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le champ de bataille électronique

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Une analyse approfondie du champ de bataille électronique moderne, explorant les technologies de surveillance et d'armement développées pendant la guerre du Viêt-nam. Paul Dickson examine l'évolution de la guerre high-tech.


Caractéristiques

Finition.s Broché collé
Auteur.s Paul Dickson
Éditeur Éditions France-Empire
État Bon
Nb. de pages 228
Année d'édition

Paru en 1976
réimprimé en
1979

Langue.s Français
Traduit de l'anglais par Ch. Michaux et J. Joba 
Format 14 x 19 x 2 cm
Catégorie.s • AVIATION MILITAIRE
• DIDACTIQUE - TECHNIQUE
• ESSAIS - OUVRAGES THÉMATIQUES


Description

« Taisez-vous ! Méfiez-vous ! Les herbes ennemies vous écoutent ! »

… Des milliers de détecteurs enfoncés dans le sol balancent au rythme de la brise leurs antennes vertes et graciles, confondues aux herbes de la prairie… Des caméras pointent, invisibles à travers les branchages… Thermographes, enregistreurs olfactifs se mêlent aux fleurs. Tout cela vous écoute, vous voit, vous pèse, vous renifle, prend votre température. Tout cela est possible. Tout cela s’est vu. Ce n’est qu’un aspect bucolique du système de surveillance sans faille, dont le Viêt-nam fut pour les techniciens de guerre le banc d’essai. Et ces charmants petits gadgets cafardeurs peuvent aussi bien, en moins de deux minutes et à point nommé, déverser sur vous, selon que vous êtes en période de guerre ou de « construction révolutionnaire », le matraquage adverse ou les sbires de la « police de la pensée ».

Tel est le sujet de ce livre, écrit sans ombre de fantaisie gratuite mais non sans humour par Paul DICKSON, journaliste scientifique américain, auteur de plusieurs ouvrages.

Ici s’étale toute la séduction du massacre par ordinateur contemplé d’un confortable fauteuil. Mais pour une mise en garde, le ton s’élève pour évoquer « la guerre future, nette, désinvolte, aux tueries programmées comme une comptabilité de grand magasin…, où la mort presse-bouton éliminera jusqu’à ce lien tragique d’humanité qui subsistait dans le combat… ».

« Nette, désinvolte, inhumaine », la guerre électronique serait-elle du moins efficace ? Le verdict du banc d’essai vietnamien est : NON. Mais il nous est rétorqué que, de perfectionnements en perfectionnements, le champ de bataille électronique a, depuis, retiré toutes chances aux tactiques de jungles ou de maquis, à moins que ces tactiques ne se soient déjà perfectionnées dans le même temps. Cela, l’auteur ne le dit pas, mais parfois le suggère. Et l’on ne peut fermer Ce livre sans cette image des piétailles victorieuses grouillant à travers l’histoire, sans se demander si ceux qui préparent la guerre dans la perspective de tuer sans risques seront toujours capables d’endiguer le flot des peuples qui acceptent le risque.

À PROPOS DE CET AUTEUR
Paul Dickson


From https://www.pauldicksonbooks.com

I was born in Yonkers, New York on July 30, 1939 son of William A. Dickson Jr. and Isabelle Costance Cornell.

In 9th grade while working for the Nathaniel Hawthore Junior High  School magazine I got to attend a series of sessions for young  journalists hosted by the Columbia School of Journalism during which I  got to conduct several interviews:  onewith Robert Trout of CBS News and  the other with Herbert Philbrick, a man who had infiltrated the  Communist Party as an FBI informant and had written a bestseller called  I Led Three Lives: Citizen, 'Communist', Counterspy.  Both interviews were published in the school magazine.

In my junior year in high-school I attended Riverdale Country School, a  private school in the Bronx. I graduated in 1957 and then attended  Wesleyan University in Middletown Connecticut where, among other things,  I took narrative writing courses from poet Richard Wilbur and novelist  George Garrett and a took a course in using computers to correlate and  interpret information—all of which stood me in good stead for decades.

I graduated from Wesleyan in 1961 with a degree marked with a  Distinction in Psychology. The special degree was granted because of a  research paper I wrote on the social impact of rock 'n roll, a project  which involved extensive interviewing—disc jockeys, record company  owners, teen-agers from the Bronx and South Yonkers and so forth.  Wesleyan actually gave me a grant to conduct these interviews during the  summer of my junior year.

Within a few days of leaving Wesleyan I flew to Sweden where I obtained  a job through an international student  exchange program which netted  me a position  in Göteborg Sweden where I worked to help a shipping  company convert from a system where long needles were used to pull and  extract data from punch cards to one which used a computer to sort the  punch cards. I then hitchhiked around Europe for several months during  which time the Berlin Wall went up and I missed notice of my  pre-induction physical. To avoid  imminent induction and a future as a  private peeling potatoes at Fort Smith, Arkansas,   I signed up for  Naval Officer Candidate School in Newport RI. I was trained as a  cryptologist and served as a deck officer on the attack aircraft carrier  Franklin D. Roosevelt (CVA-42) where I spent a few months shy of three  years.

While on the Roosevelt I began writing for money and sold my first piece to the New York Times (a travel piece on the newly independent nation of Malta which I wrote  while the ship was in port there)  I left the ship  in Valencia and  spent a year in Spain after getting out of the Navy. I spent the year  writing  and publishing articles in The New York Herald Tribune and The Saturday Review of Literature.  during which the highlight  was getting momentarily arrested and tossed  out of the Spanish town of Guernica by Francisco Franco's notorious  Civil Guard. I was doing a piece for Saturday Review on the  iconic village which had been bombed by the Nazi's during the Spanish  Civil War. I described getting kicked out of Guernica by the police as  part of the story which gave the story its punch and I was hooked.

After I got back from Europe I tried to get a job with one of the New  York newspapers or magazines but failed so went to work for one  soul-testing year training to be an account executive for a major  brokerage house. After my escape from Wall Street I went to work for  McGraw-Hill in  Manhattan where I started in public relations but then  worked my way into position as a reporter for Electronics magazine which sent me to Washington where I got to cover NASA from the end of the Gemini program through the lunar landing.

While working for Electronics I also worked as a contributing editor for EYE magazine  a slick rock 'n roll oriented magazine published by the Hearst Corp.  This allowed me the Zelig-like opportunity to meet and talk with J.  Edgar Hoover and Jimi Hendrix both in the space of a few weeks. I had  written an article on the FBI's plan to digitize its fingerprint  collection and Hoover called me in to ask I thought it would work. I met  Hendrix as an writer for EYE.

I have been an independent writer since 1968 when I left my job as a reporter to write my first book Think Tanks which he accomplished with the help of a generous grant from the American Political Science Association.

On April 13, 1968 I married Nancy Hartman who has long served as my  first line editor and financial manager. We have two children: Andrew  Cary Dickson of Portland, Oregon  and  Alexander Hartman Dickson of  Alexandria Virginia and three grandchildren.

Since 1968, I have  been a full-time freelance writer contributing articles to various magazines and newspapers, including Smithsonian, Esquire, The Nation, Town & Country, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, and The Washington Post and writing numerous books on a wide range of subjects.

I was  a founding member and former president of Washington Independent  Writers and a member of the National Press Club. I was a contributing  editor at Washingtonian magazine and served as a consulting editor at  both Merriam-Webster, Inc and Dover Publications.

Awards, Grants, Fellowships & Pats on the Back:

Paul Dickson received a University Fellowship for reporters from the  American Political Science Association to research and write his first  book, Think Tanks which was published in 1971. For his book The Electronic Battlefield   (1976), about the impact automatic weapons systems have had on modern  warfare, he received a grant from the Fund for Investigative Journalism  to support his efforts to get certain Vietnam-era Pentagon files  declassified.

In April, 1986 I received the first Philip M. Stern Memorial Award from  Washington Independent Writers for my "...exemplary contributions to  fellow writers and to the writing profession."

The original Dickson Baseball Dictionary was awarded the 1989 Macmillan-SABR Award for Baseball Research. The first and third editions of The Dickson Baseball Dictionary were named by the New York Public Library as one of the best reference  books of 1989 and 2009 respectively.  In 2010 The Wall Street Journal  named the dictionary as one of the top five baseball books of all time.

His first biography Bill Veeck: Baseball's Greatest Maverick,  published in 2012, was awarded the Jerome Holtzman Award from the  Chicago Baseball Museum, the Reader's Choice Award for the best baseball  book of 2012 from the Special Libraries Association and the Casey Award  from Spitball magazine also for the best baseball book of 2012.

Dickson was also awarded the Tony Salin Award from the Baseball  Reliquary in 2011 for his role in preserving baseball history. He was  also a 2012 recipient of the Henry Chadwick Award which was established  in November 2009  by the Society of American Baseball Researchers (SABR)  to honor "baseball's great researchers for their invaluable  contributions to making baseball the game that links America's present  with its past."

In 2001 I was honored as a Distinguished Alumnae of Wesleyan University.

https://www.pauldicksonbooks.com

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