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This is the real way the US military changed the world

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The Phraselator P2 translates a military phrase into Pashto in 2011 (left) and Siri on a modern iPhone.AP; Anne Warmiel
A man tests a cold liquid weapon, which officials dubbed the "squirt gun"National Archives
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ARPA funded Bell Aerosystems to build an Individual Mobility System, better known as the Jet Belt, worn here by a soldier.
Nicholas Christofilos in 1958National Archives
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Following the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, US troops were embedded in areas in which few, if any, of our soldiers spoke the language. The Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA), the research and development branch of the Department of Defense, had a solution: A “Star Trek”-esque device known as the “Phraselator.”

The handheld device, issued to some divisions in Afghanistan in 2002, wasn’t a real-time translator. Instead, a soldier would hit a button, and the device would say it was going to ask some questions in Pashto or Arabic and instructed the person to raise one hand for yes or two hands for no.

Unfortunately, the yes or no answers weren’t much help, and Afghan leaders didn’t feel comfortable talking to a machine. A 2009 Army survey universally panned the universal translator: “Took too long to translate the correct phrase,” soldiers said. “Translation wrong more often than not.”

The Phraselator was dropped. DARPA cut off its outside research funding for the project, including its support of a company called SRI International. SRI spun off the technology as a separate entity called Siri, which was then bought by Apple and incorporated into the iPhone.

It’s a common refrain in Sharon Weinberger’s new history of the agency, “The Imagineers of War: The Untold Story of DARPA, the Pentagon Agency That Changed the World” (Knopf).

While the agency didn’t always succeed in its primary mission — improving the US military — its influence is everywhere.

Stanford Racing Team’s Volkswagen Touareg unmanned vehicle was the first to cross the finish line of the DARPA 2005 Grand Challenge robot race sponsored by the Pentagon.AP

“DARPA’s work on natural language processing was not necessarily going to help soldiers talk to Afghans,” Weinberger writes, “but it could help Americans find the closest Starbucks.”

Founded in 1958 in response to the Soviet launch of Sputnik, the Advanced Research Projects Agency (the “D” was added in 1972) was also pioneers in:GPS: DARPA was in charge of the first communications satellite and first spy satellite. It was involved in Transit, a satellite launched to help submarines navigate — leading to the Global Positioning System.

Driverless Cars: Starting in 2004, DARPA sponsored robotic car races across the Mojave Desert. It offered a $1 million prize to the first car that could travel 150 miles across the desert between Barstow, Calif., and Primm, Nev. Unfortunately, the best any car could do that year was 7.32 miles, but one year later, the Stanford Racing Team developed a car that completed a 212-mile course in just under seven hours. The head of that team, Sebastian Thrun, went on to pioneer the development of Google’s self-driving car.

Diagram of a network of potential internet then called ARPANETGetty Images

Stealth Aircraft: In the 1970s, DARPA sponsored development of the first “invisible aircraft,” a stealth prototype codenamed Have Blue. The stealth aircraft was designed to be invisible to radar in order to slip past Soviet air defense systems. The U.S. military’s current fleet of stealth aircraft, including the stealth helicopters used in the 2011 raid that killed Osama bin Laden, can all be traced back to DARPA.

Robotics: DARPA has been the leading investor in robotics in the United States for decades. Many of today’s most recognizable robots, like iRobot’s PackBot, a bomb disposal robot used in Iraq and Afghanistan, and Roomba, the vacuum cleaner robot, can be credited to DARPA.

The iRobot Roomba DiscoveryBloomberg News

But DARPA’s most famous legacy was that — sorry, Al Gore — it invented the Internet. In the 1960s, DARPA sponsored development of a system of networked computers called the ARPANET.

J.C.R. Licklider, a research director at ARPA, was fascinated by the ways computer operators’ “command and control” of their machines was evolving, and realized that people would use the devices to interact with each other across great distances. Though the Pentagon initially wanted a way to control its nuclear arsenal, Licklider had a bigger goal in mind, and ARPA gave him the opportunity to steer the research on networked computing, awarding contracts to scientists at MIT, Stanford, and other institutions.

The effort almost fell apart within a year, though, as ARPA’s head, Robert Sproull, was looking for ways to cut $15 million from the agency’s budget. Licklider’s research hadn’t produced any concrete results, so it was a natural target — until Licklider invited Sproull to visit some of the computer labs and convinced him their work would pay off in the long run. It did — ARPANET developed many of the protocols that the Internet uses today.

MIT Professor J.C.R. Licklider and student Jeff HarrisGetty Images

From a purely military perspective, DARPA’s biggest success has been drones, which the agency has been working on since the Vietnam War.

With Project AGILE, the agency spent millions of dollars trying to develop counterinsurgency techniques to help the South Vietnamese government defeat the Viet Cong. One endeavor took a small drone helicopter developed by the Navy to drop nuclear bombs on Soviet submarines, added a TV camera, and installed the remote control equipment in the back of a jeep.

Then, they added a small gun and bombs. Although these drones tended to crash during test flights, and were never used in Vietnam, the project at least established that, in principle, drones could be viable in combat.

By 1980, DARPA had resumed its research into unmanned vehicles that could replace spy planes, working with a company called Leading Systems Incorporated to develop a prototype.

This drone, code-named Amber, could be used for reconnaissance missions or as a cruise missile. After 10 years, however, the Pentagon refused to extend the program further. LSI went bankrupt and was sold to a defense contractor called General Atomics — at which point the CIA stepped in. With a few modifications, including a significantly quieter engine,

Amber evolved into the Predator drone, which both the CIA and the Air Force would use in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere.

In 1967, ARPA sponsored Lockheed’s QT-2 aircraft, or “quiet airplane,” for use in Vietnam.Sharon Weinberger

And then there were the duds.

DARPA’s attempts to win the Vietnam War bordered on the absurd, like the proposal to relocate entire village populations into “strategic hamlets,” walled communities designed to keep out infiltrators. Villagers were understandably opposed.

Soviet naval cannon-shell for automatic antiaircraft and antimissileShutterstock

A nuclear-weapon shield during the Cold War proved particularly vexing. One proposal was to shoot down Soviet ICBMs with a charged particle beam, which would be powered by draining the Great Lakes and running all that water through a massive generator. That idea got kicked around for at least a decade, though almost nobody ever expected it to work, mainly because it seemed to keep scientists’ creative juices flowing.

In the 1970s, DARPA psychologist George Lawrence explored the possibilities of biofeedback training: What if combat soldiers could be taught to slow their own heartbeats after getting shot, to reduce the odds of bleeding out? What if fighter pilots could willfully maintain low blood pressure in emergency situations? Lawrence eventually decided the training would be too much work for insufficient results, but along the way he was asked to look into a Central Intelligence Agency-funded project testing Uri Geller, famous in those days for his claims of an array of psychic powers.

Lawrence flew out to California, showed up at the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) looking heavily hungover, and declared, “Okay, show me a f—ing miracle.” But Geller never let the team test him under truly scientific conditions. As another witness described it, the SRI researchers, who were inclined to believe Geller’s claims, came across as “bumbling idiots.” Lawrence grew increasingly frustrated. At one point, Geller claimed he’d moved a compass needle with his mind; Lawrence stomped his foot on the floor and made the needle move far further.

Much later, asked to give his appraisal of the CIA’s parapsychology research, Lawrence was blunt: “You have been wasting your money. Every damn dime of this is nonsense.”