Marines use science fiction to envision, prepare for the battlefield of the future
ΣΧΟΛΙΟ ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟΥ : Να πούμε ότι ο στρατός των Η.Π.Α έχει κάτι που ονομάζεται "Mad Scientist Initiative" (Πρωτοβουλία Τρελών Επιστημόνων χαχαχα). Υπάρχει ένα think tank στην Αμερική, -το οποίο διαβάζει και ότι γράφουμε εδώ είτε ως σχόλιο, είτε ως κείμενο- το οποίο αποτελείται από συγγραφείς επιστημονικής φαντασίας που ονομάζεται "SIGMA". Το SIGMA είναι μια ομάδα συγγραφέων επιστημονικής φαντασίας που προσφέρουν συμβουλές για την Κυβέρνηση των Η.Π.Α . Πολλοί από αυτούς έχουν Διδακτορικά διπλώματα, σε υψηλούς τομείς τεχνολογίας, ενώ αρκετοί από αυτούς κατέχουν θέσεις στην αμυντική και βιομηχανική βιομηχανία. Φαίνεται τελικά ότι η επιστημονική φαντασία συναντά την πραγματικότητα, και μετά έρχεται στα κέντρα ελέγχου υψηλής τεχνολογίας που είναι εγκατεστημένα στα πολεμικά πλοία και στα αεροπλάνα.
Water bots, holographic radio displays, electromagnetic pulse rifles,
and futuristic gear for Marines operating in dystopian landscapes may
not be too far in the distant future — at least as envisioned by the Atlantic Council's panelists discussing Marines, science fiction and the future of warfare.
Eighteen
military writers out of 74 applicants were selected to participate in a
one-day writing seminar held in February last year. Their work was
discussed Wednesday during a panel discussion at the Washington, D.C., think tank.
The
three short stories they produced, with help from professional science
fiction authors, question the current utility of force in a futuristic
world. The goal is to challenge institutional knowledge and encourage
Marines to think outside the box in order to adapt to a rapidly changing
world.
"If we are thinking and writing about the future, we
are more likely to get it right," said Steven Grundman, the George Lund
Fellow for emerging defense challenges at the Atlantic Council.
The
one-day writing seminar was coordinated in 2015 by the Marine Corps'
Futures Assessment Division (MCFAD) and the Atlantic Council, with the
goal of bringing to life the potential three future worlds described in
the Marine Corps Security Assessment Environment Forecast (MCSEF):
2030-2045.
The exercise in creative science fiction writing or
"immersive futurism," as described by Charles Gannon, a member of the
SIGMA intelligence and defense consultancy group, was intended to
highlight bridged gaps in institutional thinking.
"Some folks in
defense and the intelligence community don't think about the future.
The intelligence community is driven by requirements," Erin Simpson,
chief executive officer of Caerus Associates, a research and analysis
firm, said. "Science fiction is good for problems of discovery."
As
the military works to prepare for an uncertain, ever-changing operating
environment, the services have turned to science fiction as a way to
envision the future.
Last fall, the Army launched its inaugural
Mad Scientist Science Fiction Writing Contest, calling on soldiers to
write about "Warfare in 2030 to 2050." Soldiers who wanted to
participate were asked to consider trends in science, technology,
society, the global economy, and other aspects, and how these trends
will affect how the Army operates in future conflicts.
Writers
can explore how future capabilities may be used during warfare, and the
Army may use those ideas to research the future of technology and
warfare.
The three science fiction stories produced through the joint effort of
the Marine Corps and the Atlantic Council describe dystopian landscapes
that seek to capture the strategic global community and the potential
futuristic tactical operating environment for the Marine Corps, said Lt.
Col. Patrick Kirchner, deputy director of MCFAD.
The intent is that a lance corporal or second lieutenant reading or
writing these stories will have described an operating environment that
will no longer be new to them when they advance in rank later in their
careers.
"It won’t be the first time the Marine has thought about the experience or world he is operating in," Kirchner said.
The uniformed personnel selected to write the science fiction stories
had two rules they had to follow in their stories: the future world had
to be laid out in the MCSEF publication and be bounded by the rules of
physics, Kirchner said.
The MCSEF document, described as "printed Ambien" by Kirchner, was
published in 2015, and is the culmination of research, future trends and
estimates from the National Intelligence Council.
It describes three potential future global environments. In the first,
water scarcity exacerbates conflict between the developed and developing
world. The U.S. plays a significant role in this world but is checked
by a challenging China and budgetary restrictions. The second world
envisions humanitarian disasters, food scarcity and massive demographic
migrations to mega cities. The third world foresees an America that is
no longer a global leader, a multipolar landscape brought out by the
rise of China and India and the diffusion of technology.
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