environment of academic freedom and in the interest of advancing concepts related to national defense. The

views expressed in this report are those of the authors and do not reflect the official policy or position of the

United States Air Force, Department of Defense, or the United States government.

This report contains fictional representations of future situations/scenarios. Any similarities to real people or

events, other than those specifically cited, are unintentional and are for purposes of illustration only.

This publication has been reviewed by security and policy review authorities, is unclassified, and is cleared

for public release.

iii

Contents

Chapter Page

Disclaimer.........................................................................................................................................ii

Illustrations.......................................................................................................................................iv

Tables...............................................................................................................................................iv

Acknowledgments..............................................................................................................................v

Executive Summary ...........................................................................................................................vi

1 Introduction........................................................................................................................................1

2 Required Capability...........................................................................................................................3

Why Would We Want to Mess with the Weather? ........................................................................3

What Do We Mean by “Weather-modification”?..........................................................................4

3 System Description .............................................................................................................................8

The Global Weather Network.......................................................................................................8

Applying Weather-modification to Military Operations .............................................................10

4 Concept of Operations ......................................................................................................................13

Precipitation ...............................................................................................................................13

Fog.............................................................................................................................................16

Storms........................................................................................................................................18

Exploitation of “NearSpace” for Space Control.........................................................................20

Opportunities Afforded by Space Weather-modification............................................................20

Communications Dominance via Ionospheric Modification........................................................21

Artificial Weather.......................................................................................................................27

Concept of Operations Summary.................................................................................................28

5 Investigation Recommendations........................................................................................................31

How Do We Get There From Here?...........................................................................................31

Conclusions ...............................................................................................................................34

Appendix Page

A Why Is the Ionosphere Important? .....................................................................................................36

B Research to Better Understand and Predict Ionospheric Effects........................................................39

C Acronyms and Definitions .................................................................................................................41

Bibliography....................................................................................................................................42

iv

Illustrations

Figure Page

3-1. Global Weather Network....................................................................................................................9

3-2. The Military System for Weather-Modification Operations. ............................................................11

4-1. Crossed-Beam Approach for Generating an Artificial Ionospheric Mirror......................................23

4-2. Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors Point-to-Point Communications .......................................................24

4-3. Artificial Ionospheric Mirror Over-the-Horizon Surveillance Concept. ..........................................25

4-4. Scenarios for Telecommunications Degradation ..............................................................................26

5-1. A Core Competency Road Map to Weather Modification in 2025. ..................................................32

5-2. A Systems Development Road Map to Weather Modification in 2025.............................................34

Tables

Table Page

1 Operational Capabilities Matrix........................................................................................................vi

v

Acknowledgments

We express our appreciation to Mr Mike McKim of Air War College who provided a wealth of

technical expertise and innovative ideas that significantly contributed to our paper. We are also especially

grateful for the devoted support of our families during this research project. Their understanding and

patience during the demanding research period were crucial to the project’s success.

vi

Executive Summary

In 2025, US aerospace forces can “own the weather” by capitalizing on emerging technologies and

focusing development of those technologies to war-fighting applications. Such a capability offers the war

fighter tools to shape the battlespace in ways never before possible. It provides opportunities to impact

operations across the full spectrum of conflict and is pertinent to all possible futures. The purpose of this

paper is to outline a strategy for the use of a future weather-modification system to achieve military

objectives rather than to provide a detailed technical road map.

A high-risk, high-reward endeavor, weather-modification offers a dilemma not unlike the splitting of the

atom. While some segments of society will always be reluctant to examine controversial issues such as

weather-modification, the tremendous military capabilities that could result from this field are ignored at our

own peril. From enhancing friendly operations or disrupting those of the enemy via small-scale tailoring of

natural weather patterns to complete dominance of global communications and counterspace control,

weather-modification offers the war fighter a wide-range of possible options to defeat or coerce an

adversary. Some of the potential capabilities a weather-modification system could provide to a war-fighting

commander in chief (CINC) are listed in table 1.

Technology advancements in five major areas are necessary for an integrated weather-modification

capability: (1) advanced nonlinear modeling techniques, (2) computational capability, (3) information

gathering and transmission, (4) a global sensor array, and (5) weather intervention techniques. Some

intervention tools exist today and others may be developed and refined in the future.

vii

Table 1

Operational Capabilities Matrix

DEGRADE ENEMY FORCES ENHANCE FRIENDLY FORCES

Precipitation Enhancement Precipitation Avoidance

- Flood Lines of Communication - Maintain/Improve LOC

- Reduce PGM/Recce Effectiveness - Maintain Visibility

- Decrease Comfort Level/Morale - Maintain Comfort Level/Morale

Storm Enhancement Storm Modification

- Deny Operations - Choose Battlespace Environment

Precipitation Denial Space Weather

- Deny Fresh Water - Improve Communication Reliability

- Induce Drought - Intercept Enemy Transmissions

Space Weather

- Revitalize Space Assets

- Disrupt Communications/Radar

- Disable/Destroy Space Assets Fog and Cloud Generation

- Increase Concealment

Fog and Cloud Removal Fog and Cloud Removal

- Deny Concealment - Maintain Airfield Operations

- Increase Vulnerability to PGM/Recce - Enhance PGM Effectiveness

Detect Hostile Weather Activities Defend against Enemy Capabilities

Current technologies that will mature over the next 30 years will offer anyone who has the necessary

resources the ability to modify weather patterns and their corresponding effects, at least on the local scale.

Current demographic, economic, and environmental trends will create global stresses that provide the

impetus necessary for many countries or groups to turn this weather-modification ability into a capability.

In the United States, weather-modification will likely become a part of national security policy with

both domestic and international applications. Our government will pursue such a policy, depending on its

interests, at various levels. These levels could include unilateral actions, participation in a security

framework such as NATO, membership in an international organization such as the UN, or participation in a

coalition. Assuming that in 2025 our national security strategy includes weather-modification, its use in our

national military strategy will naturally follow. Besides the significant benefits an operational capability

would provide, another motivation to pursue weather-modification is to deter and counter potential

adversaries.

viii

In this paper we show that appropriate application of weather-modification can provide battlespace

dominance to a degree never before imagined. In the future, such operations will enhance air and space

superiority and provide new options for battlespace shaping and battlespace awareness.1 “The technology is

there, waiting for us to pull it all together;”2 in 2025 we can “Own the Weather.”

Notes

1 The weather-modification capabilities described in this paper are consistent with the operating

environments and missions relevant for aerospace forces in 2025 as defined by AF/LR, a long-range planning

office reporting to the CSAF [based on AF/LR PowerPoint briefing “Air and Space Power Framework for

Strategy Development (jda-2lr.ppt)].”

2 General Gordon R. Sullivan, “Moving into the 21st Century: America’s Army and Modernization,”

Military Review (July 1993) quoted in Mary Ann Seagraves and Richard Szymber, “Weather a Force

Multiplier,” Military Review, November/December 1995, 75.

1

Chapter 1

Introduction

Scenario: Imagine that in 2025 the US is fighting a rich, but now consolidated, politically powerful

drug cartel in South America. The cartel has purchased hundreds of Russian-and Chinese-built fighters that

have successfully thwarted our attempts to attack their production facilities. With their local numerical

superiority and interior lines, the cartel is launching more than 10 aircraft for every one of ours. In addition,

the cartel is using the French system probatoire d' observation de la terre (SPOT) positioning and tracking

imagery systems, which in 2025 are capable of transmitting near-real-time, multispectral imagery with 1

meter resolution. The US wishes to engage the enemy on an uneven playing field in order to exploit the full

potential of our aircraft and munitions.

Meteorological analysis reveals that equatorial South America typically has afternoon thunderstorms on

a daily basis throughout the year. Our intelligence has confirmed that cartel pilots are reluctant to fly in or

near thunderstorms. Therefore, our weather force support element (WFSE), which is a part of the

commander in chief’s (CINC) air operations center (AOC), is tasked to forecast storm paths and trigger or

intensify thunderstorm cells over critical target areas that the enemy must defend with their aircraft. Since

our aircraft in 2025 have all-weather capability, the thunderstorm threat is minimal to our forces, and we can

effectively and decisively control the sky over the target.

The WFSE has the necessary sensor and communication capabilities to observe, detect, and act on

weather-modification requirements to support US military objectives. These capabilities are part of an

advanced battle area system that supports the war-fighting CINC. In our scenario, the CINC tasks the WFSE

to conduct storm intensification and concealment operations. The WFSE models the atmospheric conditions

2

to forecast, with 90 percent confidence, the likelihood of successful modification using airborne cloud

generation and seeding.

In 2025, uninhabited aerospace vehicles (UAV) are routinely used for weather-modification operations.

By cross-referencing desired attack times with wind and thunderstorm forecasts and the SPOT satellite’s

projected orbit, the WFSE generates mission profiles for each UAV. The WFSE guides each UAV using

near-real-time information from a networked sensor array.

Prior to the attack, which is coordinated with forecasted weather conditions, the UAVs begin cloud

generation and seeding operations. UAVs disperse a cirrus shield to deny enemy visual and infrared (IR)

surveillance. Simultaneously, microwave heaters create localized scintillation to disrupt active sensing via

synthetic aperture radar (SAR) systems such as the commercially available Canadian search and rescue

satellite-aided tracking (SARSAT) that will be widely available in 2025. Other cloud seeding operations

cause a developing thunderstorm to intensify over the target, severely limiting the enemy’s capability to

defend. The WFSE monitors the entire operation in real-time and notes the successful completion of another

very important but routine weather-modification mission.

This scenario may seem far-fetched, but by 2025 it is within the realm of possibility. The next chapter

explores the reasons for weather-modification, defines the scope, and examines trends that will make it

possible in the next 30 years.

3

Chapter 2

Required Capability

Why Would We Want to Mess with the Weather?

According to Gen Gordon Sullivan, former Army chief of staff, “As we leap technology into the 21st

century, we will be able to see the enemy day or night, in any weather— and go after him relentlessly.”1 A

global, precise, real-time, robust, systematic weather-modification capability would provide war-fighting

CINCs with a powerful force multiplier to achieve military objectives. Since weather will be common to all

possible futures, a weather-modification capability would be universally applicable and have utility across

the entire spectrum of conflict. The capability of influencing the weather even on a small scale could change

it from a force degrader to a force multiplier.

People have always wanted to be able to do something about the weather. In the US, as early as 1839,

newspaper archives tell of people with serious and creative ideas on how to make rain.2 In 1957, the

president’s advisory committee on weather control explicitly recognized the military potential of weathermodification,

warning in their report that it could become a more important weapon than the atom bomb.3

However, controversy since 1947 concerning the possible legal consequences arising from the

deliberate alteration of large storm systems meant that little future experimentation could be conducted on

storms which had the potential to reach land.4 In 1977, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution

prohibiting the hostile use of environmental modification techniques. The resulting “Convention on the

Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification Technique (ENMOD)”

4

committed the signatories to refrain from any military or other hostile use of weather-modification which

could result in widespread, long-lasting, or severe effects.5 While these two events have not halted the

pursuit of weather-modification research, they have significantly inhibited its pace and the development of

associated technologies, while producing a primary focus on suppressive versus intensification activities.

The influence of the weather on military operations has long been recognized. During World War II,

Eisenhower said,

[i]n Europe bad weather is the worst enemy of the air [operations]. Some soldier once

said, “The weather is always neutral.” Nothing could be more untrue. Bad weather is

obviously the enemy of the side that seeks to launch projects requiring good weather, or of

the side possessing great assets, such as strong air forces, which depend upon good

weather for effective operations. If really bad weather should endure permanently, the

Nazi would need nothing else to defend the Normandy coast!6

The impact of weather has also been important in more recent military operations. A significant number

of the air sorties into Tuzla during the initial deployment supporting the Bosnian peace operation aborted due

to weather. During Operation Desert Storm, Gen Buster C. Glosson asked his weather officer to tell him

which targets would be clear in 48 hours for inclusion in the air tasking order (ATO).7 But current

forecasting capability is only 85 percent accurate for no more than 24 hours, which doesn't adequately meet

the needs of the ATO planning cycle. Over 50 percent of the F-117 sorties weather aborted over their targets

and A-10s only flew 75 of 200 scheduled close air support (CAS) missions due to low cloud cover during

the first two days of the campaign.8 The application of weather-modification technology to clear a hole over

the targets long enough for F-117s to attack and place bombs on target or clear the fog from the runway at

Tuzla would have been a very effective force multiplier. Weather-modification clearly has potential for

military use at the operational level to reduce the elements of fog and friction for friendly operations and to

significantly increase them for the enemy.

What Do We Mean by “Weather-modification”?

Today, weather-modification is the alteration of weather phenomena over a limited area for a limited

period of time.9 Within the next three decades, the concept of weather-modification could expand to include

the ability to shape weather patterns by influencing their determining factors.10 Achieving such a highly

5

accurate and reasonably precise weather-modification capability in the next 30 years will require

overcoming some challenging but not insurmountable technological and legal hurdles.

Technologically, we must have a solid understanding of the variables that affect weather. We must be

able to model the dynamics of their relationships, map the possible results of their interactions, measure their

actual real-time values, and influence their values to achieve a desired outcome. Society will have to

provide the resources and legal basis for a mature capability to develop. How could all of this happen? The

following notional scenario postulates how weather-modification might become both technically feasible and

socially desirable by 2025.

Between now and 2005, technological advances in meteorology and the demand for more precise

weather information by global businesses will lead to the successful identification and parameterization of

the major variables that affect weather. By 2015, advances in computational capability, modeling techniques,

and atmospheric information tracking will produce a highly accurate and reliable weather prediction

capability, validated against real-world weather. In the following decade, population densities put pressure

on the worldwide availability and cost of food and usable water. Massive life and property losses

associated with natural weather disasters become increasingly unacceptable. These pressures prompt

governments and/or other organizations who are able to capitalize on the technological advances of the

previous 20 years to pursue a highly accurate and reasonably precise weather-modification capability. The

increasing urgency to realize the benefits of this capability stimulates laws and treaties, and some unilateral

actions, making the risks required to validate and refine it acceptable. By 2025, the world, or parts of it, are

able to shape local weather patterns by influencing the factors that affect climate, precipitation, storms and

their effects, fog, and near space. These highly accurate and reasonably precise civil applications of

weather-modification technology have obvious military implications. This is particularly true for aerospace

forces, for while weather may affect all mediums of operation, it operates in ours.

The term weather-modification may have negative connotations for many people, civilians and military

members alike. It is thus important to define the scope to be considered in this paper so that potential critics

or proponents of further research have a common basis for discussion.

In the broadest sense, weather-modification can be divided into two major categories: suppression and

intensification of weather patterns. In extreme cases, it might involve the creation of completely new weather

6

patterns, attenuation or control of severe storms, or even alteration of global climate on a far-reaching and/or

long-lasting scale. In the mildest and least controversial cases it may consist of inducing or suppressing

precipitation, clouds, or fog for short times over a small-scale region. Other low-intensity applications might

include the alteration and/or use of near space as a medium to enhance communications, disrupt active or

passive sensing, or other purposes. In conducting the research for this study, the broadest possible

interpretation of weather-modification was initially embraced, so that the widest range of opportunities

available for our military in 2025 were thoughtfully considered. However, for several reasons described

below, this paper focuses primarily on localized and short-term forms of weather-modification and how

these could be incorporated into war-fighting capability. The primary areas discussed include generation and

dissipation of precipitation, clouds, and fog; modification of localized storm systems; and the use of the

ionosphere and near space for space control and communications dominance. These applications are

consistent with CJCSI 3810.01, “Meteorological and Oceanographic Operations.”

11

Extreme and controversial examples of weather modification—creation of made-to-order weather,

large-scale climate modification, creation and/or control (or “steering”) of severe storms, etc.—were

researched as part of this study but receive only brief mention here because, in the authors’ judgment, the

technical obstacles preventing their application appear insurmountable within 30 years.12 If this were not the

case, such applications would have been included in this report as potential military options, despite their

controversial and potentially malevolent nature and their inconsistency with standing UN agreements to

which the US is a signatory.

On the other hand, the weather-modification applications proposed in this report range from technically

proven to potentially feasible. They are similar, however, in that none are currently employed or envisioned

for employment by our operational forces. They are also similar in their potential value for the war fighter of

the future, as we hope to convey in the following chapters. A notional integrated system that incorporates

weather-modification tools will be described in the next chapter; how those tools might be applied are then

discussed within the framework of the Concept of Operations in chapter 4.

7

1 Gen Gordon R. Sullivan, “Moving into the 21st Century: America’s Army and Modernization,”

Military Review (July 1993) quoted in Mary Ann Seagraves and Richard Szymber, “Weather a Force

Multiplier,” Military Review, November/December 1995, 75.

2 Horace R. Byers, “History of Weather-modification,” in Wilmot N. Hess, ed. Weather and Climate

Modification, (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1974), 4.

3 William B. Meyer, “The Life and Times of US Weather: What Can We Do About It?” American

Heritage 37, no. 4 (June/July 1986), 48.

4 Byers, 13.

5 US Department of State, The Department of State Bulletin. 74, no. 1981 (13 June 1977): 10.

6 Dwight D Eisenhower. “Crusade in Europe,” quoted in John F. Fuller, Thor’s Legions (Boston:

American Meterology Society, 1990), 67.

7 Interview of Lt Col Gerald F. Riley, Staff Weather Officer to CENTCOM OIC of CENTAF Weather

Support Force and Commander of 3rd Weather Squadron, in “Desert Shield/Desert Storm Interview Series,”

by Dr William E. Narwyn, AWS Historian, 29 May 1991.

8 Thomas A. Keaney and Eliot A. Cohen. Gulf War Air Power Survey Summary Report (Washington

D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1993), 172.

9 Herbert S. Appleman, An Introduction to Weather-modification (Scott AFB, Ill.: Air Weather

Service/MAC, September 1969), 1.

10 William Bown, “Mathematicians Learn How to Tame Chaos,” New Scientist, 30 May 1992, 16.

11 CJCSI 3810.01, Meteorological and Oceanographic Operations, 10 January 95. This CJCS

Instruction establishes policy and assigns responsibilities for conducting meteorological and oceanographic

operations. It also defines the terms widespread, long-lasting, and severe, in order to identify those activities

that US forces are prohibited from conducting under the terms of the UN Environmental Modification

Convention. Widespread is defined as encompassing an area on the scale of several hundred km; long-lasting

means lasting for a period of months, or approximately a season; and severe involves serious or significant

disruption or harm to human life, natural and economic resources, or other assets.

12 Concern about the unintended consequences of attempting to “control” the weather is well justified.

Weather is a classic example of a chaotic system (i.e., a system that never exactly repeats itself). A chaotic

system is also extremely sensitive: minuscule differences in conditions greatly affect outcomes. According to

Dr. Glenn James, a widely published chaos expert, technical advances may provide a means to predict when

weather transitions will occur and the magnitude of the inputs required to cause those transitions; however, it

will never be possible to precisely predict changes that occur as a result of our inputs. The chaotic nature of

weather also limits our ability to make accurate long-range forecasts. The renowned physicist Edward

Teller recently presented calculations he performed to determine the long-range weather forecasting

improvement that would result from a satellite constellation providing continuous atmospheric measurements

over a 1 km2 grid worldwide. Such a system, which is currently cost-prohibitive, would only improve longrange

forecasts from the current five days to approximately 14 days. Clearly, there are definite physical

limits to mankind’s ability to control nature, but the extent of those physical limits remains an open question.

Sources: G. E. James, “Chaos Theory: The Essentials for Military Applications,” in ACSC Theater Air

Campaign Studies Coursebook, AY96, 8 (Maxwell AFB, Ala: Air University Press, 1995), 1-64. The

Teller calculations are cited in Reference 49 of this source.

8

Chapter 3

System Description

Our vision is that by 2025 the military could influence the weather on a mesoscale (<200 km2) or

microscale (immediate local area) to achieve operational capabilities such as those listed in Table 1. The

capability would be the synergistic result of a system consisting of (1) highly trained weather force

specialists (WFS) who are members of the CINC’s weather force support element (WFSE); (2) access ports

to the global weather network (GWN), where worldwide weather observations and forecasts are obtained

near-real-time from civilian and military sources; (3) a dense, highly accurate local area weather sensing and

communication system; (4) an advanced computer local area weather-modification modeling and prediction

capability within the area of responsibility (AOR); (5) proven weather-modification intervention

technologies; and (6) a feedback capability.

The Global Weather Network

The GWN is envisioned to be an evolutionary expansion of the current military and civilian worldwide

weather data network. By 2025, it will be a super high-speed, expanded bandwidth, communication network

filled with near-real-time weather observations taken from a denser and more accurate worldwide

observation network resulting from highly improved ground, air, maritime, and space sensors. The network

will also provide access to forecast centers around the world where sophisticated, tailored forecast and data

products, generated from weather prediction models (global, regional, local, specialized, etc.) based on the

latest nonlinear mathematical techniques are made available to GWN customers for near-real-time use.

9

By 2025, we envision that weather prediction models, in general, and mesoscale weather-modification

models, in particular, will be able to emulate all-weather producing variables, along with their interrelated

dynamics, and prove to be highly accurate in stringent measurement trials against empirical data. The brains

of these models will be advanced software and hardware capabilities which can rapidly ingest trillions of

environmental data points, merge them into usable data bases, process the data through the weather prediction

models, and disseminate the weather information over the GWN in near-real-time.1 This network is depicted

schematically in figure 3-1.

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 3-1. Global Weather Network

Evidence of the evolving future weather modeling and prediction capability as well as the GWN can be

seen in the national oceanic and atmospheric administration's (NOAA) 1995–2005 strategic plan. It includes

program elements to "advance short-term warning and forecast services, implement seasonal to inter-annual

climate forecasts, and predict and assess decadal to centennial change;"2 it does not, however, include plans

for weather-modification modeling or modification technology development. NOAA's plans include

extensive data gathering programs such as Next Generation Radar (NEXRAD) and Doppler weather

surveillance systems deployed throughout the US. Data from these sensing systems feed into over 100

forecast centers for processing by the Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System (AWIPS), which

will provide data communication, processing, and display capabilities for extensive forecasting. In addition,

10

NOAA has leased a Cray C90 supercomputer capable of performing over 1.5x1010 operations per second that

has already been used to run a Hurricane Prediction System.3

Applying Weather-modification to Military Operations

How will the military, in general, and the USAF, in particular, manage and employ a weathermodification

capability? We envision this will be done by the weather force support element (WFSE),

whose primary mission would be to support the war-fighting CINCs with weather-modification options, in

addition to current forecasting support. Although the WFSE could operate anywhere as long as it has access

to the GWN and the system components already discussed, it will more than likely be a component within the

AOC or its 2025-equivalent. With the CINC’s intent as guidance, the WFSE formulates weathermodification

options using information provided by the GWN, local weather data network, and weathermodification

forecast model. The options include range of effect, probability of success, resources to be

expended, the enemy’s vulnerability, and risks involved. The CINC chooses an effect based on these inputs,

and the WFSE then implements the chosen course, selecting the right modification tools and employing them

to achieve the desired effect. Sensors detect the change and feed data on the new weather pattern to the

modeling system which updates its forecast accordingly. The WFSE checks the effectiveness of its efforts by

pulling down the updated current conditions and new forecast(s) from the GWN and local weather data

network, and plans follow-on missions as needed. This concept is illustrated in figure 3-2.

11

33--DECIISIION

6--FEEDBACK

AIIR OPS CENTER

WEATHER FORCE

SUPPORT ELEMENT

CINC

1--IINTENT

2--WX MOD

OPTIIONS

FORECASTS//

DATA

4--EMPLOY

WX MOD TOOLS

5--CAUSE EFFECT

GWN

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 3-2. The Military System for Weather-Modification Operations.

WFSE personnel will need to be experts in information systems and well schooled in the arts of both

offensive and defensive information warfare. They would also have an in-depth understanding of the GWN

and an appreciation for how weather-modification could be employed to meet a CINC’s needs.

Because of the nodal web nature of the GWN, this concept would be very flexible. For instance, a

WFSE could be assigned to each theater to provide direct support to the CINC. The system would also be

survivable, with multiple nodes connected to the GWN.

A product of the information age, this system would be most vulnerable to information warfare. Each

WFSE would need the most current defensive and offensive information capabilities available. Defensive

abilities would be necessary for survival. Offensive abilities could provide spoofing options to create

virtual weather in the enemy's sensory and information systems, making it more likely for them to make

decisions producing results of our choosing rather than theirs. It would also allow for the capability to mask

or disguise our weather-modification activities.

12

Two key technologies are necessary to meld an integrated, comprehensive, responsive, precise, and

effective weather-modification system. Advances in the science of chaos are critical to this endeavor. Also

key to the feasibility of such a system is the ability to model the extremely complex nonlinear system of

global weather in ways that can accurately predict the outcome of changes in the influencing variables.

Researchers have already successfully controlled single variable nonlinear systems in the lab and

hypothesize that current mathematical techniques and computer capacity could handle systems with up to five

variables. Advances in these two areas would make it feasible to affect regional weather patterns by making

small, continuous nudges to one or more influencing factors. Conceivably, with enough lead time and the

right conditions, you could get “made-to-order” weather.4

Developing a true weather-modification capability will require various intervention tools to adjust the

appropriate meteorological parameters in predictable ways. It is this area that must be developed by the

military based on specific required capabilities such as those listed in table 1, table 1 is located in the

Executive Summary. Such a system would contain a sensor array and localized battle area data net to

provide the fine level of resolution required to detect intervention effects and provide feedback. This net

would include ground, air, maritime, and space sensors as well as human observations in order to ensure the

reliability and responsiveness of the system, even in the event of enemy countermeasures. It would also

include specific intervention tools and technologies, some of which already exist and others which must be

developed. Some of these proposed tools are described in the following chapter titled Concept of

Operations. The total weather-modification process would be a real-time loop of continuous, appropriate,

measured interventions, and feedback capable of producing desired weather behavior.

Notes

1 SPACECAST 2020, Space Weather Support for Communications, white paper G (Maxwell AFB,

Ala.: Air War College/2020, 1994).

2 Rear Adm Sigmund Petersen, “NOAA Moves Toward The 21st Century,” The Military Engineer 20,

no. 571 (June-July 1995): 44.

3 Ibid.

4 William Brown, “Mathematicians Learn How to Tame Chaos,” New Scientist (30 May 1992): 16.

13

Chapter 4

Concept of Operations

The essential ingredient of the weather-modification system is the set of intervention techniques used to

modify the weather. The number of specific intervention methodologies is limited only by the imagination,

but with few exceptions they involve infusing either energy or chemicals into the meteorological process in

the right way, at the right place and time. The intervention could be designed to modify the weather in a

number of ways, such as influencing clouds and precipitation, storm intensity, climate, space, or fog.

Precipitation

For centuries man has desired the ability to influence precipitation at the time and place of his choosing.

Until recently, success in achieving this goal has been minimal; however, a new window of opportunity may

exist resulting from development of new technologies and an increasing world interest in relieving water

shortages through precipitation enhancement. Consequently, we advocate that the DOD explore the many

opportunities (and also the ramifications) resulting from development of a capability to influence

precipitation or conducting “selective precipitation modification.” Although the capability to influence

precipitation over the long term (i.e., for more than several days) is still not fully understood. By 2025 we

will certainly be capable of increasing or decreasing precipitation over the short term in a localized area.

Before discussing research in this area, it is important to describe the benefits of such a capability.

While many military operations may be influenced by precipitation, ground mobility is most affected.

Influencing precipitation could prove useful in two ways. First, enhancing precipitation could decrease the

14

enemy’s trafficability by muddying terrain, while also affecting their morale. Second, suppressing

precipitation could increase friendly trafficability by drying out an otherwise muddied area.

What is the possibility of developing this capability and applying it to tactical operations by 2025?

Closer than one might think. Research has been conducted in precipitation modification for many years, and

an aspect of the resulting technology was applied to operations during the Vietnam War.1 These initial

attempts provide a foundation for further development of a true capability for selective precipitation

modification.

Interestingly enough, the US government made a conscious decision to stop building upon this

foundation. As mentioned earlier, international agreements have prevented the US from investigating

weather-modification operations that could have widespread, long-lasting, or severe effects. However,

possibilities do exist (within the boundaries of established treaties) for using localized precipitation

modification over the short term, with limited and potentially positive results.

These possibilities date back to our own previous experimentation with precipitation modification. As

stated in an article appearing in the Journal of Applied Meteorology,

[n]early all the weather-modification efforts over the last quarter century have been aimed

at producing changes on the cloud scale through exploitation of the saturated vapor

pressure difference between ice and water. This is not to be criticized but it is time we

also consider the feasibility of weather-modification on other time-space scales and with

other physical hypotheses.2

This study by William M. Gray, et al., investigated the hypothesis that “significant beneficial influences

can be derived through judicious exploitation of the solar absorption potential of carbon black dust.”3 The

study ultimately found that this technology could be used to enhance rainfall on the mesoscale, generate cirrus

clouds, and enhance cumulonimbus (thunderstorm) clouds in otherwise dry areas.

The technology can be described as follows. Just as a black tar roof easily absorbs solar energy and

subsequently radiates heat during a sunny day, carbon black also readily absorbs solar energy. When

dispersed in microscopic or “dust” form in the air over a large body of water, the carbon becomes hot and

heats the surrounding air, thereby increasing the amount of evaporation from the body of water below. As the

surrounding air heats up, parcels of air will rise and the water vapor contained in the rising air parcel will

eventually condense to form clouds. Over time the cloud droplets increase in size as more and more water

vapor condenses, and eventually they become too large and heavy to stay suspended and will fall as rain or

15

other forms of precipitation.4 The study points out that this precipitation enhancement technology would

work best “upwind from coastlines with onshore flow.” Lake-effect snow along the southern edge of the

Great Lakes is a naturally occurring phenomenon based on similar dynamics.

Can this type of precipitation enhancement technology have military applications? Yes, if the right

conditions exist. For example, if we are fortunate enough to have a fairly large body of water available

upwind from the targeted battlefield, carbon dust could be placed in the atmosphere over that water.

Assuming the dynamics are supportive in the atmosphere, the rising saturated air will eventually form clouds

and rainshowers downwind over the land.5 While the likelihood of having a body of water located upwind

of the battlefield is unpredictable, the technology could prove enormously useful under the right conditions.

Only further experimentation will determine to what degree precipitation enhancement can be controlled.

If precipitation enhancement techniques are successfully developed and the right natural conditions also

exist, we must also be able to disperse carbon dust into the desired location. Transporting it in a completely

controlled, safe, cost-effective, and reliable manner requires innovation. Numerous dispersal techniques

have already been studied, but the most convenient, safe, and cost-effective method discussed is the use of

afterburner-type jet engines to generate carbon particles while flying through the targeted air. This method is

based on injection of liquid hydrocarbon fuel into the afterburner’s combustion gases. This direct generation

method was found to be more desirable than another plausible method (i.e., the transport of large quantities of

previously produced and properly sized carbon dust to the desired altitude).

The carbon dust study demonstrated that small-scale precipitation enhancement is possible and has been

successfully verified under certain atmospheric conditions. Since the study was conducted, no known

military applications of this technology have been realized. However, we can postulate how this technology

might be used in the future by examining some of the delivery platforms conceivably available for effective

dispersal of carbon dust or other effective modification agents in the year 2025.

One method we propose would further maximize the technology’s safety and reliability, by virtually

eliminating the human element. To date, much work has been done on UAVs which can closely (if not

completely) match the capabilities of piloted aircraft. If this UAV technology were combined with stealth and

carbon dust technologies, the result could be a UAV aircraft invisible to radar while en route to the targeted

area, which could spontaneously create carbon dust in any location. However, minimizing the number of

16

UAVs required to complete the mission would depend upon the development of a new and more efficient

system to produce carbon dust by a follow-on technology to the afterburner-type jet engines previously

mentioned. In order to effectively use stealth technology, this system must also have the ability to disperse

carbon dust while minimizing (or eliminating) the UAV’s infrared heat source.

In addition to using stealth UAV and carbon dust absorption technology for precipitation enhancement,

this delivery method could also be used for precipitation suppression. Although the previously mentioned

study did not significantly explore the possibility of cloud seeding for precipitation suppression, this

possibility does exist. If clouds were seeded (using chemical nuclei similar to those used today or perhaps a

more effective agent discovered through continued research) before their downwind arrival to a desired

location, the result could be a suppression of precipitation. In other words, precipitation could be “forced”

to fall before its arrival in the desired territory, thereby making the desired territory “dry.” The strategic and

operational benefits of doing this have previously been discussed.

Fog

In general, successful fog dissipation requires some type of heating or seeding process. Which

technique works best depends on the type of fog encountered. In simplest terms, there are two basic types of

fog—cold and warm. Cold fog occurs at temperatures below 32oF. The best-known dissipation technique

for cold fog is to seed it from the air with agents that promote the growth of ice crystals.6

Warm fog occurs at temperatures above 32oF and accounts for 90 percent of the fog-related problems

encountered by flight operations.7 The best-known dissipation technique is heating because a small

temperature increase is usually sufficient to evaporate the fog. Since heating usually isn’t practical, the next

most effective technique is hygroscopic seeding.8 Hygroscopic seeding uses agents that absorb water vapor.

This technique is most effective when accomplished from the air but can also be accomplished from the

ground.9 Optimal results require advance information on fog depth, liquid water content, and wind.10

Decades of research show that fog dissipation is an effective application of weather-modification

technology with demonstrated savings of huge proportions for both military and civil aviation.11 Local

17

municipalities have also shown an interest in applying these techniques to improve the safety of high-speed

highways transiting areas of frequently occurring dense fog.12

There are some emerging technologies which may have important applications for fog dispersal. As

discussed earlier, heating is the most effective dispersal method for the most commonly occurring type of fog.

Unfortunately, it has proved impractical for most situations and would be difficult at best for contingency

operations. However, the development of directed radiant energy technologies, such as microwaves and

lasers, could provide new possibilities.

Lab experiments have shown microwaves to be effective for the heat dissipation of fog. However,

results also indicate that the energy levels required exceed the US large power density exposure limit of 100

watt/m2 and would be very expensive.13 Field experiments with lasers have demonstrated the capability to

dissipate warm fog at an airfield with zero visibility. Generating 1 watt/cm2, which is approximately the US

large power density exposure limit, the system raised visibility to one quarter of a mile in 20 seconds.14

Laser systems described in the Space Operations portion of this AF 2025 study could certainly provide this

capability as one of their many possible uses.

With regard to seeding techniques, improvements in the materials and delivery methods are not only

plausible but likely. Smart materials based on nanotechnology are currently being developed with gigaops

computer capability at their core. They could adjust their size to optimal dimensions for a given fog seeding

situation and even make adjustments throughout the process. They might also enhance their dispersal

qualities by adjusting their buoyancy, by communicating with each other, and by steering themselves within

the fog. They will be able to provide immediate and continuous effectiveness feedback by integrating with a

larger sensor network and can also change their temperature and polarity to improve their seeding effects.15

As mentioned above, UAVs could be used to deliver and distribute these smart materials.

Recent army research lab experiments have demonstrated the feasibility of generating fog. They used

commercial equipment to generate thick fog in an area 100 meters long. Further study has shown fogs to be

effective at blocking much of the UV/IR/visible spectrum, effectively masking emitters of such radiation from

IR weapons.16 This technology would enable a small military unit to avoid detection in the IR spectrum. Fog

could be generated to quickly, conceal the movement of tanks or infantry, or it could conceal military

18

operations, facilities, or equipment. Such systems may also be useful in inhibiting observations of sensitive

rear-area operations by electro-optical reconnaissance platforms.17

Storms

The desirability to modify storms to support military objectives is the most aggressive and

controversial type of weather-modification. The damage caused by storms is indeed horrendous. For

instance, a tropical storm has an energy equal to 10,000 one-megaton hydrogen bombs,18 and in 1992

Hurricane Andrew totally destroyed Homestead AFB, Florida, caused the evacuation of most military

aircraft in the southeastern US, and resulted in $15.5 billion of damage.19 However, as one would expect

based on a storm’s energy level, current scientific literature indicates that there are definite physical limits on

mankind’s ability to modify storm systems. By taking this into account along with political, environmental,

economic, legal, and moral considerations, we will confine our analysis of storms to localized thunderstorms

and thus do not consider major storm systems such as hurricanes or intense low-pressure systems.

At any instant there are approximately 2,000 thunderstorms taking place. In fact 45,000 thunderstorms,

which contain heavy rain, hail, microbursts, wind shear, and lightning form daily.20 Anyone who has flown

frequently on commercial aircraft has probably noticed the extremes that pilots will go to avoid

thunderstorms. The danger of thunderstorms was clearly shown in August 1985 when a jumbo jet crashed

killing 137 people after encountering microburst wind shears during a rain squall.21 These forces of nature

impact all aircraft and even the most advanced fighters of 1996 make every attempt to avoid a thunderstorm.

Will bad weather remain an aviation hazard in 2025? The answer, unfortunately, is “yes,” but

projected advances in technology over the next 30 years will diminish the hazard potential. Computercontrolled

flight systems will be able to “autopilot” aircraft through rapidly changing winds. Aircraft will

also have highly accurate, onboard sensing systems that can instantaneously “map” and automatically guide

the aircraft through the safest portion of a storm cell. Aircraft are envisioned to have hardened electronics

that can withstand the effects of lightning strikes and may also have the capability to generate a surrounding

electropotential field that will neutralize or repel lightning strikes.

19

Assuming that the US achieves some or all of the above outlined aircraft technical advances and

maintains the technological “weather edge” over its potential adversaries, we can next look at how we could

modify the battlespace weather to make the best use of our technical advantage.

Weather-modification technologies might involve techniques that would increase latent heat release in

the atmosphere, provide additional water vapor for cloud cell development, and provide additional surface

and lower atmospheric heating to increase atmospheric instability. Critical to the success of any attempt to

trigger a storm cell is the pre-existing atmospheric conditions locally and regionally. The atmosphere must

already be conditionally unstable and the large-scale dynamics must be supportive of vertical cloud

development. The focus of the weather-modification effort would be to provide additional “conditions” that

would make the atmosphere unstable enough to generate cloud and eventually storm cell development. The

path of storm cells once developed or enhanced is dependent not only on the mesoscale dynamics of the storm

but the regional and synoptic (global) scale atmospheric wind flow patterns in the area which are currently

not subject to human control.

As indicated, the technical hurdles for storm development in support of military operations are

obviously greater than enhancing precipitation or dispersing fog as described earlier. One area of storm

research that would significantly benefit military operations is lightning modification. Most research efforts

are being conducted to develop techniques to lessen the occurrence or hazards associated with lightning.

This is important research for military operations and resource protection, but some offensive military benefit

could be obtained by doing research on increasing the potential and intensity of lightning. Concepts to

explore include increasing the basic efficiency of the thunderstorm, stimulating the triggering mechanism that

initiates the bolt, and triggering lightning such as that which struck Apollo 12 in 1968.22 Possible

mechanisms to investigate would be ways to modify the electropotential characteristics over certain targets to

induce lightning strikes on the desired targets as the storm passes over their location.

In summary, the ability to modify battlespace weather through storm cell triggering or enhancement

would allow us to exploit the technological “weather” advances of our 2025 aircraft; this area has

tremendous potential and should be addressed by future research and concept development programs.

20

Exploitation of “NearSpace” for Space Control

This section discusses opportunities for control and modification of the ionosphere and near-space

environment for force enhancement; specifically to enhance our own communications, sensing, and navigation

capabilities and/or impair those of our enemy. A brief technical description of the ionosphere and its

importance in current communications systems is provided in appendix A.

By 2025, it may be possible to modify the ionosphere and near space, creating a variety of potential

applications, as discussed below. However, before ionospheric modification becomes possible, a number of

evolutionary advances in space weather forecasting and observation are needed. Many of these needs were

described in a Spacecast 2020 study, Space Weather Support for Communications.23 Some of the

suggestions from this study are included in appendix B; it is important to note that our ability to exploit near

space via active modification is dependent on successfully achieving reliable observation and prediction

capabilities.

Opportunities Afforded by Space Weather-modification

Modification of the near-space environment is crucial to battlespace dominance. General Charles

Horner, former commander in chief, United States space command, described his worst nightmare as “seeing

an entire Marine battalion wiped out on some foreign landing zone because he was unable to deny the enemy

intelligence and imagery generated from space.”24 Active modification could provide a “technological fix”

to jam the enemy’s active and passive surveillance and reconnaissance systems. In short, an operational

capability to modify the near-space environment would ensure space superiority in 2025; this capability

would allow us to shape and control the battlespace via enhanced communication, sensing, navigation,

and precision engagement systems.

While we recognize that technological advances may negate the importance of certain electromagnetic

frequencies for US aerospace forces in 2025 (such as radio frequency (RF), high-frequency (HF) and very

high-frequency (VHF) bands), the capabilities described below are nevertheless relevant. Our nonpeer

21

adversaries will most likely still depend on such frequencies for communications, sensing, and navigation

and would thus be extremely vulnerable to disruption via space weather-modification.

Communications Dominance via Ionospheric Modification

Modification of the ionosphere to enhance or disrupt communications has recently become the subject of

active research. According to Lewis M. Duncan, and Robert L. Showen, the Former Soviet Union (FSU)

conducted theoretical and experimental research in this area at a level considerably greater than comparable

programs in the West.25 There is a strong motivation for this research, because

induced ionospheric modifications may influence, or even disrupt, the operation of radio

systems relying on propagation through the modified region. The controlled generation or

accelerated dissipation of ionospheric disturbances may be used to produce new

propagation paths, otherwise unavailable, appropriate for selected RF missions.26

A number of methods have been explored or proposed to modify the ionosphere, including injection of

chemical vapors and heating or charging via electromagnetic radiation or particle beams (such as ions,

neutral particles, x-rays, MeV particles, and energetic electrons).27 It is important to note that many

techniques to modify the upper atmosphere have been successfully demonstrated experimentally. Groundbased

modification techniques employed by the FSU include vertical HF heating, oblique HF heating,

microwave heating, and magnetospheric modification.28 Significant military applications of such operations

include low frequency (LF) communication production, HF ducted communications, and creation of an

artificial ionosphere (discussed in detail below). Moreover, developing countries also recognize the benefit

of ionospheric modification: “in the early 1980’s, Brazil conducted an experiment to modify the ionosphere

by chemical injection.”29

Several high-payoff capabilities that could result from the modification of the ionosphere or near space

are described briefly below. It should be emphasized that this list is not comprehensive; modification of the

ionosphere is an area rich with potential applications and there are also likely spin-off applications that have

yet to be envisioned.

Ionospheric mirrors for pinpoint communication or over-the-horizon (OTH) radar transmission.

The properties and limitations of the ionosphere as a reflecting medium for high-frequency radiation are

22

described in appendix A. The major disadvantage in depending on the ionosphere to reflect radio waves is

its variability, which is due to normal space weather and events such as solar flares and geomagnetic storms.

The ionosphere has been described as a crinkled sheet of wax paper whose relative position rises and sinks

depending on weather conditions. The surface topography of the crinkled paper also constantly changes,

leading to variability in its reflective, refractive, and transmissive properties.

Creation of an artificial uniform ionosphere was first proposed by Soviet researcher A. V. Gurevich in

the mid-1970s. An artificial ionospheric mirror (AIM) would serve as a precise mirror for electromagnetic

radiation of a selected frequency or a range of frequencies. It would thereby be useful for both pinpoint

control of friendly communications and interception of enemy transmissions.

This concept has been described in detail by Paul A. Kossey, et al. in a paper entitled “Artificial

Ionospheric Mirrors (AIM).”30 The authors describe how one could precisely control the location and height

of the region of artificially produced ionization using crossed microwave (MW) beams, which produce

atmospheric breakdown (ionization) of neutral species. The implications of such control are enormous: one

would no longer be subject to the vagaries of the natural ionosphere but would instead have direct control of

the propagation environment. Ideally, the AIM could be rapidly created and then would be maintained only

for a brief operational period. A schematic depicting the crossed-beam approach for generation of an AIM is

shown in figure 4-1.31

An AIM could theoretically reflect radio waves with frequencies up to 2 GHz, which is nearly two

orders of magnitude higher than those waves reflected by the natural ionosphere. The MW radiator power

requirements for such a system are roughly an order of magnitude greater than 1992 state-of-the-art systems;

however, by 2025 such a power capability is expected to be easily achievable.

23

NORMAL IONOSPHERIC REFLECTING LAYERS

(100-300 km)

IONIZATION LAYER

(MIRROR)

INTENSE MW 30-70 km

BEAMS

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 4-1. Crossed-Beam Approach for Generating an Artificial Ionospheric Mirror

Besides providing pinpoint communication control and potential interception capability, this technology

would also provide communication capability at specified frequencies, as desired. Figure 4-2 shows how a

ground-based radiator might generate a series of AIMs, each of which would be tailored to reflect a selected

transmission frequency. Such an arrangement would greatly expand the available bandwidth for

communications and also eliminate the problem of interference and crosstalk (by allowing one to use the

requisite power level).

24

Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors

8 MHz

5 MHz 12 MHz

14 MHz

GROUND-BASED

AIM GENERATOR

TRANSMISSION

STATION

RECEIVER

STATION

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 4-2. Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors Point-to-Point Communications

Kossey et al. also describe how AIMs could be used to improve the capability of OTH radar:

AIM based radar could be operated at a frequency chosen to optimize target detection,

rather than be limited by prevailing ionospheric conditions. This, combined with the

possibility of controlling the radar’s wave polarization to mitigate clutter effects, could

result in reliable detection of cruise missiles and other low observable targets.32

A schematic depicting this concept is shown in figure 4-3. Potential advantages over conventional OTH

radars include frequency control, mitigation of auroral effects, short range operation, and detection of a

smaller cross-section target.

25

IONOSPHERE

AIM

OTH

RADAR

NORMAL

OTH RANGE

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 4-3. Artificial Ionospheric Mirror Over-the-Horizon Surveillance Concept.

Disruption of communications and radar via ionospheric control. A variation of the capability

proposed above is ionospheric modification to disrupt an enemy’s communication or radar transmissions.

Because HF communications are controlled directly by the ionosphere’s properties, an artificially created

ionization region could conceivably disrupt an enemy’s electromagnetic transmissions. Even in the absence

of an artificial ionization patch, high-frequency modification produces large-scale ionospheric variations

which alter HF propagation characteristics. The payoff of research aimed at understanding how to control

these variations could be high as both HF communication enhancement and degradation are possible.

Offensive interference of this kind would likely be indistinguishable from naturally occurring space weather.

This capability could also be employed to precisely locate the source of enemy electromagnetic

transmissions.

VHF, UHF, and super-high frequency (SHF) satellite communications could be disrupted by creating

artificial ionospheric scintillation. This phenomenon causes fluctuations in the phase and amplitude of radio

waves over a very wide band (30 MHz to 30 GHz). HF modification produces electron density irregularities

that cause scintillation over a wide-range of frequencies. The size of the irregularities determines which

frequency band will be affected. Understanding how to control the spectrum of the artificial irregularities

26

generated in the HF modification process should be a primary goal of research in this area. Additionally, it

may be possible to suppress the growth of natural irregularities resulting in reduced levels of natural

scintillation. Creating artificial scintillation would allow us to disrupt satellite transmissions over selected

regions. Like the HF disruption described above, such actions would likely be indistinguishable from

naturally occurring environmental events. Figure 4-4 shows how artificially ionized regions might be used to

disrupt HF communications via attenuation, scatter, or absorption (fig. 4.4a) or degrade satellite

communications via scintillation or energy loss (fig. 4-4b) (from Ref. 25).

km

300

100

50

REGION

F

E

D

POTENTIAL HF PROBLEMS

ABSORPTION

ATTENUATION

SCATTER

GROUND

REGION

F

E

D

km

300

100

50

SCINTILLATION

ENERGY LOSS

GROUND

POTENTIAL TRANSIONOSPHERIC PROBLEMS

(a) (b)

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 4-4. Scenarios for Telecommunications Degradation

Exploding/disabling space assets traversing near-space. The ionosphere could potentially be

artificially charged or injected with radiation at a certain point so that it becomes inhospitable to satellites or

other space structures. The result could range from temporarily disabling the target to its complete

destruction via an induced explosion. Of course, effectively employing such a capability depends on the

ability to apply it selectively to chosen regions in space.

Charging space assets by near-space energy transfer. In contrast to the injurious capability described

above, regions of the ionosphere could potentially be modified or used as-is to revitalize space assets, for

instance by charging their power systems. The natural charge of the ionosphere may serve to provide most or

all of the energy input to the satellite. There have been a number of papers in the last decade on electrical

27

charging of space vehicles; however, according to one author, “in spite of the significant effort made in the

field both theoretically and experimentally, the vehicle charging problem is far from being completely

understood.”33 While the technical challenge is considerable, the potential to harness electrostatic energy to

fuel the satellite’s power cells would have a high payoff, enabling service life extension of space assets at a

relatively low cost. Additionally, exploiting the capability of powerful HF radio waves to accelerate

electrons to relatively high energies may also facilitate the degradation of enemy space assets through

directed bombardment with the HF-induced electron beams. As with artificial HF communication

disruptions and induced scintillation, the degradation of enemy spacecraft with such techniques would be

effectively indistinguishable from natural environment effects. The investigation and optimization of HF

acceleration mechanisms for both friendly and hostile purposes is an important area for future research

efforts.

Artificial Weather

While most weather-modification efforts rely on the existence of certain preexisting conditions, it may

be possible to produce some weather effects artificially, regardless of preexisting conditions. For instance,

virtual weather could be created by influencing the weather information received by an end user. Their

perception of parameter values or images from global or local meteorological information systems would

differ from reality. This difference in perception would lead the end user to make degraded operational

decisions.

Nanotechnology also offers possibilities for creating simulated weather. A cloud, or several clouds, of

microscopic computer particles, all communicating with each other and with a larger control system could

provide tremendous capability. Interconnected, atmospherically buoyant, and having navigation capability in

three dimensions, such clouds could be designed to have a wide-range of properties. They might exclusively

block optical sensors or could adjust to become impermeable to other surveillance methods. They could also

provide an atmospheric electrical potential difference, which otherwise might not exist, to achieve precisely

aimed and timed lightning strikes. Even if power levels achieved were insufficient to be an effective strike

weapon, the potential for psychological operations in many situations could be fantastic.

28

One major advantage of using simulated weather to achieve a desired effect is that unlike other

approaches, it makes what are otherwise the results of deliberate actions appear to be the consequences of

natural weather phenomena. In addition, it is potentially relatively inexpensive to do. According to J. Storrs

Hall, a scientist at Rutgers University conducting research on nanotechnology, production costs of these

nanoparticles could be about the same price per pound as potatoes.34 This of course discounts research and

development costs, which will be primarily borne by the private sector and be considered a sunk cost by

2025 and probably earlier.

Concept of Operations Summary

Weather affects everything we do, and weather-modification can enhance our ability to dominate the

aerospace environment. It gives the commander tools to shape the battlespace. It gives the logistician tools

to optimize the process. It gives the warriors in the cockpit an operating environment literally crafted to their

needs. Some of the potential capabilities a weather-modification system could provide to a war-fighting

CINC are summarized in table 1, of the executive summary).

Notes

1 A pilot program known as Project Popeye conducted in 1966 attempted to extend the monsoon season

in order to increase the amount of mud on the Ho Chi Minh trail thereby reducing enemy movements. A silver

iodide nuclei agent was dispersed from WC-130, F4 and A-1E aircraft into the clouds over portions of the

trail winding from North Vietnam through Laos and Cambodia into South Vietnam. Positive results during

this initial program led to continued operations from 1967 to 1972. While the effects of this program remain

disputed, some scientists believe it resulted in a significant reduction in the enemy’s ability to bring supplies

into South Vietnam along the trail. E. M. Frisby, “Weather-modification in Southeast Asia, 1966–1972,” The

Journal of Weather-modification 14, no. 1 (April 1982): 1—3.

2 William M. Gray et al., “Weather-modification by Carbon Dust Absorption of Solar Energy,” Journal

of Applied Meteorology 15 (April 1976): 355.

3 Ibid.

4 Ibid.

5 Ibid., 367.

6 AWS PLAN 813 Appendix I Annex Alfa (Scott AFB, Ill.: Air Weather Service/(MAC) 14 January

1972), 11. Hereafter cited as Annex Alfa.

7 Capt Frank G. Coons, “Warm Fog Dispersal—A Different Story,” Aerospace Safety 25, no. 10

(October 1969): 16.

8 Annex Alfa, 14.

29

9 Warren C. Kocmond, “Dissipation of Natural Fog in the Atmosphere,” Progress of NASA Research

on Warm Fog Properties and Modification Concepts, NASA SP-212 (Washington, D.C.: Scientific and

Technical Information Division of the Office of Technology Utilization of the National Aeronautics and

Space Administration, 1969), 74.

10 James E. Jiusto, “Some Principles of Fog Modification with Hygrosopic Nuclei,” Progress of NASA

Research on Warm Fog Properties and Modification Concepts, NASA SP-212 (Washington, D.C.:

Scientific and Technical Information Division of the Office of Technology Utilization of the National

Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1969), 37.

11 Maj Roy Dwyer, Category III or Fog Dispersal, M-U 35582-7 D993a c.1 (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air

University Press, May 1972), 51.

12 James McLare, Pulp & Paper 68, no. 8 (August 1994): 79.

13 Milton M. Klein, A Feasibility Study of the Use of Radiant Energy for Fog Dispersal, Abstract

(Hanscom AFB, Mass.: Air Force Material Command, October 1978).

14 Edward M. Tomlinson, Kenneth C. Young, and Duane D. Smith, Laser Technology Applications for

Dissipation of Warm Fog at Airfields, PL-TR-92-2087 (Hanscom AFB, Mass.: Air Force Material

Command, 1992).

15 J. Storrs Hall, “Overview of Nanotechnology,” adapted from papers by Ralph C. Merkle and K. Eric

Drexler, Internet address: http://nanotech.rutgers.edu/nanotech-/intro.html, Rutgers University, November

1995.

16 Robert A. Sutherland, “Results of Man-Made Fog Experiment,” Proceedings of the 1991 Battlefield

Atmospherics Conference (Fort Bliss, Tex.: Hinman Hall, 3–6 December 1991).

17 Christopher Centner et al., “Environmental Warfare: Implications for Policymakers and War

Planners” (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air Command and Staff College, May 1995), 39.

18 Louis J. Battan, Harvesting the Clouds (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday & Co., 1960), 120.

19 Facts on File 55, no. 2866 (2 November 95).

20 Gene S. Stuart, “Whirlwinds and Thunderbolts,” Nature on the Rampage (Washington, D.C.:

National Geographic Society, 1986), 130.

21 Ibid., 140.

22 Heinz W. Kasemir, “Lightning Suppression by Chaff Seeding and Triggered Lightning,” in Wilmot

N. Hess, ed., Weather and Climate Modification (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1974), 623–628.

23 SPACECAST 2020, Space Weather Support for Communications, white paper G, (Maxwell AFB,

Ala.: Air War College/2020, 1994).

24 Gen Charles Horner, “Space Seen as Challenge, Military’s Final Frontier,” Defense Issues,

(Prepared Statement to the Senate Armed Services Committee), 22 April 1993, 7.

25 Lewis M. Duncan and Robert L. Showen, “Review of Soviet Ionospheric Modification Research,” in

Ionospheric Modification and Its Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military

Systems,(AGARD Conference Proceedings 485, October, 1990), 2-1.

26 Ibid.

27 Peter M. Banks, “Overview of Ionospheric Modification from Space Platforms,” in Ionospheric

Modification and Its Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military Systems (AGARD

Conference Proceedings 485, October 1990) 19-1.

28 Capt Mike Johnson, Upper Atmospheric Research and Modification—Former Soviet Union (U),

DST-18205-475-92 (Foreign Aerospace Science and Technology Center, AF Intelligence Command, 24

September 1992), 3. (Secret) Information extracted is unclassified.

29 Capt Edward E. Hume, Jr., Atmospheric and Space Environmental Research Programs in Brazil

(U) (Foreign Aerospace Science and Technology Center, AF Intelligence Command, March 1993), 12.

(Secret) Information extracted is unclassified.

30

30 Paul A. Kossey et al. “Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors (AIM),” in Ionospheric Modification and Its

Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military Systems (AGARD Conference Proceedings

485, October 1990), 17A-1.

31 Ibid., 17A-7.

32 Ibid., 17A-10.

33 B. N. Maehlum and J. Troim, “Vehicle Charging in Low Density Plasmas,” in Ionospheric

Modification and Its Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military Systems (AGARD

Conference Proceedings 485, October 1990), 24-1.

34 Hall.

31

Chapter 5

Investigation Recommendations

How Do We Get There From Here?

To fully appreciate the development of the specific operational capabilities weather-modification

could deliver to the war fighter, we must examine and understand their relationship to associated core

competencies and the development of their requisite technologies. Figure 5-1 combines the specific

operational capabilities of Table 1 into six core capabilities and depicts their relative importance over time.

For example, fog and cloud modification are currently important and will remain so for some time to come to

conceal our assets from surveillance or improve landing visibility at airfields. However, as surveillance

assets become less optically dependent and aircraft achieve a truly global all-weather landing capability, fog

and cloud modification applications become less important.

In contrast, artificial weather technologies do not currently exist. But as they are developed, the

importance of their potential applications rises rapidly. For example, the anticipated proliferation of

surveillance technologies in the future will make the ability to deny surveillance increasingly valuable. In

such an environment, clouds made of smart particles such as described in chapter 4 could provide a premium

capability.

32

Time

Now 2005 2015 2025

I

m

p

o

r

t

a

n

c

e

PM

CW

SM

AW

SWM

(F&C)M

HIGH

LOW

Legend

PM Precipitation Modification (F&C)M Fog and Cloud Modification

SM Storm Modification CW Counter Weather

SWM Space Weather-modification AW Artificial Weather

Figure 5-1. A Core Competency Road Map to Weather Modification in 2025.

Even today’s most technologically advanced militaries would usually prefer to fight in clear weather

and blue skies. But as war-fighting technologies proliferate, the side with the technological advantage will

prefer to fight in weather that gives them an edge. The US Army has already alluded to this approach in their

concept of “owning the weather.”1 Accordingly, storm modification will become more valuable over time.

The importance of precipitation modification is also likely to increase as usable water sources become more

scarce in volatile parts of the world.

As more countries pursue, develop, and exploit increasing types and degrees of weather-modification

technologies, we must be able to detect their efforts and counter their activities when necessary. As

depicted, the technologies and capabilities associated with such a counter weather role will become

increasingly important.

33

The importance of space weather-modification will grow with time. Its rise will be more rapid at first

as the technologies it can best support or negate proliferate at their fastest rates. Later, as those technologies

mature or become obsolete, the importance of space weather-modification will continue to rise but not as

rapidly.

To achieve the core capabilities depicted in figure 5-1, the necessary technologies and systems might be

developed according to the process depicted in figure 5-2. This figure illustrates the systems development

timing and sequence necessary to realize a weather-modification capability for the battlespace by 2025. The

horizontal axis represents time. The vertical axis indicates the degree to which a given technology will be

applied toward weather-modification. As the primary users, the military will be the main developer for the

technologies designated with an asterisk. The civil sector will be the main source for the remaining

technologies.

34

2025

Applic

ation

to

WX

Mod

*WFSE

Now

Time

2005 2015

GWN

SENSORS

COMP MOD

COMM

CHEM

ADV

*DE

*AIM

SC

*VR WX

*CBD

Legend

ADV Aerospace Delivery Vehicles DE Directed Energy

AIM Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors GWN Global Weather Network

CHEM Chemicals SC Smart Clouds (nanotechnology)

CBD Carbon Black Dust SENSORS Sensors

COMM Communications VR WX Virtual Weather

COMP MOD Computer Modeling WFSE Weather Force Support Element

* Technologies to be developed by DOD

Figure 5-2. A Systems Development Road Map to Weather Modification in 2025.

Conclusions

The world’s finite resources and continued needs will drive the desire to protect people and property

and more efficiently use our crop lands, forests, and range lands. The ability to modify the weather may be

desirable both for economic and defense reasons. The global weather system has been described as a series

of spheres or bubbles. Pushing down on one causes another to pop up.2 We need to know when another

power “pushes” on a sphere in their region, and how that will affect either our own territory or areas of

economic and political interest to the US.

35

Efforts are already under way to create more comprehensive weather models primarily to improve

forecasts, but researchers are also trying to influence the results of these models by adding small amounts of

energy at just the right time and space. These programs are extremely limited at the moment and are not yet

validated, but there is great potential to improve them in the next 30 years.3

The lessons of history indicate a real weather-modification capability will eventually exist despite the

risk. The drive exists. People have always wanted to control the weather and their desire will compel them

to collectively and continuously pursue their goal. The motivation exists. The potential benefits and power

are extremely lucrative and alluring for those who have the resources to develop it. This combination of

drive, motivation, and resources will eventually produce the technology. History also teaches that we cannot

afford to be without a weather-modification capability once the technology is developed and used by others.

Even if we have no intention of using it, others will. To call upon the atomic weapon analogy again, we need

to be able to deter or counter their capability with our own. Therefore, the weather and intelligence

communities must keep abreast of the actions of others.

As the preceding chapters have shown, weather-modification is a force multiplier with tremendous

power that could be exploited across the full spectrum of war-fighting environments. From enhancing

friendly operations or disrupting those of the enemy via small-scale tailoring of natural weather patterns to

complete dominance of global communications and counter-space control, weather-modification offers the

war fighter a wide-range of possible options to defeat or coerce an adversary. But, while offensive weathermodification

efforts would certainly be undertaken by US forces with great caution and trepidation, it is clear

that we cannot afford to allow an adversary to obtain an exclusive weather-modification capability.

Notes

1 Mary Ann Seagraves and Richard Szymber, “Weather a Force Multiplier,” Military Review,

November/December 1995, 69.

2 Daniel S. Halacy, The Weather Changers (New York: Harper & Row, 1968), 202.

3 William Brown, “Mathematicians Learn How to Tame Chaos,” New Scientist, 30 May 1992, 16.

36

Appendix A

Why Is the Ionosphere Important?

The ionosphere is the part of the earth’s atmosphere beginning at an altitude of about 30 miles and

extending outward 1,200 miles or more. This region consists of layers of free electrically charged particles

that transmit, refract, and reflect radio waves, allowing those waves to be transmitted great distances around

the earth. The interaction of the ionosphere on impinging electromagnetic radiation depends on the properties

of the ionospheric layer, the geometry of transmission, and the frequency of the radiation. For any given

signal path through the atmosphere, a range of workable frequency bands exists. This range, between the

maximum usable frequency (MUF) and the lowest usable frequency (LUF), is where radio waves are

reflected and refracted by the ionosphere much as a partial mirror may reflect or refract visible light.1 The

reflective and refractive properties of the ionosphere provide a means to transmit radio signals beyond direct

“line-of-sight” transmission between a transmitter and receiver. Ionospheric reflection and refraction has

therefore been used almost exclusively for long-range HF (from 3 to 30 MHz) communications. Radio waves

with frequencies ranging from above 30 MHz to 300 GHz are usually used for communications requiring

line-of-sight transmissions, such as satellite communications. At these higher frequencies, radio waves

propagate through the ionosphere with only a small fraction of the wave scattering back in a pattern

analogous to a sky wave. Communicators receive significant benefit from using these frequencies since they

provide considerably greater bandwidths and thus have greater data-carrying capacity; they are also less

prone to natural interference (noise).

Although the ionosphere acts as a natural “mirror” for HF radio waves, it is in a constant state of flux,

and thus, its “mirror property” can be limited at times. Like terrestrial weather, ionospheric properties

37

change from year to year, from day to day, and even from hour to hour. This ionospheric variability, called

space weather, can cause unreliability in ground- and space-based communications that depend on

ionospheric reflection or transmission. Space weather variability affects how the ionosphere attenuates,

absorbs, reflects, refracts, and changes the propagation, phase, and amplitude characteristics of radio waves.

These weather dependent changes may arise from certain space weather conditions such as: (1) variability of

solar radiation entering the upper atmosphere; (2) the solar plasma entering the earth’s magnetic field; (3) the

gravitational atmospheric tides produced by the sun and moon; and (4) the vertical swelling of the

atmosphere due to daytime heating of the sun.2 Space weather is also significantly affected by solar flare

activity, the tilt of the earth’s geomagnetic field, and abrupt ionospheric changes resulting from events such as

geomagnetic storms.

In summary, the ionosphere’s inherent reflectivity is a natural gift that humans have used to create longrange

communications connecting distant points on the globe. However, natural variability in the ionosphere

reduces the reliability of our communication systems that depend on ionospheric reflection and refraction

(primarily HF). For the most part, higher frequency communications such as UHF, SHF, and EHF bands are

transmitted through the ionosphere without distortion. However, these bands are also subject to degradation

caused by ionospheric scintillation, a phenomenon induced by abrupt variations in electron density along the

signal path, resulting in signal fade caused by rapid signal path variations and defocusing of the signal’s

amplitude and/or phase.

Understanding and predicting ionospheric variability and its influence on the transmission and reflection

of electromagnetic radiation has been a much studied field of scientific inquiry. Improving our ability to

observe, model, and forecast space weather will substantially improve our communication systems, both

ground and space-based. Considerable work is being conducted, both within the DOD and the commercial

sector, on improving observation, modeling, and forecasting of space weather. While considerable technical

challenges remain, we assume for the purposes of this study that dramatic improvements will occur in these

areas over the next several decades.

38

1 AU-18, Space Handbook, An Analyst’s Guide Vol. II. (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air University Press,

December 1993), 196.

2 Thomas F. Tascione, Introduction to the Space Environment (Colorado Springs: USAF Academy

Department of Physics, 1984), 175.

39

Appendix B

Research to Better Understand and Predict Ionospheric Effects

According to a SPACECAST 2020 study titled, “Space Weather Support for Communications,” the

major factors limiting our ability to observe and accurately forecast space weather are (1) current

ionospheric sensing capability; (2) density and frequency of ionospheric observations; (3) sophistication and

accuracy of ionospheric models; and (4) current scientific understanding of the physics of ionospherethermosphere-

magnetosphere coupling mechanisms.1 The report recommends that improvements be realized

in our ability to measure the ionosphere vertically and spatially; to this end an architecture for ionospheric

mapping was proposed. Such a system would consist of ionospheric sounders and other sensing devices

installed on DoD and commercial satellite constellations (taking advantage in particular of the proposed

IRIDIUM system and replenishment of the GPS) and an expanded ground-based network of ionospheric

vertical sounders in the US and other nations. Understanding and predicting ionospheric scintillation would

also require launching of an equatorial remote sensing satellite in addition to the currently planned or

deployed DOD and commercial constellations.

The payoff of such a system is an improvement in ionospheric forecasting accuracy from the current

range of 40-60 percent to an anticipated 80-100 percent accuracy. Daily worldwide ionospheric mapping

would provide the data required to accurately forecast diurnal, worldwide terrestrial propagation

characteristics of electromagnetic energy from 3-300 MHz. This improved forecasting would assist satellite

operators and users, resulting in enhanced operational efficiency of space systems. It would also provide an

order of magnitude improvement in locating the sources of tactical radio communications, allowing for

location and tracking of enemy and friendly platforms.2 Improved capability to forecast ionospheric

40

scintillation would provide a means to improve communications reliability by the use of alternate ray paths

or relay to undisturbed regions. It would also enable operational users to ascertain whether outages were

due to naturally occurring ionospheric variability as opposed to enemy action or hardware problems.

These advances in ionospheric observation, modeling, and prediction would enhance the reliability and

robustness of our military communications network. In addition to their significant benefits for our existing

communications network, such advances are also requisite to further exploitation of the ionosphere via active

modification.

Notes

1 SPACECAST 2020, Space Weather Support for Communications, white paper G, (Maxwell AFB,

Ala.: Air War College/2020, 1994).

2 Referenced in ibid.

41

Appendix C

Acronyms and Definitions

AOC air operations center

AOR area of responsibility

ATO air tasking order

EHF extra high frequency

GWN global weather network

HF

IR

high frequency

infared

LF low frequency

LUF lowest usable frequency

Mesoscale less than 200 km2

Microscale immediate local area

MUF maximum usable frequency

MW

OTH

PGM

microwave

over-the-horizon

precision-guided munitions

RF radio frequency

SAR

SARSAT

synthetic aperture radar

search and rescue satellite-aided tracking

SHF

SPOT

super high frequency

satellite positioning and tracking

UAV

UV

uninhabited aerospace vehicle

ultraviolet

VHF very high frequency

WFS weather force specialist

WFSE weather force support element

WX weather

42

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Armed Services Committee) Defense Issues, 22 April 1993.

Hume, Capt Edward E., Jr. Atmospheric and Space Environmental Research Programs in Brazil (U), March

1993. Foreign Aerospace Science and Technology Center, AF Intelligence Command, 24 September

1992. (Secret) Information extracted is unclassified.

James, G. E. “Chaos Theory: The Essentials for Military Applications” ACSC Theater Air Campaign

Studies Coursebook, AY96, Vol. 8. Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air University Press, 1995.

Jiusto, James E. “Some Principles of Fog Modification with Hygroscopic Nuclei” Progress of NASA

Research on Warm Fog Properties and Modification Concepts, NASA SP-212. Washington, D.C.:

Scientific and Technical Information Division of the Office of Technology Utilization of the National

Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1969.

Johnson, Capt Mike. Upper Atmospheric Research and Modification—Former Soviet Union (U) supporting

document DST-18205-475-92, Foreign Aerospace Science and Technology Center, AF Intelligence

Command, 24 September 1992. (Secret) Information extracted is unclassified.

Kasemir, Heinz W. “Lightning Suppression by Chaff Seeding and Triggered Lightning.” In Wilmot N. Hess,

ed., Weather and Climate Modification. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1974.

Keaney, Thomas A., and Eliot A. Cohen, Gulf War Air Power Survey Summary Report. Washington D.C.:

GPO, 1993.

Klein, Milton M. A Feasibility Study of the Use of Radiant Energy for Fog Dispersal Abstract. Hanscom

AFB, Mass.: Air Force Material Command, October 1978.

Kocmond, Warren C. “Dissipation of Natural Fog in the Atmosphere,” Progress of NASA Research on

Warm Fog Properties and Modification Concepts, NASA SP-212. Washington, D.C.: Scientific and

Technical Information Division of the Office of Technology Utilization of the National Aeronautics and

Space Administration, 1969.

Kossey, Paul A., et al. “Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors (AIM) A. Concept and Issues,” In Ionospheric

Modification and its Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military Systems,

AGARD Conference Proceedings 485, October 1990.

Maehlum, B. N., and J. Troim, “Vehicle Charging in Low Density Plasmas” In Ionospheric Modification

and Its Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military Systems AGARD Conference

Proceedings 485, October 1990.

McLare, James. Pulp & Paper 68, no. 8, August 1994.

Meyer, William B. “The Life and Times of US Weather: What Can We Do About It?” American Heritage

37, no. 4 (June/July 1986).

Petersen, Rear Adm Sigmund. “NOAA Moves Toward The 21st Century.” The Military Engineer 20, no.

571 (June-July 1995).

Riley, Lt Col Gerald F. Staff Weather Officer to CENTCOM OIC of CENTAF Weather Support Force and

Commander of 3d Weather Squadron. In “Desert Shield/Desert Storm Interview Series,” interviewed

by Dr William E. Narwyn, AWS Historian, 29 May 1991.

Seagraves, Mary Ann, and Richard Szymber “Weather a Force Multiplier.” Military Review,

November/December 1995.

SPACECAST 2020. Space Weather Support for Communications White paper G. Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air

War College/2020, 1994.

44

Stuart, Gene S. “Whirlwinds and Thunderbolts,” In Nature on the Rampage. Washington D.C.: National

Geographic Society, 1986.

Sullivan, Gen Gordon R. “Moving into the 21st Century: America’s Army and Modernization” Military

Review. July 1993. Quoted in Mary Ann Seagraves and Richard Szymber “Weather a Force Multiplier”

Military Review, November/December 1995.

Sutherland, Robert A. “Results of Man-Made Fog Experiment,” In Proceedings of the 1991 Battlefield

Atmospherics Conference. Fort Bliss, Tex.: Hinman Hall, 3–6 December 1991.

Tascione, Thomas F. Introduction to the Space Environment. Colorado Springs: USAF Academy

Department of Physics, 1984.Tomlinson, Edward M., Kenneth C. Young, and Duane D. Smith Laser

Technology Applications for Dissipation of Warm Fog at Airfields, PL-TR-92-2087. Hanscom AFB,

Mass.: Air Force Materiel Command, 1992.

USAF Scientific Advisory Board. New World Vistas: Air and Space Power for the 21st Century, Summary

Volume. Washington, D.C.: USAF Scientific Advisory Board, 15 December 1995.

US Department of State. The Department of State Bulletin 76, no. 1981 (13 June 1977.SIMILAR TECHNOLOGY BUILT BY EADS (THYSSEN KRUPP DESCENDENTS)  TO HAVE BEEN INSTALLED ON HUBBLE BY MICHAEL GOOD (SHUTTLE ATLANTIST)


Weather as a Force Multiplier:


Owning the Weather in 2025

A Research Paper

Presented To

Air Force 2025

by

Col Tamzy J. House

Lt Col James B. Near, Jr.

LTC William B. Shields (USA)

Maj Ronald J. Celentano

Maj David M. Husband

Maj Ann E. Mercer

Maj James E. Pugh

August 1996

ii

Disclaimer

2025 is a study designed to comply with a directive from the chief of staff of the Air Force to examine the

concepts, capabilities, and technologies the United States will require to remain the dominant air and space

force in the future. Presented on 17 June 1996, this report was produced in the Department of Defense school

environment of academic freedom and in the interest of advancing concepts related to national defense. The

views expressed in this report are those of the authors and do not reflect the official policy or position of the

United States Air Force, Department of Defense, or the United States government.

This report contains fictional representations of future situations/scenarios. Any similarities to real people or

events, other than those specifically cited, are unintentional and are for purposes of illustration only.

This publication has been reviewed by security and policy review authorities, is unclassified, and is cleared

for public release.

iii

Contents

Chapter Page

Disclaimer.........................................................................................................................................ii

Illustrations.......................................................................................................................................iv

Tables...............................................................................................................................................iv

Acknowledgments..............................................................................................................................v

Executive Summary ...........................................................................................................................vi

1 Introduction........................................................................................................................................1

2 Required Capability...........................................................................................................................3

Why Would We Want to Mess with the Weather? ........................................................................3

What Do We Mean by “Weather-modification”?..........................................................................4

3 System Description .............................................................................................................................8

The Global Weather Network.......................................................................................................8

Applying Weather-modification to Military Operations .............................................................10

4 Concept of Operations ......................................................................................................................13

Precipitation ...............................................................................................................................13

Fog.............................................................................................................................................16

Storms........................................................................................................................................18

Exploitation of “NearSpace” for Space Control.........................................................................20

Opportunities Afforded by Space Weather-modification............................................................20

Communications Dominance via Ionospheric Modification........................................................21

Artificial Weather.......................................................................................................................27

Concept of Operations Summary.................................................................................................28

5 Investigation Recommendations........................................................................................................31

How Do We Get There From Here?...........................................................................................31

Conclusions ...............................................................................................................................34

Appendix Page

A Why Is the Ionosphere Important? .....................................................................................................36

B Research to Better Understand and Predict Ionospheric Effects........................................................39

C Acronyms and Definitions .................................................................................................................41

Bibliography....................................................................................................................................42

iv

Illustrations

Figure Page

3-1. Global Weather Network....................................................................................................................9

3-2. The Military System for Weather-Modification Operations. ............................................................11

4-1. Crossed-Beam Approach for Generating an Artificial Ionospheric Mirror......................................23

4-2. Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors Point-to-Point Communications .......................................................24

4-3. Artificial Ionospheric Mirror Over-the-Horizon Surveillance Concept. ..........................................25

4-4. Scenarios for Telecommunications Degradation ..............................................................................26

5-1. A Core Competency Road Map to Weather Modification in 2025. ..................................................32

5-2. A Systems Development Road Map to Weather Modification in 2025.............................................34

Tables

Table Page

1 Operational Capabilities Matrix........................................................................................................vi

v

Acknowledgments

We express our appreciation to Mr Mike McKim of Air War College who provided a wealth of

technical expertise and innovative ideas that significantly contributed to our paper. We are also especially

grateful for the devoted support of our families during this research project. Their understanding and

patience during the demanding research period were crucial to the project’s success.

vi

Executive Summary

In 2025, US aerospace forces can “own the weather” by capitalizing on emerging technologies and

focusing development of those technologies to war-fighting applications. Such a capability offers the war

fighter tools to shape the battlespace in ways never before possible. It provides opportunities to impact

operations across the full spectrum of conflict and is pertinent to all possible futures. The purpose of this

paper is to outline a strategy for the use of a future weather-modification system to achieve military

objectives rather than to provide a detailed technical road map.

A high-risk, high-reward endeavor, weather-modification offers a dilemma not unlike the splitting of the

atom. While some segments of society will always be reluctant to examine controversial issues such as

weather-modification, the tremendous military capabilities that could result from this field are ignored at our

own peril. From enhancing friendly operations or disrupting those of the enemy via small-scale tailoring of

natural weather patterns to complete dominance of global communications and counterspace control,

weather-modification offers the war fighter a wide-range of possible options to defeat or coerce an

adversary. Some of the potential capabilities a weather-modification system could provide to a war-fighting

commander in chief (CINC) are listed in table 1.

Technology advancements in five major areas are necessary for an integrated weather-modification

capability: (1) advanced nonlinear modeling techniques, (2) computational capability, (3) information

gathering and transmission, (4) a global sensor array, and (5) weather intervention techniques. Some

intervention tools exist today and others may be developed and refined in the future.

vii

Table 1

Operational Capabilities Matrix

DEGRADE ENEMY FORCES ENHANCE FRIENDLY FORCES

Precipitation Enhancement Precipitation Avoidance

- Flood Lines of Communication - Maintain/Improve LOC

- Reduce PGM/Recce Effectiveness - Maintain Visibility

- Decrease Comfort Level/Morale - Maintain Comfort Level/Morale

Storm Enhancement Storm Modification

- Deny Operations - Choose Battlespace Environment

Precipitation Denial Space Weather

- Deny Fresh Water - Improve Communication Reliability

- Induce Drought - Intercept Enemy Transmissions

Space Weather

- Revitalize Space Assets

- Disrupt Communications/Radar

- Disable/Destroy Space Assets Fog and Cloud Generation

- Increase Concealment

Fog and Cloud Removal Fog and Cloud Removal

- Deny Concealment - Maintain Airfield Operations

- Increase Vulnerability to PGM/Recce - Enhance PGM Effectiveness

Detect Hostile Weather Activities Defend against Enemy Capabilities

Current technologies that will mature over the next 30 years will offer anyone who has the necessary

resources the ability to modify weather patterns and their corresponding effects, at least on the local scale.

Current demographic, economic, and environmental trends will create global stresses that provide the

impetus necessary for many countries or groups to turn this weather-modification ability into a capability.

In the United States, weather-modification will likely become a part of national security policy with

both domestic and international applications. Our government will pursue such a policy, depending on its

interests, at various levels. These levels could include unilateral actions, participation in a security

framework such as NATO, membership in an international organization such as the UN, or participation in a

coalition. Assuming that in 2025 our national security strategy includes weather-modification, its use in our

national military strategy will naturally follow. Besides the significant benefits an operational capability

would provide, another motivation to pursue weather-modification is to deter and counter potential

adversaries.

viii

In this paper we show that appropriate application of weather-modification can provide battlespace

dominance to a degree never before imagined. In the future, such operations will enhance air and space

superiority and provide new options for battlespace shaping and battlespace awareness.1 “The technology is

there, waiting for us to pull it all together;”2 in 2025 we can “Own the Weather.”

Notes

1 The weather-modification capabilities described in this paper are consistent with the operating

environments and missions relevant for aerospace forces in 2025 as defined by AF/LR, a long-range planning

office reporting to the CSAF [based on AF/LR PowerPoint briefing “Air and Space Power Framework for

Strategy Development (jda-2lr.ppt)].”

2 General Gordon R. Sullivan, “Moving into the 21st Century: America’s Army and Modernization,”

Military Review (July 1993) quoted in Mary Ann Seagraves and Richard Szymber, “Weather a Force

Multiplier,” Military Review, November/December 1995, 75.

1

Chapter 1

Introduction

Scenario: Imagine that in 2025 the US is fighting a rich, but now consolidated, politically powerful

drug cartel in South America. The cartel has purchased hundreds of Russian-and Chinese-built fighters that

have successfully thwarted our attempts to attack their production facilities. With their local numerical

superiority and interior lines, the cartel is launching more than 10 aircraft for every one of ours. In addition,

the cartel is using the French system probatoire d' observation de la terre (SPOT) positioning and tracking

imagery systems, which in 2025 are capable of transmitting near-real-time, multispectral imagery with 1

meter resolution. The US wishes to engage the enemy on an uneven playing field in order to exploit the full

potential of our aircraft and munitions.

Meteorological analysis reveals that equatorial South America typically has afternoon thunderstorms on

a daily basis throughout the year. Our intelligence has confirmed that cartel pilots are reluctant to fly in or

near thunderstorms. Therefore, our weather force support element (WFSE), which is a part of the

commander in chief’s (CINC) air operations center (AOC), is tasked to forecast storm paths and trigger or

intensify thunderstorm cells over critical target areas that the enemy must defend with their aircraft. Since

our aircraft in 2025 have all-weather capability, the thunderstorm threat is minimal to our forces, and we can

effectively and decisively control the sky over the target.

The WFSE has the necessary sensor and communication capabilities to observe, detect, and act on

weather-modification requirements to support US military objectives. These capabilities are part of an

advanced battle area system that supports the war-fighting CINC. In our scenario, the CINC tasks the WFSE

to conduct storm intensification and concealment operations. The WFSE models the atmospheric conditions

2

to forecast, with 90 percent confidence, the likelihood of successful modification using airborne cloud

generation and seeding.

In 2025, uninhabited aerospace vehicles (UAV) are routinely used for weather-modification operations.

By cross-referencing desired attack times with wind and thunderstorm forecasts and the SPOT satellite’s

projected orbit, the WFSE generates mission profiles for each UAV. The WFSE guides each UAV using

near-real-time information from a networked sensor array.

Prior to the attack, which is coordinated with forecasted weather conditions, the UAVs begin cloud

generation and seeding operations. UAVs disperse a cirrus shield to deny enemy visual and infrared (IR)

surveillance. Simultaneously, microwave heaters create localized scintillation to disrupt active sensing via

synthetic aperture radar (SAR) systems such as the commercially available Canadian search and rescue

satellite-aided tracking (SARSAT) that will be widely available in 2025. Other cloud seeding operations

cause a developing thunderstorm to intensify over the target, severely limiting the enemy’s capability to

defend. The WFSE monitors the entire operation in real-time and notes the successful completion of another

very important but routine weather-modification mission.

This scenario may seem far-fetched, but by 2025 it is within the realm of possibility. The next chapter

explores the reasons for weather-modification, defines the scope, and examines trends that will make it

possible in the next 30 years.

3

Chapter 2

Required Capability

Why Would We Want to Mess with the Weather?

According to Gen Gordon Sullivan, former Army chief of staff, “As we leap technology into the 21st

century, we will be able to see the enemy day or night, in any weather— and go after him relentlessly.”1 A

global, precise, real-time, robust, systematic weather-modification capability would provide war-fighting

CINCs with a powerful force multiplier to achieve military objectives. Since weather will be common to all

possible futures, a weather-modification capability would be universally applicable and have utility across

the entire spectrum of conflict. The capability of influencing the weather even on a small scale could change

it from a force degrader to a force multiplier.

People have always wanted to be able to do something about the weather. In the US, as early as 1839,

newspaper archives tell of people with serious and creative ideas on how to make rain.2 In 1957, the

president’s advisory committee on weather control explicitly recognized the military potential of weathermodification,

warning in their report that it could become a more important weapon than the atom bomb.3

However, controversy since 1947 concerning the possible legal consequences arising from the

deliberate alteration of large storm systems meant that little future experimentation could be conducted on

storms which had the potential to reach land.4 In 1977, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution

prohibiting the hostile use of environmental modification techniques. The resulting “Convention on the

Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of Environmental Modification Technique (ENMOD)”

4

committed the signatories to refrain from any military or other hostile use of weather-modification which

could result in widespread, long-lasting, or severe effects.5 While these two events have not halted the

pursuit of weather-modification research, they have significantly inhibited its pace and the development of

associated technologies, while producing a primary focus on suppressive versus intensification activities.

The influence of the weather on military operations has long been recognized. During World War II,

Eisenhower said,

[i]n Europe bad weather is the worst enemy of the air [operations]. Some soldier once

said, “The weather is always neutral.” Nothing could be more untrue. Bad weather is

obviously the enemy of the side that seeks to launch projects requiring good weather, or of

the side possessing great assets, such as strong air forces, which depend upon good

weather for effective operations. If really bad weather should endure permanently, the

Nazi would need nothing else to defend the Normandy coast!6

The impact of weather has also been important in more recent military operations. A significant number

of the air sorties into Tuzla during the initial deployment supporting the Bosnian peace operation aborted due

to weather. During Operation Desert Storm, Gen Buster C. Glosson asked his weather officer to tell him

which targets would be clear in 48 hours for inclusion in the air tasking order (ATO).7 But current

forecasting capability is only 85 percent accurate for no more than 24 hours, which doesn't adequately meet

the needs of the ATO planning cycle. Over 50 percent of the F-117 sorties weather aborted over their targets

and A-10s only flew 75 of 200 scheduled close air support (CAS) missions due to low cloud cover during

the first two days of the campaign.8 The application of weather-modification technology to clear a hole over

the targets long enough for F-117s to attack and place bombs on target or clear the fog from the runway at

Tuzla would have been a very effective force multiplier. Weather-modification clearly has potential for

military use at the operational level to reduce the elements of fog and friction for friendly operations and to

significantly increase them for the enemy.

What Do We Mean by “Weather-modification”?

Today, weather-modification is the alteration of weather phenomena over a limited area for a limited

period of time.9 Within the next three decades, the concept of weather-modification could expand to include

the ability to shape weather patterns by influencing their determining factors.10 Achieving such a highly

5

accurate and reasonably precise weather-modification capability in the next 30 years will require

overcoming some challenging but not insurmountable technological and legal hurdles.

Technologically, we must have a solid understanding of the variables that affect weather. We must be

able to model the dynamics of their relationships, map the possible results of their interactions, measure their

actual real-time values, and influence their values to achieve a desired outcome. Society will have to

provide the resources and legal basis for a mature capability to develop. How could all of this happen? The

following notional scenario postulates how weather-modification might become both technically feasible and

socially desirable by 2025.

Between now and 2005, technological advances in meteorology and the demand for more precise

weather information by global businesses will lead to the successful identification and parameterization of

the major variables that affect weather. By 2015, advances in computational capability, modeling techniques,

and atmospheric information tracking will produce a highly accurate and reliable weather prediction

capability, validated against real-world weather. In the following decade, population densities put pressure

on the worldwide availability and cost of food and usable water. Massive life and property losses

associated with natural weather disasters become increasingly unacceptable. These pressures prompt

governments and/or other organizations who are able to capitalize on the technological advances of the

previous 20 years to pursue a highly accurate and reasonably precise weather-modification capability. The

increasing urgency to realize the benefits of this capability stimulates laws and treaties, and some unilateral

actions, making the risks required to validate and refine it acceptable. By 2025, the world, or parts of it, are

able to shape local weather patterns by influencing the factors that affect climate, precipitation, storms and

their effects, fog, and near space. These highly accurate and reasonably precise civil applications of

weather-modification technology have obvious military implications. This is particularly true for aerospace

forces, for while weather may affect all mediums of operation, it operates in ours.

The term weather-modification may have negative connotations for many people, civilians and military

members alike. It is thus important to define the scope to be considered in this paper so that potential critics

or proponents of further research have a common basis for discussion.

In the broadest sense, weather-modification can be divided into two major categories: suppression and

intensification of weather patterns. In extreme cases, it might involve the creation of completely new weather

6

patterns, attenuation or control of severe storms, or even alteration of global climate on a far-reaching and/or

long-lasting scale. In the mildest and least controversial cases it may consist of inducing or suppressing

precipitation, clouds, or fog for short times over a small-scale region. Other low-intensity applications might

include the alteration and/or use of near space as a medium to enhance communications, disrupt active or

passive sensing, or other purposes. In conducting the research for this study, the broadest possible

interpretation of weather-modification was initially embraced, so that the widest range of opportunities

available for our military in 2025 were thoughtfully considered. However, for several reasons described

below, this paper focuses primarily on localized and short-term forms of weather-modification and how

these could be incorporated into war-fighting capability. The primary areas discussed include generation and

dissipation of precipitation, clouds, and fog; modification of localized storm systems; and the use of the

ionosphere and near space for space control and communications dominance. These applications are

consistent with CJCSI 3810.01, “Meteorological and Oceanographic Operations.”

11

Extreme and controversial examples of weather modification—creation of made-to-order weather,

large-scale climate modification, creation and/or control (or “steering”) of severe storms, etc.—were

researched as part of this study but receive only brief mention here because, in the authors’ judgment, the

technical obstacles preventing their application appear insurmountable within 30 years.12 If this were not the

case, such applications would have been included in this report as potential military options, despite their

controversial and potentially malevolent nature and their inconsistency with standing UN agreements to

which the US is a signatory.

On the other hand, the weather-modification applications proposed in this report range from technically

proven to potentially feasible. They are similar, however, in that none are currently employed or envisioned

for employment by our operational forces. They are also similar in their potential value for the war fighter of

the future, as we hope to convey in the following chapters. A notional integrated system that incorporates

weather-modification tools will be described in the next chapter; how those tools might be applied are then

discussed within the framework of the Concept of Operations in chapter 4.

7

1 Gen Gordon R. Sullivan, “Moving into the 21st Century: America’s Army and Modernization,”

Military Review (July 1993) quoted in Mary Ann Seagraves and Richard Szymber, “Weather a Force

Multiplier,” Military Review, November/December 1995, 75.

2 Horace R. Byers, “History of Weather-modification,” in Wilmot N. Hess, ed. Weather and Climate

Modification, (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1974), 4.

3 William B. Meyer, “The Life and Times of US Weather: What Can We Do About It?” American

Heritage 37, no. 4 (June/July 1986), 48.

4 Byers, 13.

5 US Department of State, The Department of State Bulletin. 74, no. 1981 (13 June 1977): 10.

6 Dwight D Eisenhower. “Crusade in Europe,” quoted in John F. Fuller, Thor’s Legions (Boston:

American Meterology Society, 1990), 67.

7 Interview of Lt Col Gerald F. Riley, Staff Weather Officer to CENTCOM OIC of CENTAF Weather

Support Force and Commander of 3rd Weather Squadron, in “Desert Shield/Desert Storm Interview Series,”

by Dr William E. Narwyn, AWS Historian, 29 May 1991.

8 Thomas A. Keaney and Eliot A. Cohen. Gulf War Air Power Survey Summary Report (Washington

D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1993), 172.

9 Herbert S. Appleman, An Introduction to Weather-modification (Scott AFB, Ill.: Air Weather

Service/MAC, September 1969), 1.

10 William Bown, “Mathematicians Learn How to Tame Chaos,” New Scientist, 30 May 1992, 16.

11 CJCSI 3810.01, Meteorological and Oceanographic Operations, 10 January 95. This CJCS

Instruction establishes policy and assigns responsibilities for conducting meteorological and oceanographic

operations. It also defines the terms widespread, long-lasting, and severe, in order to identify those activities

that US forces are prohibited from conducting under the terms of the UN Environmental Modification

Convention. Widespread is defined as encompassing an area on the scale of several hundred km; long-lasting

means lasting for a period of months, or approximately a season; and severe involves serious or significant

disruption or harm to human life, natural and economic resources, or other assets.

12 Concern about the unintended consequences of attempting to “control” the weather is well justified.

Weather is a classic example of a chaotic system (i.e., a system that never exactly repeats itself). A chaotic

system is also extremely sensitive: minuscule differences in conditions greatly affect outcomes. According to

Dr. Glenn James, a widely published chaos expert, technical advances may provide a means to predict when

weather transitions will occur and the magnitude of the inputs required to cause those transitions; however, it

will never be possible to precisely predict changes that occur as a result of our inputs. The chaotic nature of

weather also limits our ability to make accurate long-range forecasts. The renowned physicist Edward

Teller recently presented calculations he performed to determine the long-range weather forecasting

improvement that would result from a satellite constellation providing continuous atmospheric measurements

over a 1 km2 grid worldwide. Such a system, which is currently cost-prohibitive, would only improve longrange

forecasts from the current five days to approximately 14 days. Clearly, there are definite physical

limits to mankind’s ability to control nature, but the extent of those physical limits remains an open question.

Sources: G. E. James, “Chaos Theory: The Essentials for Military Applications,” in ACSC Theater Air

Campaign Studies Coursebook, AY96, 8 (Maxwell AFB, Ala: Air University Press, 1995), 1-64. The

Teller calculations are cited in Reference 49 of this source.

8

Chapter 3

System Description

Our vision is that by 2025 the military could influence the weather on a mesoscale (<200 km2) or

microscale (immediate local area) to achieve operational capabilities such as those listed in Table 1. The

capability would be the synergistic result of a system consisting of (1) highly trained weather force

specialists (WFS) who are members of the CINC’s weather force support element (WFSE); (2) access ports

to the global weather network (GWN), where worldwide weather observations and forecasts are obtained

near-real-time from civilian and military sources; (3) a dense, highly accurate local area weather sensing and

communication system; (4) an advanced computer local area weather-modification modeling and prediction

capability within the area of responsibility (AOR); (5) proven weather-modification intervention

technologies; and (6) a feedback capability.

The Global Weather Network

The GWN is envisioned to be an evolutionary expansion of the current military and civilian worldwide

weather data network. By 2025, it will be a super high-speed, expanded bandwidth, communication network

filled with near-real-time weather observations taken from a denser and more accurate worldwide

observation network resulting from highly improved ground, air, maritime, and space sensors. The network

will also provide access to forecast centers around the world where sophisticated, tailored forecast and data

products, generated from weather prediction models (global, regional, local, specialized, etc.) based on the

latest nonlinear mathematical techniques are made available to GWN customers for near-real-time use.

9

By 2025, we envision that weather prediction models, in general, and mesoscale weather-modification

models, in particular, will be able to emulate all-weather producing variables, along with their interrelated

dynamics, and prove to be highly accurate in stringent measurement trials against empirical data. The brains

of these models will be advanced software and hardware capabilities which can rapidly ingest trillions of

environmental data points, merge them into usable data bases, process the data through the weather prediction

models, and disseminate the weather information over the GWN in near-real-time.1 This network is depicted

schematically in figure 3-1.

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 3-1. Global Weather Network

Evidence of the evolving future weather modeling and prediction capability as well as the GWN can be

seen in the national oceanic and atmospheric administration's (NOAA) 1995–2005 strategic plan. It includes

program elements to "advance short-term warning and forecast services, implement seasonal to inter-annual

climate forecasts, and predict and assess decadal to centennial change;"2 it does not, however, include plans

for weather-modification modeling or modification technology development. NOAA's plans include

extensive data gathering programs such as Next Generation Radar (NEXRAD) and Doppler weather

surveillance systems deployed throughout the US. Data from these sensing systems feed into over 100

forecast centers for processing by the Advanced Weather Interactive Processing System (AWIPS), which

will provide data communication, processing, and display capabilities for extensive forecasting. In addition,

10

NOAA has leased a Cray C90 supercomputer capable of performing over 1.5x1010 operations per second that

has already been used to run a Hurricane Prediction System.3

Applying Weather-modification to Military Operations

How will the military, in general, and the USAF, in particular, manage and employ a weathermodification

capability? We envision this will be done by the weather force support element (WFSE),

whose primary mission would be to support the war-fighting CINCs with weather-modification options, in

addition to current forecasting support. Although the WFSE could operate anywhere as long as it has access

to the GWN and the system components already discussed, it will more than likely be a component within the

AOC or its 2025-equivalent. With the CINC’s intent as guidance, the WFSE formulates weathermodification

options using information provided by the GWN, local weather data network, and weathermodification

forecast model. The options include range of effect, probability of success, resources to be

expended, the enemy’s vulnerability, and risks involved. The CINC chooses an effect based on these inputs,

and the WFSE then implements the chosen course, selecting the right modification tools and employing them

to achieve the desired effect. Sensors detect the change and feed data on the new weather pattern to the

modeling system which updates its forecast accordingly. The WFSE checks the effectiveness of its efforts by

pulling down the updated current conditions and new forecast(s) from the GWN and local weather data

network, and plans follow-on missions as needed. This concept is illustrated in figure 3-2.

11

33--DECIISIION

6--FEEDBACK

AIIR OPS CENTER

WEATHER FORCE

SUPPORT ELEMENT

CINC

1--IINTENT

2--WX MOD

OPTIIONS

FORECASTS//

DATA

4--EMPLOY

WX MOD TOOLS

5--CAUSE EFFECT

GWN

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 3-2. The Military System for Weather-Modification Operations.

WFSE personnel will need to be experts in information systems and well schooled in the arts of both

offensive and defensive information warfare. They would also have an in-depth understanding of the GWN

and an appreciation for how weather-modification could be employed to meet a CINC’s needs.

Because of the nodal web nature of the GWN, this concept would be very flexible. For instance, a

WFSE could be assigned to each theater to provide direct support to the CINC. The system would also be

survivable, with multiple nodes connected to the GWN.

A product of the information age, this system would be most vulnerable to information warfare. Each

WFSE would need the most current defensive and offensive information capabilities available. Defensive

abilities would be necessary for survival. Offensive abilities could provide spoofing options to create

virtual weather in the enemy's sensory and information systems, making it more likely for them to make

decisions producing results of our choosing rather than theirs. It would also allow for the capability to mask

or disguise our weather-modification activities.

12

Two key technologies are necessary to meld an integrated, comprehensive, responsive, precise, and

effective weather-modification system. Advances in the science of chaos are critical to this endeavor. Also

key to the feasibility of such a system is the ability to model the extremely complex nonlinear system of

global weather in ways that can accurately predict the outcome of changes in the influencing variables.

Researchers have already successfully controlled single variable nonlinear systems in the lab and

hypothesize that current mathematical techniques and computer capacity could handle systems with up to five

variables. Advances in these two areas would make it feasible to affect regional weather patterns by making

small, continuous nudges to one or more influencing factors. Conceivably, with enough lead time and the

right conditions, you could get “made-to-order” weather.4

Developing a true weather-modification capability will require various intervention tools to adjust the

appropriate meteorological parameters in predictable ways. It is this area that must be developed by the

military based on specific required capabilities such as those listed in table 1, table 1 is located in the

Executive Summary. Such a system would contain a sensor array and localized battle area data net to

provide the fine level of resolution required to detect intervention effects and provide feedback. This net

would include ground, air, maritime, and space sensors as well as human observations in order to ensure the

reliability and responsiveness of the system, even in the event of enemy countermeasures. It would also

include specific intervention tools and technologies, some of which already exist and others which must be

developed. Some of these proposed tools are described in the following chapter titled Concept of

Operations. The total weather-modification process would be a real-time loop of continuous, appropriate,

measured interventions, and feedback capable of producing desired weather behavior.

Notes

1 SPACECAST 2020, Space Weather Support for Communications, white paper G (Maxwell AFB,

Ala.: Air War College/2020, 1994).

2 Rear Adm Sigmund Petersen, “NOAA Moves Toward The 21st Century,” The Military Engineer 20,

no. 571 (June-July 1995): 44.

3 Ibid.

4 William Brown, “Mathematicians Learn How to Tame Chaos,” New Scientist (30 May 1992): 16.

13

Chapter 4

Concept of Operations

The essential ingredient of the weather-modification system is the set of intervention techniques used to

modify the weather. The number of specific intervention methodologies is limited only by the imagination,

but with few exceptions they involve infusing either energy or chemicals into the meteorological process in

the right way, at the right place and time. The intervention could be designed to modify the weather in a

number of ways, such as influencing clouds and precipitation, storm intensity, climate, space, or fog.

Precipitation

For centuries man has desired the ability to influence precipitation at the time and place of his choosing.

Until recently, success in achieving this goal has been minimal; however, a new window of opportunity may

exist resulting from development of new technologies and an increasing world interest in relieving water

shortages through precipitation enhancement. Consequently, we advocate that the DOD explore the many

opportunities (and also the ramifications) resulting from development of a capability to influence

precipitation or conducting “selective precipitation modification.” Although the capability to influence

precipitation over the long term (i.e., for more than several days) is still not fully understood. By 2025 we

will certainly be capable of increasing or decreasing precipitation over the short term in a localized area.

Before discussing research in this area, it is important to describe the benefits of such a capability.

While many military operations may be influenced by precipitation, ground mobility is most affected.

Influencing precipitation could prove useful in two ways. First, enhancing precipitation could decrease the

14

enemy’s trafficability by muddying terrain, while also affecting their morale. Second, suppressing

precipitation could increase friendly trafficability by drying out an otherwise muddied area.

What is the possibility of developing this capability and applying it to tactical operations by 2025?

Closer than one might think. Research has been conducted in precipitation modification for many years, and

an aspect of the resulting technology was applied to operations during the Vietnam War.1 These initial

attempts provide a foundation for further development of a true capability for selective precipitation

modification.

Interestingly enough, the US government made a conscious decision to stop building upon this

foundation. As mentioned earlier, international agreements have prevented the US from investigating

weather-modification operations that could have widespread, long-lasting, or severe effects. However,

possibilities do exist (within the boundaries of established treaties) for using localized precipitation

modification over the short term, with limited and potentially positive results.

These possibilities date back to our own previous experimentation with precipitation modification. As

stated in an article appearing in the Journal of Applied Meteorology,

[n]early all the weather-modification efforts over the last quarter century have been aimed

at producing changes on the cloud scale through exploitation of the saturated vapor

pressure difference between ice and water. This is not to be criticized but it is time we

also consider the feasibility of weather-modification on other time-space scales and with

other physical hypotheses.2

This study by William M. Gray, et al., investigated the hypothesis that “significant beneficial influences

can be derived through judicious exploitation of the solar absorption potential of carbon black dust.”3 The

study ultimately found that this technology could be used to enhance rainfall on the mesoscale, generate cirrus

clouds, and enhance cumulonimbus (thunderstorm) clouds in otherwise dry areas.

The technology can be described as follows. Just as a black tar roof easily absorbs solar energy and

subsequently radiates heat during a sunny day, carbon black also readily absorbs solar energy. When

dispersed in microscopic or “dust” form in the air over a large body of water, the carbon becomes hot and

heats the surrounding air, thereby increasing the amount of evaporation from the body of water below. As the

surrounding air heats up, parcels of air will rise and the water vapor contained in the rising air parcel will

eventually condense to form clouds. Over time the cloud droplets increase in size as more and more water

vapor condenses, and eventually they become too large and heavy to stay suspended and will fall as rain or

15

other forms of precipitation.4 The study points out that this precipitation enhancement technology would

work best “upwind from coastlines with onshore flow.” Lake-effect snow along the southern edge of the

Great Lakes is a naturally occurring phenomenon based on similar dynamics.

Can this type of precipitation enhancement technology have military applications? Yes, if the right

conditions exist. For example, if we are fortunate enough to have a fairly large body of water available

upwind from the targeted battlefield, carbon dust could be placed in the atmosphere over that water.

Assuming the dynamics are supportive in the atmosphere, the rising saturated air will eventually form clouds

and rainshowers downwind over the land.5 While the likelihood of having a body of water located upwind

of the battlefield is unpredictable, the technology could prove enormously useful under the right conditions.

Only further experimentation will determine to what degree precipitation enhancement can be controlled.

If precipitation enhancement techniques are successfully developed and the right natural conditions also

exist, we must also be able to disperse carbon dust into the desired location. Transporting it in a completely

controlled, safe, cost-effective, and reliable manner requires innovation. Numerous dispersal techniques

have already been studied, but the most convenient, safe, and cost-effective method discussed is the use of

afterburner-type jet engines to generate carbon particles while flying through the targeted air. This method is

based on injection of liquid hydrocarbon fuel into the afterburner’s combustion gases. This direct generation

method was found to be more desirable than another plausible method (i.e., the transport of large quantities of

previously produced and properly sized carbon dust to the desired altitude).

The carbon dust study demonstrated that small-scale precipitation enhancement is possible and has been

successfully verified under certain atmospheric conditions. Since the study was conducted, no known

military applications of this technology have been realized. However, we can postulate how this technology

might be used in the future by examining some of the delivery platforms conceivably available for effective

dispersal of carbon dust or other effective modification agents in the year 2025.

One method we propose would further maximize the technology’s safety and reliability, by virtually

eliminating the human element. To date, much work has been done on UAVs which can closely (if not

completely) match the capabilities of piloted aircraft. If this UAV technology were combined with stealth and

carbon dust technologies, the result could be a UAV aircraft invisible to radar while en route to the targeted

area, which could spontaneously create carbon dust in any location. However, minimizing the number of

16

UAVs required to complete the mission would depend upon the development of a new and more efficient

system to produce carbon dust by a follow-on technology to the afterburner-type jet engines previously

mentioned. In order to effectively use stealth technology, this system must also have the ability to disperse

carbon dust while minimizing (or eliminating) the UAV’s infrared heat source.

In addition to using stealth UAV and carbon dust absorption technology for precipitation enhancement,

this delivery method could also be used for precipitation suppression. Although the previously mentioned

study did not significantly explore the possibility of cloud seeding for precipitation suppression, this

possibility does exist. If clouds were seeded (using chemical nuclei similar to those used today or perhaps a

more effective agent discovered through continued research) before their downwind arrival to a desired

location, the result could be a suppression of precipitation. In other words, precipitation could be “forced”

to fall before its arrival in the desired territory, thereby making the desired territory “dry.” The strategic and

operational benefits of doing this have previously been discussed.

Fog

In general, successful fog dissipation requires some type of heating or seeding process. Which

technique works best depends on the type of fog encountered. In simplest terms, there are two basic types of

fog—cold and warm. Cold fog occurs at temperatures below 32oF. The best-known dissipation technique

for cold fog is to seed it from the air with agents that promote the growth of ice crystals.6

Warm fog occurs at temperatures above 32oF and accounts for 90 percent of the fog-related problems

encountered by flight operations.7 The best-known dissipation technique is heating because a small

temperature increase is usually sufficient to evaporate the fog. Since heating usually isn’t practical, the next

most effective technique is hygroscopic seeding.8 Hygroscopic seeding uses agents that absorb water vapor.

This technique is most effective when accomplished from the air but can also be accomplished from the

ground.9 Optimal results require advance information on fog depth, liquid water content, and wind.10

Decades of research show that fog dissipation is an effective application of weather-modification

technology with demonstrated savings of huge proportions for both military and civil aviation.11 Local

17

municipalities have also shown an interest in applying these techniques to improve the safety of high-speed

highways transiting areas of frequently occurring dense fog.12

There are some emerging technologies which may have important applications for fog dispersal. As

discussed earlier, heating is the most effective dispersal method for the most commonly occurring type of fog.

Unfortunately, it has proved impractical for most situations and would be difficult at best for contingency

operations. However, the development of directed radiant energy technologies, such as microwaves and

lasers, could provide new possibilities.

Lab experiments have shown microwaves to be effective for the heat dissipation of fog. However,

results also indicate that the energy levels required exceed the US large power density exposure limit of 100

watt/m2 and would be very expensive.13 Field experiments with lasers have demonstrated the capability to

dissipate warm fog at an airfield with zero visibility. Generating 1 watt/cm2, which is approximately the US

large power density exposure limit, the system raised visibility to one quarter of a mile in 20 seconds.14

Laser systems described in the Space Operations portion of this AF 2025 study could certainly provide this

capability as one of their many possible uses.

With regard to seeding techniques, improvements in the materials and delivery methods are not only

plausible but likely. Smart materials based on nanotechnology are currently being developed with gigaops

computer capability at their core. They could adjust their size to optimal dimensions for a given fog seeding

situation and even make adjustments throughout the process. They might also enhance their dispersal

qualities by adjusting their buoyancy, by communicating with each other, and by steering themselves within

the fog. They will be able to provide immediate and continuous effectiveness feedback by integrating with a

larger sensor network and can also change their temperature and polarity to improve their seeding effects.15

As mentioned above, UAVs could be used to deliver and distribute these smart materials.

Recent army research lab experiments have demonstrated the feasibility of generating fog. They used

commercial equipment to generate thick fog in an area 100 meters long. Further study has shown fogs to be

effective at blocking much of the UV/IR/visible spectrum, effectively masking emitters of such radiation from

IR weapons.16 This technology would enable a small military unit to avoid detection in the IR spectrum. Fog

could be generated to quickly, conceal the movement of tanks or infantry, or it could conceal military

18

operations, facilities, or equipment. Such systems may also be useful in inhibiting observations of sensitive

rear-area operations by electro-optical reconnaissance platforms.17

Storms

The desirability to modify storms to support military objectives is the most aggressive and

controversial type of weather-modification. The damage caused by storms is indeed horrendous. For

instance, a tropical storm has an energy equal to 10,000 one-megaton hydrogen bombs,18 and in 1992

Hurricane Andrew totally destroyed Homestead AFB, Florida, caused the evacuation of most military

aircraft in the southeastern US, and resulted in $15.5 billion of damage.19 However, as one would expect

based on a storm’s energy level, current scientific literature indicates that there are definite physical limits on

mankind’s ability to modify storm systems. By taking this into account along with political, environmental,

economic, legal, and moral considerations, we will confine our analysis of storms to localized thunderstorms

and thus do not consider major storm systems such as hurricanes or intense low-pressure systems.

At any instant there are approximately 2,000 thunderstorms taking place. In fact 45,000 thunderstorms,

which contain heavy rain, hail, microbursts, wind shear, and lightning form daily.20 Anyone who has flown

frequently on commercial aircraft has probably noticed the extremes that pilots will go to avoid

thunderstorms. The danger of thunderstorms was clearly shown in August 1985 when a jumbo jet crashed

killing 137 people after encountering microburst wind shears during a rain squall.21 These forces of nature

impact all aircraft and even the most advanced fighters of 1996 make every attempt to avoid a thunderstorm.

Will bad weather remain an aviation hazard in 2025? The answer, unfortunately, is “yes,” but

projected advances in technology over the next 30 years will diminish the hazard potential. Computercontrolled

flight systems will be able to “autopilot” aircraft through rapidly changing winds. Aircraft will

also have highly accurate, onboard sensing systems that can instantaneously “map” and automatically guide

the aircraft through the safest portion of a storm cell. Aircraft are envisioned to have hardened electronics

that can withstand the effects of lightning strikes and may also have the capability to generate a surrounding

electropotential field that will neutralize or repel lightning strikes.

19

Assuming that the US achieves some or all of the above outlined aircraft technical advances and

maintains the technological “weather edge” over its potential adversaries, we can next look at how we could

modify the battlespace weather to make the best use of our technical advantage.

Weather-modification technologies might involve techniques that would increase latent heat release in

the atmosphere, provide additional water vapor for cloud cell development, and provide additional surface

and lower atmospheric heating to increase atmospheric instability. Critical to the success of any attempt to

trigger a storm cell is the pre-existing atmospheric conditions locally and regionally. The atmosphere must

already be conditionally unstable and the large-scale dynamics must be supportive of vertical cloud

development. The focus of the weather-modification effort would be to provide additional “conditions” that

would make the atmosphere unstable enough to generate cloud and eventually storm cell development. The

path of storm cells once developed or enhanced is dependent not only on the mesoscale dynamics of the storm

but the regional and synoptic (global) scale atmospheric wind flow patterns in the area which are currently

not subject to human control.

As indicated, the technical hurdles for storm development in support of military operations are

obviously greater than enhancing precipitation or dispersing fog as described earlier. One area of storm

research that would significantly benefit military operations is lightning modification. Most research efforts

are being conducted to develop techniques to lessen the occurrence or hazards associated with lightning.

This is important research for military operations and resource protection, but some offensive military benefit

could be obtained by doing research on increasing the potential and intensity of lightning. Concepts to

explore include increasing the basic efficiency of the thunderstorm, stimulating the triggering mechanism that

initiates the bolt, and triggering lightning such as that which struck Apollo 12 in 1968.22 Possible

mechanisms to investigate would be ways to modify the electropotential characteristics over certain targets to

induce lightning strikes on the desired targets as the storm passes over their location.

In summary, the ability to modify battlespace weather through storm cell triggering or enhancement

would allow us to exploit the technological “weather” advances of our 2025 aircraft; this area has

tremendous potential and should be addressed by future research and concept development programs.

20

Exploitation of “NearSpace” for Space Control

This section discusses opportunities for control and modification of the ionosphere and near-space

environment for force enhancement; specifically to enhance our own communications, sensing, and navigation

capabilities and/or impair those of our enemy. A brief technical description of the ionosphere and its

importance in current communications systems is provided in appendix A.

By 2025, it may be possible to modify the ionosphere and near space, creating a variety of potential

applications, as discussed below. However, before ionospheric modification becomes possible, a number of

evolutionary advances in space weather forecasting and observation are needed. Many of these needs were

described in a Spacecast 2020 study, Space Weather Support for Communications.23 Some of the

suggestions from this study are included in appendix B; it is important to note that our ability to exploit near

space via active modification is dependent on successfully achieving reliable observation and prediction

capabilities.

Opportunities Afforded by Space Weather-modification

Modification of the near-space environment is crucial to battlespace dominance. General Charles

Horner, former commander in chief, United States space command, described his worst nightmare as “seeing

an entire Marine battalion wiped out on some foreign landing zone because he was unable to deny the enemy

intelligence and imagery generated from space.”24 Active modification could provide a “technological fix”

to jam the enemy’s active and passive surveillance and reconnaissance systems. In short, an operational

capability to modify the near-space environment would ensure space superiority in 2025; this capability

would allow us to shape and control the battlespace via enhanced communication, sensing, navigation,

and precision engagement systems.

While we recognize that technological advances may negate the importance of certain electromagnetic

frequencies for US aerospace forces in 2025 (such as radio frequency (RF), high-frequency (HF) and very

high-frequency (VHF) bands), the capabilities described below are nevertheless relevant. Our nonpeer

21

adversaries will most likely still depend on such frequencies for communications, sensing, and navigation

and would thus be extremely vulnerable to disruption via space weather-modification.

Communications Dominance via Ionospheric Modification

Modification of the ionosphere to enhance or disrupt communications has recently become the subject of

active research. According to Lewis M. Duncan, and Robert L. Showen, the Former Soviet Union (FSU)

conducted theoretical and experimental research in this area at a level considerably greater than comparable

programs in the West.25 There is a strong motivation for this research, because

induced ionospheric modifications may influence, or even disrupt, the operation of radio

systems relying on propagation through the modified region. The controlled generation or

accelerated dissipation of ionospheric disturbances may be used to produce new

propagation paths, otherwise unavailable, appropriate for selected RF missions.26

A number of methods have been explored or proposed to modify the ionosphere, including injection of

chemical vapors and heating or charging via electromagnetic radiation or particle beams (such as ions,

neutral particles, x-rays, MeV particles, and energetic electrons).27 It is important to note that many

techniques to modify the upper atmosphere have been successfully demonstrated experimentally. Groundbased

modification techniques employed by the FSU include vertical HF heating, oblique HF heating,

microwave heating, and magnetospheric modification.28 Significant military applications of such operations

include low frequency (LF) communication production, HF ducted communications, and creation of an

artificial ionosphere (discussed in detail below). Moreover, developing countries also recognize the benefit

of ionospheric modification: “in the early 1980’s, Brazil conducted an experiment to modify the ionosphere

by chemical injection.”29

Several high-payoff capabilities that could result from the modification of the ionosphere or near space

are described briefly below. It should be emphasized that this list is not comprehensive; modification of the

ionosphere is an area rich with potential applications and there are also likely spin-off applications that have

yet to be envisioned.

Ionospheric mirrors for pinpoint communication or over-the-horizon (OTH) radar transmission.

The properties and limitations of the ionosphere as a reflecting medium for high-frequency radiation are

22

described in appendix A. The major disadvantage in depending on the ionosphere to reflect radio waves is

its variability, which is due to normal space weather and events such as solar flares and geomagnetic storms.

The ionosphere has been described as a crinkled sheet of wax paper whose relative position rises and sinks

depending on weather conditions. The surface topography of the crinkled paper also constantly changes,

leading to variability in its reflective, refractive, and transmissive properties.

Creation of an artificial uniform ionosphere was first proposed by Soviet researcher A. V. Gurevich in

the mid-1970s. An artificial ionospheric mirror (AIM) would serve as a precise mirror for electromagnetic

radiation of a selected frequency or a range of frequencies. It would thereby be useful for both pinpoint

control of friendly communications and interception of enemy transmissions.

This concept has been described in detail by Paul A. Kossey, et al. in a paper entitled “Artificial

Ionospheric Mirrors (AIM).”30 The authors describe how one could precisely control the location and height

of the region of artificially produced ionization using crossed microwave (MW) beams, which produce

atmospheric breakdown (ionization) of neutral species. The implications of such control are enormous: one

would no longer be subject to the vagaries of the natural ionosphere but would instead have direct control of

the propagation environment. Ideally, the AIM could be rapidly created and then would be maintained only

for a brief operational period. A schematic depicting the crossed-beam approach for generation of an AIM is

shown in figure 4-1.31

An AIM could theoretically reflect radio waves with frequencies up to 2 GHz, which is nearly two

orders of magnitude higher than those waves reflected by the natural ionosphere. The MW radiator power

requirements for such a system are roughly an order of magnitude greater than 1992 state-of-the-art systems;

however, by 2025 such a power capability is expected to be easily achievable.

23

NORMAL IONOSPHERIC REFLECTING LAYERS

(100-300 km)

IONIZATION LAYER

(MIRROR)

INTENSE MW 30-70 km

BEAMS

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 4-1. Crossed-Beam Approach for Generating an Artificial Ionospheric Mirror

Besides providing pinpoint communication control and potential interception capability, this technology

would also provide communication capability at specified frequencies, as desired. Figure 4-2 shows how a

ground-based radiator might generate a series of AIMs, each of which would be tailored to reflect a selected

transmission frequency. Such an arrangement would greatly expand the available bandwidth for

communications and also eliminate the problem of interference and crosstalk (by allowing one to use the

requisite power level).

24

Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors

8 MHz

5 MHz 12 MHz

14 MHz

GROUND-BASED

AIM GENERATOR

TRANSMISSION

STATION

RECEIVER

STATION

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 4-2. Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors Point-to-Point Communications

Kossey et al. also describe how AIMs could be used to improve the capability of OTH radar:

AIM based radar could be operated at a frequency chosen to optimize target detection,

rather than be limited by prevailing ionospheric conditions. This, combined with the

possibility of controlling the radar’s wave polarization to mitigate clutter effects, could

result in reliable detection of cruise missiles and other low observable targets.32

A schematic depicting this concept is shown in figure 4-3. Potential advantages over conventional OTH

radars include frequency control, mitigation of auroral effects, short range operation, and detection of a

smaller cross-section target.

25

IONOSPHERE

AIM

OTH

RADAR

NORMAL

OTH RANGE

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 4-3. Artificial Ionospheric Mirror Over-the-Horizon Surveillance Concept.

Disruption of communications and radar via ionospheric control. A variation of the capability

proposed above is ionospheric modification to disrupt an enemy’s communication or radar transmissions.

Because HF communications are controlled directly by the ionosphere’s properties, an artificially created

ionization region could conceivably disrupt an enemy’s electromagnetic transmissions. Even in the absence

of an artificial ionization patch, high-frequency modification produces large-scale ionospheric variations

which alter HF propagation characteristics. The payoff of research aimed at understanding how to control

these variations could be high as both HF communication enhancement and degradation are possible.

Offensive interference of this kind would likely be indistinguishable from naturally occurring space weather.

This capability could also be employed to precisely locate the source of enemy electromagnetic

transmissions.

VHF, UHF, and super-high frequency (SHF) satellite communications could be disrupted by creating

artificial ionospheric scintillation. This phenomenon causes fluctuations in the phase and amplitude of radio

waves over a very wide band (30 MHz to 30 GHz). HF modification produces electron density irregularities

that cause scintillation over a wide-range of frequencies. The size of the irregularities determines which

frequency band will be affected. Understanding how to control the spectrum of the artificial irregularities

26

generated in the HF modification process should be a primary goal of research in this area. Additionally, it

may be possible to suppress the growth of natural irregularities resulting in reduced levels of natural

scintillation. Creating artificial scintillation would allow us to disrupt satellite transmissions over selected

regions. Like the HF disruption described above, such actions would likely be indistinguishable from

naturally occurring environmental events. Figure 4-4 shows how artificially ionized regions might be used to

disrupt HF communications via attenuation, scatter, or absorption (fig. 4.4a) or degrade satellite

communications via scintillation or energy loss (fig. 4-4b) (from Ref. 25).

km

300

100

50

REGION

F

E

D

POTENTIAL HF PROBLEMS

ABSORPTION

ATTENUATION

SCATTER

GROUND

REGION

F

E

D

km

300

100

50

SCINTILLATION

ENERGY LOSS

GROUND

POTENTIAL TRANSIONOSPHERIC PROBLEMS

(a) (b)

Source: Microsoft Clipart Gallery ã 1995 with courtesy from Microsoft.

Figure 4-4. Scenarios for Telecommunications Degradation

Exploding/disabling space assets traversing near-space. The ionosphere could potentially be

artificially charged or injected with radiation at a certain point so that it becomes inhospitable to satellites or

other space structures. The result could range from temporarily disabling the target to its complete

destruction via an induced explosion. Of course, effectively employing such a capability depends on the

ability to apply it selectively to chosen regions in space.

Charging space assets by near-space energy transfer. In contrast to the injurious capability described

above, regions of the ionosphere could potentially be modified or used as-is to revitalize space assets, for

instance by charging their power systems. The natural charge of the ionosphere may serve to provide most or

all of the energy input to the satellite. There have been a number of papers in the last decade on electrical

27

charging of space vehicles; however, according to one author, “in spite of the significant effort made in the

field both theoretically and experimentally, the vehicle charging problem is far from being completely

understood.”33 While the technical challenge is considerable, the potential to harness electrostatic energy to

fuel the satellite’s power cells would have a high payoff, enabling service life extension of space assets at a

relatively low cost. Additionally, exploiting the capability of powerful HF radio waves to accelerate

electrons to relatively high energies may also facilitate the degradation of enemy space assets through

directed bombardment with the HF-induced electron beams. As with artificial HF communication

disruptions and induced scintillation, the degradation of enemy spacecraft with such techniques would be

effectively indistinguishable from natural environment effects. The investigation and optimization of HF

acceleration mechanisms for both friendly and hostile purposes is an important area for future research

efforts.

Artificial Weather

While most weather-modification efforts rely on the existence of certain preexisting conditions, it may

be possible to produce some weather effects artificially, regardless of preexisting conditions. For instance,

virtual weather could be created by influencing the weather information received by an end user. Their

perception of parameter values or images from global or local meteorological information systems would

differ from reality. This difference in perception would lead the end user to make degraded operational

decisions.

Nanotechnology also offers possibilities for creating simulated weather. A cloud, or several clouds, of

microscopic computer particles, all communicating with each other and with a larger control system could

provide tremendous capability. Interconnected, atmospherically buoyant, and having navigation capability in

three dimensions, such clouds could be designed to have a wide-range of properties. They might exclusively

block optical sensors or could adjust to become impermeable to other surveillance methods. They could also

provide an atmospheric electrical potential difference, which otherwise might not exist, to achieve precisely

aimed and timed lightning strikes. Even if power levels achieved were insufficient to be an effective strike

weapon, the potential for psychological operations in many situations could be fantastic.

28

One major advantage of using simulated weather to achieve a desired effect is that unlike other

approaches, it makes what are otherwise the results of deliberate actions appear to be the consequences of

natural weather phenomena. In addition, it is potentially relatively inexpensive to do. According to J. Storrs

Hall, a scientist at Rutgers University conducting research on nanotechnology, production costs of these

nanoparticles could be about the same price per pound as potatoes.34 This of course discounts research and

development costs, which will be primarily borne by the private sector and be considered a sunk cost by

2025 and probably earlier.

Concept of Operations Summary

Weather affects everything we do, and weather-modification can enhance our ability to dominate the

aerospace environment. It gives the commander tools to shape the battlespace. It gives the logistician tools

to optimize the process. It gives the warriors in the cockpit an operating environment literally crafted to their

needs. Some of the potential capabilities a weather-modification system could provide to a war-fighting

CINC are summarized in table 1, of the executive summary).

Notes

1 A pilot program known as Project Popeye conducted in 1966 attempted to extend the monsoon season

in order to increase the amount of mud on the Ho Chi Minh trail thereby reducing enemy movements. A silver

iodide nuclei agent was dispersed from WC-130, F4 and A-1E aircraft into the clouds over portions of the

trail winding from North Vietnam through Laos and Cambodia into South Vietnam. Positive results during

this initial program led to continued operations from 1967 to 1972. While the effects of this program remain

disputed, some scientists believe it resulted in a significant reduction in the enemy’s ability to bring supplies

into South Vietnam along the trail. E. M. Frisby, “Weather-modification in Southeast Asia, 1966–1972,” The

Journal of Weather-modification 14, no. 1 (April 1982): 1—3.

2 William M. Gray et al., “Weather-modification by Carbon Dust Absorption of Solar Energy,” Journal

of Applied Meteorology 15 (April 1976): 355.

3 Ibid.

4 Ibid.

5 Ibid., 367.

6 AWS PLAN 813 Appendix I Annex Alfa (Scott AFB, Ill.: Air Weather Service/(MAC) 14 January

1972), 11. Hereafter cited as Annex Alfa.

7 Capt Frank G. Coons, “Warm Fog Dispersal—A Different Story,” Aerospace Safety 25, no. 10

(October 1969): 16.

8 Annex Alfa, 14.

29

9 Warren C. Kocmond, “Dissipation of Natural Fog in the Atmosphere,” Progress of NASA Research

on Warm Fog Properties and Modification Concepts, NASA SP-212 (Washington, D.C.: Scientific and

Technical Information Division of the Office of Technology Utilization of the National Aeronautics and

Space Administration, 1969), 74.

10 James E. Jiusto, “Some Principles of Fog Modification with Hygrosopic Nuclei,” Progress of NASA

Research on Warm Fog Properties and Modification Concepts, NASA SP-212 (Washington, D.C.:

Scientific and Technical Information Division of the Office of Technology Utilization of the National

Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1969), 37.

11 Maj Roy Dwyer, Category III or Fog Dispersal, M-U 35582-7 D993a c.1 (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air

University Press, May 1972), 51.

12 James McLare, Pulp & Paper 68, no. 8 (August 1994): 79.

13 Milton M. Klein, A Feasibility Study of the Use of Radiant Energy for Fog Dispersal, Abstract

(Hanscom AFB, Mass.: Air Force Material Command, October 1978).

14 Edward M. Tomlinson, Kenneth C. Young, and Duane D. Smith, Laser Technology Applications for

Dissipation of Warm Fog at Airfields, PL-TR-92-2087 (Hanscom AFB, Mass.: Air Force Material

Command, 1992).

15 J. Storrs Hall, “Overview of Nanotechnology,” adapted from papers by Ralph C. Merkle and K. Eric

Drexler, Internet address: http://nanotech.rutgers.edu/nanotech-/intro.html, Rutgers University, November

1995.

16 Robert A. Sutherland, “Results of Man-Made Fog Experiment,” Proceedings of the 1991 Battlefield

Atmospherics Conference (Fort Bliss, Tex.: Hinman Hall, 3–6 December 1991).

17 Christopher Centner et al., “Environmental Warfare: Implications for Policymakers and War

Planners” (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air Command and Staff College, May 1995), 39.

18 Louis J. Battan, Harvesting the Clouds (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday & Co., 1960), 120.

19 Facts on File 55, no. 2866 (2 November 95).

20 Gene S. Stuart, “Whirlwinds and Thunderbolts,” Nature on the Rampage (Washington, D.C.:

National Geographic Society, 1986), 130.

21 Ibid., 140.

22 Heinz W. Kasemir, “Lightning Suppression by Chaff Seeding and Triggered Lightning,” in Wilmot

N. Hess, ed., Weather and Climate Modification (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1974), 623–628.

23 SPACECAST 2020, Space Weather Support for Communications, white paper G, (Maxwell AFB,

Ala.: Air War College/2020, 1994).

24 Gen Charles Horner, “Space Seen as Challenge, Military’s Final Frontier,” Defense Issues,

(Prepared Statement to the Senate Armed Services Committee), 22 April 1993, 7.

25 Lewis M. Duncan and Robert L. Showen, “Review of Soviet Ionospheric Modification Research,” in

Ionospheric Modification and Its Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military

Systems,(AGARD Conference Proceedings 485, October, 1990), 2-1.

26 Ibid.

27 Peter M. Banks, “Overview of Ionospheric Modification from Space Platforms,” in Ionospheric

Modification and Its Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military Systems (AGARD

Conference Proceedings 485, October 1990) 19-1.

28 Capt Mike Johnson, Upper Atmospheric Research and Modification—Former Soviet Union (U),

DST-18205-475-92 (Foreign Aerospace Science and Technology Center, AF Intelligence Command, 24

September 1992), 3. (Secret) Information extracted is unclassified.

29 Capt Edward E. Hume, Jr., Atmospheric and Space Environmental Research Programs in Brazil

(U) (Foreign Aerospace Science and Technology Center, AF Intelligence Command, March 1993), 12.

(Secret) Information extracted is unclassified.

30

30 Paul A. Kossey et al. “Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors (AIM),” in Ionospheric Modification and Its

Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military Systems (AGARD Conference Proceedings

485, October 1990), 17A-1.

31 Ibid., 17A-7.

32 Ibid., 17A-10.

33 B. N. Maehlum and J. Troim, “Vehicle Charging in Low Density Plasmas,” in Ionospheric

Modification and Its Potential to Enhance or Degrade the Performance of Military Systems (AGARD

Conference Proceedings 485, October 1990), 24-1.

34 Hall.

31

Chapter 5

Investigation Recommendations

How Do We Get There From Here?

To fully appreciate the development of the specific operational capabilities weather-modification

could deliver to the war fighter, we must examine and understand their relationship to associated core

competencies and the development of their requisite technologies. Figure 5-1 combines the specific

operational capabilities of Table 1 into six core capabilities and depicts their relative importance over time.

For example, fog and cloud modification are currently important and will remain so for some time to come to

conceal our assets from surveillance or improve landing visibility at airfields. However, as surveillance

assets become less optically dependent and aircraft achieve a truly global all-weather landing capability, fog

and cloud modification applications become less important.

In contrast, artificial weather technologies do not currently exist. But as they are developed, the

importance of their potential applications rises rapidly. For example, the anticipated proliferation of

surveillance technologies in the future will make the ability to deny surveillance increasingly valuable. In

such an environment, clouds made of smart particles such as described in chapter 4 could provide a premium

capability.

32

Time

Now 2005 2015 2025

I

m

p

o

r

t

a

n

c

e

PM

CW

SM

AW

SWM

(F&C)M

HIGH

LOW

Legend

PM Precipitation Modification (F&C)M Fog and Cloud Modification

SM Storm Modification CW Counter Weather

SWM Space Weather-modification AW Artificial Weather

Figure 5-1. A Core Competency Road Map to Weather Modification in 2025.

Even today’s most technologically advanced militaries would usually prefer to fight in clear weather

and blue skies. But as war-fighting technologies proliferate, the side with the technological advantage will

prefer to fight in weather that gives them an edge. The US Army has already alluded to this approach in their

concept of “owning the weather.”1 Accordingly, storm modification will become more valuable over time.

The importance of precipitation modification is also likely to increase as usable water sources become more

scarce in volatile parts of the world.

As more countries pursue, develop, and exploit increasing types and degrees of weather-modification

technologies, we must be able to detect their efforts and counter their activities when necessary. As

depicted, the technologies and capabilities associated with such a counter weather role will become

increasingly important.

33

The importance of space weather-modification will grow with time. Its rise will be more rapid at first

as the technologies it can best support or negate proliferate at their fastest rates. Later, as those technologies

mature or become obsolete, the importance of space weather-modification will continue to rise but not as

rapidly.

To achieve the core capabilities depicted in figure 5-1, the necessary technologies and systems might be

developed according to the process depicted in figure 5-2. This figure illustrates the systems development

timing and sequence necessary to realize a weather-modification capability for the battlespace by 2025. The

horizontal axis represents time. The vertical axis indicates the degree to which a given technology will be

applied toward weather-modification. As the primary users, the military will be the main developer for the

technologies designated with an asterisk. The civil sector will be the main source for the remaining

technologies.

34

2025

Applic

ation

to

WX

Mod

*WFSE

Now

Time

2005 2015

GWN

SENSORS

COMP MOD

COMM

CHEM

ADV

*DE

*AIM

SC

*VR WX

*CBD

Legend

ADV Aerospace Delivery Vehicles DE Directed Energy

AIM Artificial Ionospheric Mirrors GWN Global Weather Network

CHEM Chemicals SC Smart Clouds (nanotechnology)

CBD Carbon Black Dust SENSORS Sensors

COMM Communications VR WX Virtual Weather

COMP MOD Computer Modeling WFSE Weather Force Support Element

* Technologies to be developed by DOD

Figure 5-2. A Systems Development Road Map to Weather Modification in 2025.

Conclusions

The world’s finite resources and continued needs will drive the desire to protect people and property

and more efficiently use our crop lands, forests, and range lands. The ability to modify the weather may be

desirable both for economic and defense reasons. The global weather system has been described as a series

of spheres or bubbles. Pushing down on one causes another to pop up.2 We need to know when another

power “pushes” on a sphere in their region, and how that will affect either our own territory or areas of

economic and political interest to the US.

35

Efforts are already under way to create more comprehensive weather models primarily to improve

forecasts, but researchers are also trying to influence the results of these models by adding small amounts of

energy at just the right time and space. These programs are extremely limited at the moment and are not yet

validated, but there is great potential to improve them in the next 30 years.3

The lessons of history indicate a real weather-modification capability will eventually exist despite the

risk. The drive exists. People have always wanted to control the weather and their desire will compel them

to collectively and continuously pursue their goal. The motivation exists. The potential benefits and power

are extremely lucrative and alluring for those who have the resources to develop it. This combination of

drive, motivation, and resources will eventually produce the technology. History also teaches that we cannot

afford to be without a weather-modification capability once the technology is developed and used by others.

Even if we have no intention of using it, others will. To call upon the atomic weapon analogy again, we need

to be able to deter or counter their capability with our own. Therefore, the weather and intelligence

communities must keep abreast of the actions of others.

As the preceding chapters have shown, weather-modification is a force multiplier with tremendous

power that could be exploited across the full spectrum of war-fighting environments. From enhancing

friendly operations or disrupting those of the enemy via small-scale tailoring of natural weather patterns to

complete dominance of global communications and counter-space control, weather-modification offers the

war fighter a wide-range of possible options to defeat or coerce an adversary. But, while offensive weathermodification

efforts would certainly be undertaken by US forces with great caution and trepidation, it is clear

that we cannot afford to allow an adversary to obtain an exclusive weather-modification capability.

Notes

1 Mary Ann Seagraves and Richard Szymber, “Weather a Force Multiplier,” Military Review,

November/December 1995, 69.

2 Daniel S. Halacy, The Weather Changers (New York: Harper & Row, 1968), 202.

3 William Brown, “Mathematicians Learn How to Tame Chaos,” New Scientist, 30 May 1992, 16.

36

Appendix A

Why Is the Ionosphere Important?

The ionosphere is the part of the earth’s atmosphere beginning at an altitude of about 30 miles and

extending outward 1,200 miles or more. This region consists of layers of free electrically charged particles

that transmit, refract, and reflect radio waves, allowing those waves to be transmitted great distances around

the earth. The interaction of the ionosphere on impinging electromagnetic radiation depends on the properties

of the ionospheric layer, the geometry of transmission, and the frequency of the radiation. For any given

signal path through the atmosphere, a range of workable frequency bands exists. This range, between the

maximum usable frequency (MUF) and the lowest usable frequency (LUF), is where radio waves are

reflected and refracted by the ionosphere much as a partial mirror may reflect or refract visible light.1 The

reflective and refractive properties of the ionosphere provide a means to transmit radio signals beyond direct

“line-of-sight” transmission between a transmitter and receiver. Ionospheric reflection and refraction has

therefore been used almost exclusively for long-range HF (from 3 to 30 MHz) communications. Radio waves

with frequencies ranging from above 30 MHz to 300 GHz are usually used for communications requiring

line-of-sight transmissions, such as satellite communications. At these higher frequencies, radio waves

propagate through the ionosphere with only a small fraction of the wave scattering back in a pattern

analogous to a sky wave. Communicators receive significant benefit from using these frequencies since they

provide considerably greater bandwidths and thus have greater data-carrying capacity; they are also less

prone to natural interference (noise).

Although the ionosphere acts as a natural “mirror” for HF radio waves, it is in a constant state of flux,

and thus, its “mirror property” can be limited at times. Like terrestrial weather, ionospheric properties

37

change from year to year, from day to day, and even from hour to hour. This ionospheric variability, called

space weather, can cause unreliability in ground- and space-based communications that depend on

ionospheric reflection or transmission. Space weather variability affects how the ionosphere attenuates,

absorbs, reflects, refracts, and changes the propagation, phase, and amplitude characteristics of radio waves.

These weather dependent changes may arise from certain space weather conditions such as: (1) variability of

solar radiation entering the upper atmosphere; (2) the solar plasma entering the earth’s magnetic field; (3) the

gravitational atmospheric tides produced by the sun and moon; and (4) the vertical swelling of the

atmosphere due to daytime heating of the sun.2 Space weather is also significantly affected by solar flare

activity, the tilt of the earth’s geomagnetic field, and abrupt ionospheric changes resulting from events such as

geomagnetic storms.

In summary, the ionosphere’s inherent reflectivity is a natural gift that humans have used to create longrange

communications connecting distant points on the globe. However, natural variability in the ionosphere

reduces the reliability of our communication systems that depend on ionospheric reflection and refraction

(primarily HF). For the most part, higher frequency communications such as UHF, SHF, and EHF bands are

transmitted through the ionosphere without distortion. However, these bands are also subject to degradation

caused by ionospheric scintillation, a phenomenon induced by abrupt variations in electron density along the

signal path, resulting in signal fade caused by rapid signal path variations and defocusing of the signal’s

amplitude and/or phase.

Understanding and predicting ionospheric variability and its influence on the transmission and reflection

of electromagnetic radiation has been a much studied field of scientific inquiry. Improving our ability to

observe, model, and forecast space weather will substantially improve our communication systems, both

ground and space-based. Considerable work is being conducted, both within the DOD and the commercial

sector, on improving observation, modeling, and forecasting of space weather. While considerable technical

challenges remain, we assume for the purposes of this study that dramatic improvements will occur in these

areas over the next several decades.

38

1 AU-18, Space Handbook, An Analyst’s Guide Vol. II. (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air University Press,

December 1993), 196.

2 Thomas F. Tascione, Introduction to the Space Environment (Colorado Springs: USAF Academy

Department of Physics, 1984), 175.

39

Appendix B

Research to Better Understand and Predict Ionospheric Effects

According to a SPACECAST 2020 study titled, “Space Weather Support for Communications,” the

major factors limiting our ability to observe and accurately forecast space weather are (1) current

ionospheric sensing capability; (2) density and frequency of ionospheric observations; (3) sophistication and

accuracy of ionospheric models; and (4) current scientific understanding of the physics of ionospherethermosphere-

magnetosphere coupling mechanisms.1 The report recommends that improvements be realized

in our ability to measure the ionosphere vertically and spatially; to this end an architecture for ionospheric

mapping was proposed. Such a system would consist of ionospheric sounders and other sensing devices

installed on DoD and commercial satellite constellations (taking advantage in particular of the proposed

IRIDIUM system and replenishment of the GPS) and an expanded ground-based network of ionospheric

vertical sounders in the US and other nations. Understanding and predicting ionospheric scintillation would

also require launching of an equatorial remote sensing satellite in addition to the currently planned or

deployed DOD and commercial constellations.

The payoff of such a system is an improvement in ionospheric forecasting accuracy from the current

range of 40-60 percent to an anticipated 80-100 percent accuracy. Daily worldwide ionospheric mapping

would provide the data required to accurately forecast diurnal, worldwide terrestrial propagation

characteristics of electromagnetic energy from 3-300 MHz. This improved forecasting would assist satellite

operators and users, resulting in enhanced operational efficiency of space systems. It would also provide an

order of magnitude improvement in locating the sources of tactical radio communications, allowing for

location and tracking of enemy and friendly platforms.2 Improved capability to forecast ionospheric

40

scintillation would provide a means to improve communications reliability by the use of alternate ray paths

or relay to undisturbed regions. It would also enable operational users to ascertain whether outages were

due to naturally occurring ionospheric variability as opposed to enemy action or hardware problems.

These advances in ionospheric observation, modeling, and prediction would enhance the reliability and

robustness of our military communications network. In addition to their significant benefits for our existing

communications network, such advances are also requisite to further exploitation of the ionosphere via active

modification.

Notes

1 SPACECAST 2020, Space Weather Support for Communications, white paper G, (Maxwell AFB,

Ala.: Air War College/2020, 1994).

2 Referenced in ibid.

41

Appendix C

Acronyms and Definitions

AOC air operations center

AOR area of responsibility

ATO air tasking order

EHF extra high frequency

GWN global weather network

HF

IR

high frequency

infared

LF low frequency

LUF lowest usable frequency

Mesoscale less than 200 km2

Microscale immediate local area

MUF maximum usable frequency

MW

OTH

PGM

microwave

over-the-horizon

precision-guided munitions

RF radio frequency

SAR

SARSAT

synthetic aperture radar

search and rescue satellite-aided tracking

SHF

SPOT

super high frequency

satellite positioning and tracking

UAV

UV

uninhabited aerospace vehicle

ultraviolet

VHF very high frequency

WFS weather force specialist

WFSE weather force support element

WX weather

42

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