-Caveat Lector-

http://www.questionsquestions.net/docs0209/1112_mit.html

"MIT Lincoln Laboratory's Surface Surveillance Program develops advanced technology for
detecting and identifying vehicles and  facilities on and beneath the surface in 
wide-area,
heavily cluttered and electronically hostile battlefields. MIT Lincoln Laboratory has
developed clutter cancellation technology that is used in today's airborne surveillance
systems...We are developing technology capable of detecting and tracking moving targets
that are partially or fully obscured by foliage..."
--MIT Lincolon Laboratory web site

"Draper's core work remains focused on the development of innovative solutions for the
Department of Defense's future technology needs...These areas include...precision
targeting and weapons systems..."
--Draper Lab President Vincent Vitto in 2001

MIT & The Air Force

by Bob Feldman

One difference between Manhattan and Cambridge, Massachusetts is that one of
Cambridge's neighborhood universities, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
[MIT], is
much more involved in a colloborative relationship with the Pentagon and its U.S. Air 
Force
than are Manhattan neighborhood universities like Columbia or NYU.

MIT was the 10th-largest recipient of U.S. Air Force contracts during the 1999 fiscal 
year
and the 12th-largest recipient of U.S. Air Force contracts in the 2000 fiscal year. 
And,
coincidentally, between 1993 and 1997, MIT Professor Sheila Widnall was the Clinton
Administration's Secretary of the Air Force. In addition, an MIT Corporation Chairman 
of the
Board, Paul Gray, has sat on the board of directors of Boeing in recent years.

With $345 million worth of U.S. Air Force contracts, MIT received a larger amount of 
Air
Force contracts than did IBM or General Dynamics in 1999. And in 2000, MIT's $339 
million
worth of U.S. Air Force contracts was a larger amount of Air Force contracts than 
either
Rockwell, Littleton, Carlyle or Textron received in 2000.

Between 1996 and 1999 the value of MIT's contracts from all branches of the Pentagon
increased from $319 million to $357 million. (By comparison, in 1967 the value of MIT's
Department of Defense contracts was only about $95 million). The 40th-largest 
recipient of
all Pentagon contracts in 1996, by 1999 MIT was the 34th-largest recipient of all 
Pentagon
contracts. The following year, MIT was the 44th-largest recipient of all Pentagon 
contracts,
the value of all of its Pentagon contracts having decreased from $357 million to $347 
million
between 1999 and 2000..

The 28th-largest recipient of U.S. Navy contracts in 1999, Charles Stark Draper Lab 
Inc. is
apparently still institutionally-affiliated to MIT, according to the web- site which 
MIT shares
with Draper. Draper Lab received $147 million worth of U.S. Navy contracts in 1999. The
overall value of Draper's contracts from all branches of the Pentagon was $166 million 
in
1999, making it the 82nd-largest recipient of all Pentagon contracts during that year.

If MIT and the MIT-affiliated Draper Lab are considered as one entity, then MIT/Draper 
Lab
would rank 23rd on the 1999 list of largest recipients of U.S. Defense Department 
contracts.

As the 12th-largest recipient of U.S. Air Force contracts in 2000, can we assume that 
MIT is
helping the U.S. Air Force prepare for 21st-century space warfare?

Here's what MIT Professor Sheila Widnall said on May 29, 1997 in a speech at The 
National
Security Forum at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama, when she was Air Force Secretary:

"[Air Force Chief of Staff] Gen. [Ronald R.] Fogelman and I initiated a redesign of 
the Air
Force, or at least outlined its direction into the 21st century. This is laid out in 
our vision
document, Global Engagement, and it is indeed an exciting vision. It's full of vectors 
for
change, with implications for everything we do. But I'm sure as future Air Force 
members
look back, they will focus on a single sentence that reflects the consensus we reached
about the integration of air and space capabilities. `We are now transitioning from an 
air
force into an air and space force on an evolutionary path to a space and air force.'

"We are traveling toward the day when our Air Force will become one enormous network
of sensors, command centers and shooters. In fact, we are already well on our way 
there.
For example, we have already demonstrated the capability to get a direct downlink from
our intelligence satellites on orbit, to the cockpit of one of our fighters with 
real-time data
on the threats that a pilot will face in the target area.

"Or you can feed photos from our photo-reconnaissance aircraft into the cockpit of a 
fighter
enroute to the target area, so the pilot can have the latest update on target 
positions after
he or she gets airborne. That's all incredible, miraculous, but very shortly, it will 
be routine.

"Impressive though they are, these giant steps represent only a precursor to the 
progress
that I expect the Air Force to make over the decades that lie ahead of us. Rapidly,
inexorably, we are maturing into a space and air force. It's inevitable. That's where 
the
technological opportunities lead us, that's where we have to go to execute our
responsibilities in the years ahead.

"Already we are nearing the ability to find, fix, track and target from space anything 
of
consequence on the face of the earth. Beyond that, we are working toward the ability to
perform those functions in near real-time. We are well along that path. When we get 
there,
the face of warfare will be forever changed. That capability will move us to a new era 
of
warfare, with consequences that we can hardly even project today...

"Right now the Air Force is charged with supporting General Howell M. Estes III,
[commander in chief, United States Space Command, CINCSPACE] in his mission of force
application and space control...

"...Already we are reaping the benefits of initiatives like the Space Warfare Center 
out in
[Falcon Air Force Base,] Colorado, and of including our space experts in the Weapons
School at Nellis [Air Force Base, Nev.].

"I have visited the Space Warfare Center, and I have seen the miracles they are 
working at
the tactical and technical levels..."

In December 1998, former Air Force Secretary Widnall was named an "Institute Professor"
by the MIT Administration; and she was "one of the leaders in the creation of the new
ROTC program" at MIT, according to a February 1999 MIT press release. (At least 142
other U.S. universities are also presently training future U.S. Air Force officers on 
their
campuses, incidentally).

An MIT professor since 1964, Widnall sat on the Carnegie Corporation of New York's 
board
of trustees between 1984 and 1993; and she was that foundation's Vice-Chair of the 
Board
between 1990 and 1993.

In 1999, Widnall also sat on the board of trustees of the Alfred F. Sloan Foundation. 
Former
Air Force Secretary Widnall also had been a member of the Corporation of Draper Labs
since 1988 and a member of MIT's Lincoln Laboratory Advisory Committee since 1991.
Presently, MIT Professor Widnall also sits on the board of trustees of the Institute 
for
Defense Analyses.

In May 1995, the MIT News reported that MIT Lincoln Laboratory, "a research and
development center operated by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for the
Department of Defense," opened its new South Laboratory Building on Hanscom Air Force
Base in Lexington, Massachusetts; and that Lincoln Laboratory "has been a key center of
advanced electornic and military technology since it was founded at the request of the 
U.S.
Air Force in 1951."

According to MIT News, "the experience and expertise of the Laboratory are widely 
utilized
by the Department of Defense in the areas of surveillance, identification and
communications;" and "the Laboratory has been at the center of advances ranging from
material and semiconductor device fabricators to missile defense, air defense, military
satellite communications, and radar that can detect tanks or other targets hidden under
foliage."

Approximately 1,000 people are employed at the Lexington laboratory where most of MIT's
research work for the U.S. Air Force is being done.

The director of MIT's Space Grant Program between 1990 and 1993, MIT Professor Daniel
Hastings, began serving as the U.S. Air Force's chief scientist shortly before former 
Air
Force Secretary Widnall returned to MIT's campus in the Fall of 1997. According to a 
May
8, 1997 MIT press release, "Professor Hastings noted that the Air Force, the most
technically intense branch of service, is `redefining itself' from an air and space 
force into a
space and air force.' I will help them understand the nature of this transition,' he 
said.""

In his 1985 autobiography, The Education of A College President, MIT's president and/or
MIT Corporation Chairman between 1949 and 1971, James Killian, recalled the origins of
MIT's Lincoln Laboratory:

"MIT's success in war research had brought it great prestige in the corridors of the
Pentagon and in the staff of the National Security Council. More important, MIT 
possessed a
large reservoir of people experienced in thinking creatively about national security 
and in
identifying deficiencies in our defenses for which these scientists saw remedies. This 
group
constituted a kind of research establishment...

"The group was repeatedly called on for help in the early days of my presidency...This 
led
to the invention by ingenious MIT academics of the `summer study' (some called it 
`group
think'), an arrangement that made it possible for the Institute to sponsor ad hoc 
studies of
great value to the Department of Defense...

"The name `summer study' evolved as a result of the projects being undertaken mainly in
the summer, when academic personnel were more readily available...The Cambridge
academic community and the federal government provided the initiative for a number of
these projects.

"Out of one of these studies came the initiation of the Lincoln Laborartory..."

Writing in the 1980s, the now-deceased former MIT President/Chairman (who also sat on
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting board of directors between 1968 and 1975)
characterized the kind of research that has been done at MIT's Lincoln Laboratory in 
the
following way:

"Thirty-four years after the decisions were reached to undertake the Lincoln 
Laboratory, it
stands as a highly productive research center managed by MIT but located away from the
campus. It thus is free to undertake classified research which would be unacceptable 
to the
Institute were the laboratory located on campus."

A book published by South End Press in the 1980s, Universities In The Business of
Repression by Jonathan Feldman, characterized Lincoln Laboratory as "the central
institution linking MIT to the military;" and noted that Lincoln Laboratory was 
"responsible
for projects researching strategic offense and defense, military statellite 
communications,
high-energy laser technology and advanced electronics." The same book also indicated 
that
MIT's Pentagon contracts increased by 47 percent between 1982 and 1986, during the
Reagan Era.

The MIT Administration also, historically, helped the Pentagon develop its weapons of 
mass
destruction by its involvement with the Institute for Defense Analyses [IDA]. As 
Village Voice
reporter James Ridgeway noted in his 1968 book The Closed Corporation, "James R. 
Killian,
Jr., chairman of the board of MIT put together IDA."

On its website at www.ida.org , IDA noted that it "traces its roots to 1947, when 
Secretary
of Defense Forrestal established the Weapons Systems Evaluation Group [WSEG] to provide
technical analyses of weapons systems and programs;" and "in the mid-1950s, the
Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff asked the 
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology to form a civilian, nonprofit research institute." IDA also 
reported in
1999 that it "established the Joint Advanced Warfighting Program to develop new
operational concepts." With "a research staff of approximately 24 people, including 
several
active duty officers representing the U.S. Navy, the U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Marine
Corps," that is "augmented by adjunct and consultants when necessary," IDA's Joint
Advance Warfighting Program "serves as a catalyst for develping breakthrough
improvements in military capabilities."

In his autobiography, Killian (who was nicknamed "Mr. MIT" during his life) also 
recalled the
role MIT played in the creation of the Pentagon's IDA weapons research think-tank:

"The Department of Defense had established an agency known as the Weapons Systems
Evaluation Group [WSEG] to undertake studies and analyses for the Secretary of Defense
and for the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

"In 1955 I received a letter from then-Secretary of Defense, Charles E. Wilson, 
proposing
that MIT undertake the formation of a nonprofit corporation that would have as its
members a group of universities whose purpose would be to support with their expertise
the analyses of WSEG...

"In his letter the secretary requested that MIT `as a public service' proceed with
arrangements for the support of the Weapons Systems Evaluation Group. `The need for
strengthening the WSEG,' he said, `has been acute for many months.'

"I reported back to Secretary Wilson that MIT would undertake this responsibility and 
that
we would proceed at once to invite a group of universities to form a consortium to 
operate
the nonprofit corporation...

"We at MIT proceeded at once to invite four institutions to join us: the California 
Institute of
Technology, Case Institute of Technology, Stanford, and Tulane. Later seven other
universities joined the original group. While considering the proposal to form a 
nonprofit
corporation to undertake responsibility for WSEG, I consulted a number of scientists 
and of
course the administrative officers of MIT. In the pre-IDA days, Professor Philip Morse 
of MIT
had served as WSEG's director of research. Among those with whom I talked was Harvard
Professor of Chemistry E. Bright Wilson, who also had for a period been a member of the
WSEG group. He described the urgent need to add scientists to the group, and he 
strongly
supported the proposed organization that we were considering. Another person who had
already accepted appointment to the staff of WSEG was Eugene Skolnikoff...He continued
with the WSEG group after the new corporation was formed and later became a professor
of political science at MIT and then director of the Center for International Studies.

"Among the MIT administrators who played a major role in the formation of IDA were
Albert G. Hill, James McCormack, Jr., and Edward L. Cochrane. Both Professor HIll and
General McCormack became officers of IDA and made major contributions in helping it
discharge its responsibilities.

"At the beginning the board of trustees included a representative from each of the
participating universities and in addition two public trustees, William A. M. Burden 
and
Laurance Rockefeller. Later Burden was to become the chairman of the board, and in his
autobiography, Peggy and I, he was to write that IDA `became one of the top priorities 
of
my life, and it came about through my friendship with Dr. James R. Killian, the 
President of
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.'...

"IDA continues to discharge its mission in accord with the original plans that led to 
its
formation."

As previously noted, MIT Professor Sheila Widnall presently sits on the IDA board of
trustees. Other U.S. university-linked members of the IDA board of trustees are: 1. 
Harvard
University JFK School of Government Lecturer In Public Policy and former Deputy 
Secretary
of Defense John White; 2. Former Tufts University Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy
Dean and Retired General John Galvin; 3. University of Southern California Center for
Telecommunications Management Executive Director Jack Borsting; 4. University of South
Carolina President John Palms; and 5. University of Texas LBJ School of Public Affairs 
Dean
Edwin Dorn. In addition, the IDA board of trustees also includes a Los Alamos National
Laboratory deputy laboratory director for science, technology & programs, a former 
deputy
director of the National Security Agency; a former U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia, a
former US Air Force chief of staff, a former commander-in-chief of the U.S. Atlantic 
Fleet, a
former Hercules CEO and the chief communications officer of the National Academy of
Science.

Killian was not the first MIT President who sought to establish a collaborative 
relationship
between MIT and a war-making department of the U.S. government. According to the 1920
book put out by the MIT Alumni Association's War Records Committee in 1920,
Technology's War Record, "immediately after the severance of diplomatic relations with
Germany, to be exact on February 5, 1917, President [Richard Cockburn] Maclaurin
telegraphed to the War Department, placing our laboratories and staff at the Nation's
disposal for such work as the Institute might be considered best fitted to perform."

During World War I--which claimed the lives of 120 former MIT students--some people 
with
links to MIT apparently became involved in chemical warfare research. According to
Technology's War Record:

"It will be noticed that the development of the Chemical Warfare Service was almost
entirely in the hands of Technology men...It is true that the tremendous plans for gas
warfare which were under consideration were never put in operation, but upon the other
hand in all the great attacks launched by the American Army in the Fall of 1918, gas 
troops
were present with Stokes mortars, phosphorous bombs, thermite and gases, and the
American artillery although using ammunition manufactured abroad, were firing gas from
the Edgewood Arsenal. There is probably no feature of the entire war which was so 
largely
a Technology enterprise, and it is one of which Technology men may well be exceedingly
proud..."

In more recent years, MIT's Provost between 1985 and 1990, John Deutch, held the post 
of
Deputy Secretary of Defense at the same time MIT Professor Widnall was Secretary of the
Air Force, before he was appointed CIA Director in May 1995 by Clinton.

Like MIT's Lincoln Laboratory's work, the MIT-linked Draper Lab's work is described
somewhat on MIT's web site. Under a section entitled "Tactical Systems," Draper reports
that its "test of an Extended Range Guided Munition in 1997 represented the first 
successful
launch of an integrated GRS/micromechanic IMU in a gun-launched system." The MIT web
site also notes that:

"Draper supports major Air Force and Navy fixed-wing and rotary aircraft through the
insertion and integration of state-of-the-art technology into field systems.

"Draper integrated an embedded GRS/INS system and Mirror Support System for the A-10
Thunderbolt...

"Draper developed...an advanced...fire control system for the Cobra helicopter...

"Draper develped an inertial guidance, navigation, and control capability for a 
same-air
parachute delivery system for the U.S. Army.

Draper continues to provide systems engineering support to many Air Force and Navy
intiatives."

If an estimated 3,565 civilians were, indeed, killed between October 8, 2001 and 
Christmas
Day 2001 as a result of the U.S. Air Force's military campaign in Afghanistan, then an
argument might be made that MIT shares some moral responsibility for these Afghan
civilian deaths. And if 2002 brings another escalation in U.S. Air Force military 
activity in
Iraq, it might be productive for anti- racist/anti-war folks in the U.S. to again 
demand that
MIT end its collaborative relationship with the U.S. Air Force, once and for all. If 
university
complicity with the Pentagon can be ended in Manhattan in the 21st-century, why is it 
still
continuing in the "People's Republic of Cambridge"?

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