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I knew about von Braun and General Medaris agitating for a Jupiter C
launch of a satellite in 1956. Someone was trying to tell me, last week, that von Braun apparently conspired to put a satellite in orbit in 1956! The Jupiter C was being used to do ballistic missile re-entry tests from Florida; von Braun was going to... kind of sort of ....'by accident'.. go for a ballistic arc that circled the Earth or even Earth orbit. Apparently ...General. Medaris was willing to look the other way, till the Pentagon got wind of it. The DOD told Medaris to tell von Braun it was verboten! So it never came about. That a space age myth? |
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On Oct 4, 7:10 am, Al wrote:
I knew about von Braun and General Medaris agitating for a Jupiter C launch of a satellite in 1956. Someone was trying to tell me, last week, that von Braun apparently conspired to put a satellite in orbit in 1956! The Jupiter C was being used to do ballistic missile re-entry tests from Florida; von Braun was going to... kind of sort of ....'by accident'.. go for a ballistic arc that circled the Earth or even Earth orbit. Apparently ...General. Medaris was willing to look the other way, till the Pentagon got wind of it. The DOD told Medaris to tell von Braun it was verboten! So it never came about. That a space age myth? It is absolutely true that Project Orbiter could have launched a satellite in 1956. Eisenhower nixed it for very specific reasons. He did not want America to be first in space. There's a reason it only took 90 says to dust off the Jupiter-C to launch Explorer 1. |
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"neopeius" wrote in message
ups.com... On Oct 4, 7:10 am, Al wrote: I knew about von Braun and General Medaris agitating for a Jupiter C launch of a satellite in 1956. Someone was trying to tell me, last week, that von Braun apparently conspired to put a satellite in orbit in 1956! The Jupiter C was being used to do ballistic missile re-entry tests from Florida; von Braun was going to... kind of sort of ....'by accident'.. go for a ballistic arc that circled the Earth or even Earth orbit. Apparently ...General. Medaris was willing to look the other way, till the Pentagon got wind of it. The DOD told Medaris to tell von Braun it was verboten! So it never came about. That a space age myth? It is absolutely true that Project Orbiter could have launched a satellite in 1956. Eisenhower nixed it for very specific reasons. He did not want America to be first in space. rand Not true. /rant There's a reason it only took 90 says to dust off the Jupiter-C to launch Explorer 1. -- Greg Moore SQL Server DBA Consulting Remote and Onsite available! Email: sql (at) greenms.com http://www.greenms.com/sqlserver.html |
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![]() Greg D. Moore (Strider) wrote: It is absolutely true that Project Orbiter could have launched a satellite in 1956. Eisenhower nixed it for very specific reasons. He did not want America to be first in space. rand Not true. /rant Oh, I like that. :-D People forget that space law was a very hypothetical thing prior to the launch of Sputnik, and that it set the precedent by being allowed to fly over the U.S. without complaint...in that satellites were considered to be similar to ships at sea in international waters from that moment on. We already knew that Corona was in the future, and we'd learn a lot more about the Soviet Union via reconsats than they'd ever learn about us via their Zenits. Pat |
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On Oct 7, 8:43 pm, Pat Flannery wrote:
Greg D. Moore (Strider) wrote: It is absolutely true that Project Orbiter could have launched a satellite in 1956. Eisenhower nixed it for very specific reasons. He did not want America to be first in space. rand Not true. /rant Oh, I like that. :-D People forget that space law was a very hypothetical thing prior to the launch of Sputnik, and that it set the precedent by being allowed to fly over the U.S. without complaint...in that satellites were considered to be similar to ships at sea in international waters from that moment on. We already knew that Corona was in the future, and we'd learn a lot more about the Soviet Union via reconsats than they'd ever learn about us via their Zenits. Pat Yeah, I'm not sure what "Not True" is all about. It's not a secret. It was a calculated move by the President, and not a bad one in foresight or hindsight. At the *very* least, Eisenhower wanted the IGY probe to be at least ostensibly civilian. There was no place for ABMA in that scheme of things. |
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"neopeius" wrote in message
ups.com... On Oct 7, 8:43 pm, Pat Flannery wrote: Greg D. Moore (Strider) wrote: It is absolutely true that Project Orbiter could have launched a satellite in 1956. Eisenhower nixed it for very specific reasons. He did not want America to be first in space. rand Not true. /rant Oh, I like that. :-D People forget that space law was a very hypothetical thing prior to the launch of Sputnik, and that it set the precedent by being allowed to fly over the U.S. without complaint...in that satellites were considered to be similar to ships at sea in international waters from that moment on. We already knew that Corona was in the future, and we'd learn a lot more about the Soviet Union via reconsats than they'd ever learn about us via their Zenits. Pat Yeah, I'm not sure what "Not True" is all about. It's not a secret. It was a calculated move by the President, and not a bad one in foresight or hindsight. It's not true because it's not true. And you answered your own question below. At the *very* least, Eisenhower wanted the IGY probe to be at least ostensibly civilian. There was no place for ABMA in that scheme of things. This is correct. There's no evidence however though that Eisenhower did not want the American's to be first though. -- Greg Moore SQL Server DBA Consulting Remote and Onsite available! Email: sql (at) greenms.com http://www.greenms.com/sqlserver.html |
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On Mon, 8 Oct 2007 14:51:38 -0400, in a place far, far away, "Greg D.
Moore \(Strider\)" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: At the *very* least, Eisenhower wanted the IGY probe to be at least ostensibly civilian. There was no place for ABMA in that scheme of things. This is correct. There's no evidence however though that Eisenhower did not want the American's to be first though. The administration certainly didn't mind letting the Soviet Union establish the overflight precedent. |
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![]() "Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... On Mon, 8 Oct 2007 14:51:38 -0400, in a place far, far away, "Greg D. Moore \(Strider\)" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: At the *very* least, Eisenhower wanted the IGY probe to be at least ostensibly civilian. There was no place for ABMA in that scheme of things. This is correct. There's no evidence however though that Eisenhower did not want the American's to be first though. The administration certainly didn't mind letting the Soviet Union establish the overflight precedent. I'd forgotten about this issue. There was some fear that the Soviet Union would object to overflights of its country by US satellites, which could have made proposed military satellites problematic. Jeff -- "When transportation is cheap, frequent, reliable, and flexible, everything else becomes easier." - Jon Goff |
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On Oct 8, 12:42 pm, "Jeff Findley"
wrote: "Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... On Mon, 8 Oct 2007 14:51:38 -0400, in a place far, far away, "Greg D. Moore \(Strider\)" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: At the *very* least, Eisenhower wanted the IGY probe to be at least ostensibly civilian. There was no place for ABMA in that scheme of things. This is correct. There's no evidence however though that Eisenhower did not want the American's to be first though. The administration certainly didn't mind letting the Soviet Union establish the overflight precedent. I'd forgotten about this issue. There was some fear that the Soviet Union would object to overflights of its country by US satellites, which could have made proposed military satellites problematic. Jeff -- "When transportation is cheap, frequent, reliable, and flexible, everything else becomes easier." - Jon Goff You had better believe that if the US had been first, the Soviets would have set international track records in the UN screaming about the overflights of "their sacred motherland" and violation of THEIR national soveignty. They didn't mind doing it to anyone else, but if ANYONE, especially the US, did it to them ... This would have set a VERY bad precident, if it had been backed up. This level of national hypocracy was quite noticable at the time, even to a pre-teen which had quite a lot of admiration of the Soviets in their scientific acheivements. |
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... On Oct 8, 12:42 pm, "Jeff Findley" wrote: I'd forgotten about this issue. There was some fear that the Soviet Union would object to overflights of its country by US satellites, which could have made proposed military satellites problematic. You had better believe that if the US had been first, the Soviets would have set international track records in the UN screaming about the overflights of "their sacred motherland" and violation of THEIR national soveignty. They didn't mind doing it to anyone else, but if ANYONE, especially the US, did it to them ... This would have set a VERY bad precident, if it had been backed up. So at the time, the US didn't mind the Soviets overflying the US? I thought that the US scrambled fighters to turn such flights away from the US. Granted, I wasn't even born back then, so I'm going by what I've read in history books and seen on TV documentaries of the Cold War. Jeff -- "When transportation is cheap, frequent, reliable, and flexible, everything else becomes easier." - Jon Goff |
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