Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Military Archaeology and Cold War Archaeology

Previously, I wrote about the relationship that I thought existed between the fields of Cold War Studies and Cold War Archaeology. In this post, I’d like to push that thinking in yet another direction and consider the relationship that exists between the fields of Military or Battlefield Archaeology and Cold War Archaeology.

The archaeology of battlefield and related military sites is a well-regarded subfield of historical archaeology. In the United States, the field rose to prominence through the work of archaeologists like Douglas Scott, whose archaeological investigations have caused scholars to re-interpret the battle events and history of the Battle of Little Big Horn. Around the globe, major battlefield archaeological research has been conducted on the US Civil War, English Civil War, and World War One. Currently, there are no less than half a dozen Russian battlefield archaeology “search parties” actively working to locate the remains of Red Army soldiers killed during the Second World War.

And this research is making a mark. Just in the past several years, a number of popular books on the field have been published on the field, including, by Tim Lynch and John Cooksey’s Battlefield Archaeology (2007), Combat Archaeology: Material Culture and Modern Conflict (Duckworth Debates in Archaeology) by John Schofield (2006), and Fields of Conflict: Battlefield Archaeology from the Roman Empire to the Korean War by Douglas Scott, Lawrence Babits, and Charles Haecker (2006). Although the National Park Service really leads the national battlefield archaeology effort, other institutions like The Center for Historic and Military Archaeology (CHMA) are also contributing. The CHMA is an academic research and experiential learning program at Heidelberg College in Tiffin, Ohio that provides an undergraduate program for archaeologists focusing on historic and military archaeology of Civil War sites. Meanwhile, the Journal of Conflict Archaeology serves as an leading publication for a field “devoted to battlefield and military archaeology and other spheres of conflict archaeology”. Clearly, military archaeology is an established field of inquiry and one that underpins my own archaeological interests, as well as those of others.

Paralleling the question I posed earlier of Cold War Studies, one can reasonably ask, what can the field of Cold War archaeology contribute to the world of military archaeology? The answer would seem to be: a lot. As ancient and medieval conflicts have long been studied, so too are 18th, 19th, and early 20th century conflicts now being studied. It seems logical that the Cold War conflict will eventually become a focus of both history and archaeology. Following the practiced principle and principals of battlefield archaeology, Cold War archaeology could learn to learn as much from its sites as military archaeologists have already learned from theirs. Imagine an archaeological investigation of the former Soviet missile base near San Cristobal, Cuba leading scholars to re-interpret the events and history of the Cuban Missile Crisis in the same way Douglas Scott and his team led to a reinterpretation of the Battle of Little Big Horn.

Obviously, any union of the two would necessitate getting beyond the notion, if such a notion exists, of battlefields as singularly representative of military archaeology. At a minimum, it would require the recognition of Cold War battlefields in their more transient and intangible forms. These new battlefield forms include the more familiar airfields, military bases, underground bunkers, missile silos, radar installations, and nuclear weapons testing sites, but also some lesser-known sites and structures, such as those built to sustain civilian communication networks, continuity of government, or civil defense.

One example of this sort of lesser-known structures are a chain of underground repeater and main stations built by Bell Telephone Company in the 1960s as part of an Armageddon-proof transcontinental coaxial phone cable system. Called the L-4 line, the system consisted of buried concrete repeater stations located every two miles along the transcontinental route and larger main stations (manned underground facilities) located at 120 to 160 mile intervals. Constructed of reinforced concrete and is covered with several feet of earth, both types of stations were designed and built to survive everything up to a direct Soviet nuclear warhead blast. The main stations featured blast doors that closed automatically in the event of a nuclear blast, gas-turbine engines for providing emergency power, and ventilation systems designed to filter air inside the building and prevent the entry of airborne fallout, as well as sleeping accommodations and decontamination showers for workers. As a critical link in the civilian communication network, the Cold War fought by those working in these Bell Telephone bunkers was on a battlefield unseen in previous American wars.

With a few philosophical compromises, military archaeology and Cold War archaeology seem destined to work together. Perhaps what remains to be seen is if Cold War Archaeology can first stand on its own before attempting to run with the “big dogs” of military archaeology.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Why Study Cold War Archaeology

Indelibly imprinted on both the global psyche and its landscape, the Cold War proved to be a lengthy and fearsome element of 20th century life that was facilitated in part by the growth of a vast military industrial complex. Today, much of that complex, the physical legacy of the Cold War, is coming of age, in preservationist terms, and will soon need to be managed in one way or another by heritage specialists.

Despite, or perhaps due to, its relative propinquity, making cultural or historical sense of the Cold War might prove difficult. Complicated by both past and lingering issues of national security, geopolitics, and partisanship, any serious attempt at reading the Cold War, even if done broadly through the use of archival texts, personal narratives, provenienced artifacts, and cultural landscapes, can be as academically risky as they it is intellectually rewarding. Still, it is a critical reading that needs to be done.

Unprecedented as a form of war, I believe that only some of what we think we know about the Cold War past is accurate, as the powers of national secrecy, revisionism, and nationalism have been constantly working to cloud our view. It is as if, as David Lowenthal proclaimed in a book of the same name, the past is a “foreign country” that is continually being enlarged and diminished, embellished and purified, and lengthened and abbreviated, all while simultaneously being tinged with the colors of our present. However, despite this subjective coloring, a reading of the Cold War past offers to our present the broad potential benefits of identity, guidance, enrichment, and even escape. These benefits, in turn, provide a rationale and foundation for the work of identifying, understanding, and preserving some of our most critical of Cold War cultural and historic resources.

For better or worse, the Cold War was, and remains, a principal driver in defining America’s identity as a global nuclear superpower. Chilling for many, more comforting for others, this identity is deeply rooted in a collection of powerful Cold War spaces, places, and technologies. Beyond the obvious and not-so-obvious technological advances in weapons of mass destruction, the Cold War led to the construction of thousands (literally) of structures and sites around the globe whose sole function was to serve and sustain that war. In the United States alone, trillions of dollars were spent on the creation and expansion of a vast military-industrial complex that was unprecedented in human history. A vast and sometimes secret Cold War cultural landscape emerged in the form of military bases, nuclear weapons research and production facilities, weapons testing grounds, strategic bomber bases, radar station networks, intercontinental ballistic missile complexes, and elaborate control and command centers. Today, the physical legacy of the Cold War is a profusion of both inhabited and abandoned facilities and sites of which scholars are only now beginning to understand the true military, scientific, political, or social significance.

The concept of gaining guidance from the past is hardly a new notion and the Cold War’s physical legacy is no exception. What history has to teach us about the rigid politics of distrust, the elusive qualities of national security, and the enduring social, economic and environmental hazards of militarization often lies only shallowly buried in Cold War era sites. Guidance for political leadership might still be found in understanding of the ways in which the physical legacy of the Cold War was created and used-or perhaps misused–with the ultimate goal of not making the same mistakes again in the future. Effective historical guidance, however, hinges principally on awareness and that awareness comes from knowing the Cold War in all its archival, biographical, and material forms.

Enrichment is a tricky term. Because it can mean to both improve and enhance the quality or value of something, as well as to make someone wealthy or wealthier, the notion of enrichment can be seen as either constructive or predatory. The predatory nature of neo-capitalism, for example, could mean that the greatest enrichment some would find in Cold War landscape is in its destruction for the siting of new shopping malls or upscale condominiums. In the context of this discussion, however, the benefit that I think reading the Cold War past offers to the present is a constructive enhancement of the quality of our shared cultural landscape. In a world where the existing built landscape of the Cold War is falling down (quite literally), the identification and preservation of the elements of the Cold War landscape that have the most meaning for all the world’s citizens seems to make great sense. Of course, if you want more shopping malls or condominiums and the capitalistic escapism they provide, the Cold War landscape may provide that benefit as well.

Several years ago, my sons discovered the James Bond films. Relatively unaware of the temporal, political and social contexts of the movies, they were quickly entranced by the films in the same way previous generations of teenage boys had been. For them James Bond quickly came to symbolize Cold War espionage, but was pure escapism that I doubt few sites of the Cold War’s actual physical legacy could ever match. On the contrary, the authentic stories and sites of Cold War espionage and intrigue are real, interesting, even alarming, in ways that surpass the fantasy of Bond. The trick, of course, is to tease out these real stories of Cold War intrigue and espionage–or whatever other stories they may hold–out of seemingly mute stone (or perhaps concrete) walls.

Because the Cold War dominated global politics, economics, and popular culture so largely for more than forty years, its landscapes and legacies will likely be with us for some time. Indeed, they are with us even today as America confronts its past practices in global affairs. Ultimately, what the world learns from the Cold War period, or what benefits that experience brings to future generations, will depend upon at least partly upon how fully and accurately we present its history to future generations. It may be difficult to imagine that the benefits of identity, guidance, enrichment, and escape might be somehow found in confronting the Cold War’s historical identity and concrete physical legacies, but in my mind, helping the world discover, define, understand and preserve that past are critical tasks for the nascent Cold War archaeologist.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Cold War Studies and Cold War Archaeology

I've been thinking this week about the relationship that exists between the fields of Cold War Studies and Cold War Archaeology and, in particular, what each field has to offer the other.

Obviously, this thinking presupposes that the fields indeed have an interrelationship and that they are neither incompatible with, nor subsidiary to, each other. While their apparent compatibility, or any lack thereof, is yet to be tested, it is the notion that Cold War archaeology is, or might become or be describes as the “handmaiden” to Cold War Studies––much the way historical archaeology was once described in terms if its subservient relationship to historical studies that most concerns me.

This notion of the handmaiden, for those among us who are not “Old School”, assumes the subordination of one person or entity to another. The founders of American historical archaeology fought long and hard in the discipline’s early days against the use of this label to describe a presumed subservience of the field to the more deeply-rooted discipline of History. What has emerged are two fields, now deeply entwined in a more or less common scholarly domain, yet not always working or playing well together.

Cold War Studies emerged even before the Cold War was nearing its end as a intellectually challenging and academically promising field that includes various forms of inquiry into the political, economic, social, intellectual, and, of course, military aspects of the Cold War, its historical origins, and potential contemporary consequence. The field has found a strong scholarly footing in the recurring declassification of tons (literally) of formerly secret documents from various countries archives and in the sometimes prosaic biographical accounts of Cold War warriors who have trickled in from the cold.

The main British center for advanced study and research on the Cold War is The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) Cold War Studies Centre. In the United States, the Center for Cold War Studies and International History at UC Santa Barbara (CCWS) and the Harvard Project on Cold War Studies are two leading institutions. Meanwhile, The Journal of Cold War Studies has since 1999 published peer-reviewed articles based on archival research conducted in the former Communist world and in Western countries.

So what can Cold War archaeology contribute to Cold War Studies? There would seem to be a plethora of ways in which archeological evidence might add to what is now a predominantly archival and biographical understanding of the Cold War. For example, the structural remains of airfields, missile silos, docks, industrial sites, radar installations, and underground bunkers may serve to illustrate the technological evolution of military technologies, buildings, and transportation and communication networks that are not otherwise explicated in either archival or biographical data. The archaeological remains of Cold War sites, even if it is only fences, foundations, overgrown roadways, or trash dumps, may help illuminate the use patterns of structures and the land. Even some less-obvious archaeological evidence, such as distinguishing vegetation patterns, might help us understand the ways in which a restricted area was patrolled by guards, or was concealed from public view.

The relationship between Cold War Studies and Cold War archaeology has yet to bloom. It may be that the field will never develop enough influence and authority (in the form of funding, believers, research, and literature) to be more than the “handmaiden” of Cold War Studies or History, but the potential exists for it to be both a incontrovertible contributor to Cold War historical scholarship and a distinct field of academic inquiry in its own right. Time may tell.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Cold War Archaeology – defining the field

Last week, I offered my views about Cold War archaeology as an emerging subfield of historical archaeology. This week, I add a few particulars to that proposal.

In my mind, any attempt to mark out some plausible boundaries to the notion of a Cold War archaeology subfield, it would seem appropriate to consider the Cold War in terms of an episode––that being a significant event that is part of, but distinct from a greater whole––rather than in terms of an era. This idea of the “Cold War era” may indeed be popular in a conventional respect, but lacks the focus necessary to explicitly define a field of inquiry.

It is critical to remember that the “Cold War era” was a period comprised of more than simply a prolonged chapter of nasty US/Soviet relations supported by an arms race. There is more to it than that. As a result of the devastating economic, social, and political effects of World War II, the first few decades of the CW witnessed a range of significant historical events including the collapse of numerous long-standing colonial regimes around world. These events were accompanied by a range of remarkable medical, scientific and technical advances, and various social and educational reforms, yet much of this noteworthy history-making had little or nothing to do with either the core Cold war issues of the nuclear arms race and the unfriendly state of relations between the United States and the Soviet Union. With a few exceptions, these events could be excluded from the scope of Cold War archaeology. In addition, those instances when the “Cold War went hot”, such as during the Korean War or Vietnam, might logically be excluded from Cold War archaeology’s purview.

Leaving these other events and their accompanying historical sites for the scrutiny of historians and archaeologists more deeply interested in them, the field of Cold War archaeology might find its greatest focus by defining itself through the twin issues of capitalist/communist relations and the nuclear arms race. This characterization would help situate such historic spaces and places as the Berlin Wall, Cheyenne Mountain, Spadeadam Range, Rocky Flats, Greenham Common, Semipalatinsk, and the Nevada Test Site, along with hundreds of other significant, if somewhat less widely known, Cold War sites as the field’s intellectual domain.

Once a preponderance of the world’s Cold War sites have been cataloged, the task before archaeologists would likely be to decide which merit archaeological study and which do not. That is, what do we know, and what is yet to be learned. This decision, however, may very well be made on behalf of the field by others, as a considerable number of former Cold War sites around the world are even now being taken out of operation and demolished or converted to other uses. As Wayne Cocroft of English Heritage reminds us, “We have a brief opportunity to understand and record what Top Secret sites were once used for before the evidence is lost.” Site owners may seek to have their sites better understood and even preserved, but others may not. In either case, Cold War archaeology in the United States may very well begin its life operating in a rescue archaeology mode.

However it may be that the field of Cold War archaeology comes to fruition, there is a range of paradigms, methods, and theories that might be applied to the field’s practice. In my particular case, methods of ethnoarchaeology have proven particularly valuable, but various other approaches, such as systems theory, agency theory, gender, and historical processualism, are apt to provide critical keys to our understanding of the Cold War. In that regard, John Schofield and Mike Anderton’s paper “The queer archaeology of Green Gate: interpreting contested space at Greenham Common Airbase” (World Archaeology 32 (2), 236-51) serves as a cutting-edge example of that sort of critical work.

Ultimately, any attempt at defining the field of Cold War archaeology is certain to be a lengthy, evolving, and perhaps even controversial, process that will require the scrutiny, wisdom, and intellectual commitment of more than just this author, and perhaps this blog can serve as a forum for facilitating the process.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Cold War Archaeology – an emerging archaeological subfield

If there is anything that archaeologists seem to almost universally cringe at, it is the declaration of a new subfield, or in this case, a new sub-subfield.

As it is, archaeology already has a subfield of historical archaeology, which manages to nicely encompass all sorts of sub-specialities and topics in all kinds of spaces and places– industrial archaeology, medieval archaeology, and Islamic archaeology, to list only a few. So why have I created a blog dedicated to discussions related to Cold War Archaeology?

The rationale behind this madness lies my desire to have others both inside and outside the field of historical archaeology recognize the tremendous potential that I believe can come from studying the material culture and physical legacies (artifacts and structures) left in the United States and around the globe by the Cold War.

The end of the Cold War is now nearly twenty years behind us–if you use the Fall of the Berlin Wall as a marker. Although this is far from the 50 years that historic preservationists commonly use as a marker for consideration of historic properties, the actual start of the Cold War –if one uses the Fall of the Iron Curtain as a marker–is now more than 60 years behind us. This means that each and every day more sites of Cold War activity are likely to roll past the 50 year mark that seems necessary to merit these kinds of studies of our recent past. Whether we wait for the official 50 year sanction or just pick an era or event, each day the enigmas of the past are more open than ever to historical inquiry.

In the Americas, we seem to lag behind the work of our British colleagues like Bob Clarke, Nick McCamley and Wayne Cocroft, who have already begun to put greater shape the field with publications like Four Minute Warning – Britain's Cold War, Secret Cold War Nuclear Bunkers and The Cold War: Building for Confrontation. Meanwhile, the UK's English Heritage supports a strong Cold War program of study into airfields, civil defense structures, nuclear research centers and the like. I believe it is time for Americanist historical archaeology to join the party.

To be sure, the archaeology of the Cold War in the United States is an emerging field fraught with questions and concerns. What, for example, counts as a Cold War artifact or structure? What does learning more about the militaristic culture of the Cold War add to our knowledge of humanity? What do we do with the knowledge we collect once we've collected it? What should we save for future generations and what should we let fall to ruin or beneath the bulldozer's blade? What's at stake and why should anyone care about any of this? We won't know until we start.

With yours and the archaeology community's help, it is these, and dozens of other questions and issues, that I hope to work out in the coming months on this blog. Your contributions and comments are welcome.