Ccru - Cyberhype 5 Age of Assymetry (Mute 21)Texts / text
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Cyberhype5: The Age of Asymmetry
The landscape of contemporary war is that of a hurricane projecting and dispersing,
dissipating and disintegrating through fusion and fission as it goes along.' [P. Virilio]
The geostrategic weather map is looking increasingly volatile. Pockets of turbulence
realign to form planetary frontal systems, and localized pressure threatens exponential
escalations of violence. But why do the turbular contours of meteorological cartography
fit the state we're in? Old map concepts seem either too rigid or give no illustration of
the current dynamics of mutation. If Paul Virilio is correct in describing state history as
the 'the ordered creation of chaos through the realization of a theory of war as the
geometric basis of all reality ', then it is a fitting time to explore the concept of
'asymmetry' in conflict , in causation and in planetary composition.
Since the Gulf War, the US has been gradually waking up to the drawbacks of its military
dominance. In the mid 1990s the US National Defense Panel stated that enemies were
'unlikely to confront us conventionally with mass armor formations, air superiority
forces, and deep water navel fleets of their own, all areas of overwhelming US strength
today. Instead. . .they will look for ways to match their strengths against our
weaknesses.' But in 2000, the US war machine, in an effort of projective geostrategic
weather dreamcasting called Joint Vision 2020, revealed its long term objectives as 'full
spectrum dominance'. This, by implication, set up the only feasible military opponent to
Empire's orbital cartel (and its monopoly of violence) as a decentralized insurgency
network, targeting 'weak spots' and 'pressure points' in order to threaten this 'spectral
ubiquity'. For any such 'unspecified enemy', an asymmetric approach requires an
appreciation of the opponents vulnerabilities and employs innovative, nontraditional
tactics, weapons or technologies applied at all levels of warfare strategic, operational
or tactical. 'It is difficult to move strong things by pushing directly, so you should injure
the corners.'[M. Musashi]
Joint Vision 2020 as a tract of military futurology recognized that the 'potential of such
asymmetric approaches is perhaps the most serious danger the United States faces in
the immediate future. . .the asymmetric methods and objectives of an adversary are
often far more important than the relative technological imbalance, and the
psychological impact of an attack might far outweigh the actual physical damage
inflicted.' It turns out that the US never quite woke up, and its dreams of security have
now smeared into a living cinescopic nightmare. What makes an asymmetric conflict in
the early 21st century timely is firstly, its embeddedness in a cybernetic environment
which, through wild positive feedback spirals in the vortical ecology of fear, amplifies the
classical guerilla potential the war of the flea of the 'asymmetry of causation' [small
causes can have massive effects], and secondly, the 'asymmetry of composition' [one
Empire, a multitude of opponents] of a world system in down swing phase transition. As
we leave behind the predictable shores of geostrategic equilibrium and the phase
solidity of the Cold War with the certainties of its stabilizing bipolarization, September
11 functions as rotational pivot around which we may all begin to spin. As the storm
clouds gather over this interzone of liquid instability, only one thing is certain. A new
order of disorder is emerging.
'Asymmetry of amplitude, asymmetry of rhythm, total change of rhythm.' [H. Michaux]