Periodic Reporting for period 1 - Inventing GPS (Inventing GPS: Technology and International Security in the Cold War and Beyond)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2021-09-01 do 2023-08-31
After the Cold War ended, coupled with a weapon system developed through the 1970s out of similar necessities and dynamics, GPS became a fundamental component of a new “global strike diplomacy” inaugurated by President George W.H. Bush, solidified by President William J. “Bill” Clinton, that still characterizes US foreign policy today. Since the end of the Cold War, the United States has recurred to GPS-aided cruise missiles (and drones) to strike terrorists globally, fight wars remotely, extract diplomatic concessions, intimidate adversaries, and retaliate against hostile actions. Despite transatlantic diplomatic efforts to ensure compatibility between the European Union’s Galileo navigation system and GPS, throughout the 2000s the United States operated under the assumption that GPS preeminence should be ensured. More recently, high-profile satellite navigation systems failures have demonstrated both the centrality and vulnerability to jamming of satellite navigation systems forcing the United States, the European Union, and Russia to consider next-generation improvements to guarantee the availability of satellite navigation during a potential conflict.
The omnipresence of GPS in our everyday lives may seem a natural result of GPS impressive technical capabilities. However, a closer look at the system’s history reveals that GPS did not enjoy full support within the military services that developed it and had to fight for survival. Like cruise missiles, GPS too was pushed through bureaucratic meanders by a group of embattled engineers, military men, and most importantly, policymakers in the Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford administrations. The development of GPS constitutes an effective case study of what historians of science and technology and sociologists have referred to as the “heterogeneous engineering” – the act of shaping technology political rather than technical means alone.
The project's results have been so far presented at workshops, seminars, lectures, and conferences in Europe and North America -- including at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Historians of Foreign Relations (SHAFR).