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global war, in which the world as a whole was the battlefield. Europeans
waged wars on that scale as far back as the sixteenth century. The other was
total war, in which entire societies were mobilized.
In World War II, a na
tion’s entire society was mobilized to field armies and to supply them. The
distinction between soldiers and civilians, always tenuous, completely col
lapsed in the global and total wars of the twentieth century. War became an
extraordinary display of carnage, unlike anything yet seen—both global and
total.
The roots of total war are to be found in the
nature of warfare since the
emergence of ballistic weapons—weapons that delivered bullets, artillery
shells, and bombs. A ballistic weapon is simply one that, once fired or re
leased, can’t change its course. That makes these weapons inherently inaccu
rate. A bullet fired from a rifle, or a bomb released by a bombardier, depends
on the hand–eye coordination of a soldier or airman
trying to concentrate
while others try to kill him. In World War II, the probability of any one
projectile hitting its target was startlingly low.
When accuracy is low, the only solution is to saturate the battlefield with
bullets and shells and bombs. That means that there have to be masses of
weapons, and that in turn requires masses of soldiers. Masses of soldiers re
quire vast quantities of supplies, from food to munitions. That
requires vast
numbers of men to deliver supplies, and masses of workers to produce
them. In World War II, gasoline was essential for virtually all weapons sys
tems. Consider that the effort to drill oil, refine it, and deliver it to the
battlefield—and to the factories that supplied the battlefield—was by itself
an undertaking far larger than the total effort that went into warfare in pre
vious centuries.
By the
twentieth century, the outcome of wars required such a level of
effort that nothing short of the total mobilization of society could achieve
victory. War consisted of one society hurling itself against another. Victory
depended on shattering the enemy’s society, damaging its population and
infrastructure so completely that it could no longer produce the masses of
weapons or field the massive armies required.
But bombing a city with a thousand bombers is a vast and costly under
taking. Imagine if you could achieve the same outcome with a single plane
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p r e p a r i n g f o r wa r
and a single bomb. It would achieve the goal of total
war at a fraction of the
cost and danger to one’s own nation. That was the logic behind the atomic
bomb. It was designed to destroy an enemy society so quickly and efficiently
that the enemy would capitulate rather than face the bomb. Technically the
atomic bomb was radically new. Militarily, it was simply a continuation of a
culture of war that had been developing in Europe for centuries.
The brute nature of nuclear weapons generated a technological revolu
tion in warfare. Nuclear weapons were the reductio ad absurdum of global
and total war. In order to fight nuclear wars, nations—the
United States and
the Soviet Union—had to be able to see globally. The only way to do that
efficiently was to fly over enemy territory, and the safest and most effective
way to do that was in space. While manned space projects were the public
side of space programs, the primary motive—and funding—was
driven by
the need to know precisely where the other side had located its nuclear mis
siles. Spy satellites evolved into real- time systems that could pinpoint enemy
launchers within meters, allowing them to be targeted precisely. And that
created the need for weapons that could hit those targets.
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