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Chinese space advances benefit everyone
http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion...14-oberg_x.htm USA TODAY, October 15, 2003 By James Oberg What really is about to happen is ... momentous: For the first time since 1961, and only the third time in world history, a new nation will have achieved independent human-spaceflight capability. When the Chinese manned spacecraft Shenzhou 5 blasts off this week, it will be carrying at least one astronaut and a sack of seeds for science experiments. It also will be carrying a load of the world's high hopes — and anxieties. Some are certain to worry about China's real intentions in space. But alongside that worrisome baggage is hopeful cargo: Simply by taking place, China's mission will energize the existing space activities of other countries by making old patterns of space partnerships obsolete. It's about time. Space programs in the United States, Europe and even Japan need a good kick into gear. China's emergence adds a full-fledged third partner to what has been mainly a U.S.-Russian alliance dictated by long-extinct diplomatic considerations. China provides new options for projects during a crisis, such as moving crews and cargo to the International Space Station (ISS) and back. Fears about China in space should not sidetrack people. This isn't the Cold War of U.S.-Soviet confrontation, so a new high-budget "space race" isn't in the cards. China is not racing us to establish a manned military station on the moon. Nor is it assembling an orbiting battle fleet to neutralize American space-based military tools. To imagine such threats is to fear shadows. To respond as if they were real would be folly. What really is about to happen is much more momentous: For the first time since 1961, and only the third time in world history, a new nation will have achieved independent human-spaceflight capability. China has expended a great deal of its rare resources of talent and time, and has taken enormous risks, to carry out this project. In the most basic sense, this is a case of brave young men facing daunting psychological and technical challenges and risking their lives to help mankind stretch its abilities. A Chinese human space program will have practical short- and long-term benefits. It will enhance the commercial attractiveness of its high-tech exports as well as the credibility of its aerospace military hardware. Chinese science projects will get a lot more respect across the board. And the prestige of the Beijing government will be enhanced both externally and internally, as it receives a 21st century version of the classic "Mandate of Heaven" needed by all previous Chinese rulers. In the next few years, China plans to: • Fly many more orbits in space, including experiments involving docking small space labs together and visiting them periodically. • Demonstrate that its Shenzhou vehicles are more sophisticated than Russia's Soyuz spaceship and will be able to compete with NASA's redesigned crew-transfer vehicle to carry astronauts and cargo between Earth and space stations. • Explore the moon with robot craft, including surface rovers. • Have its own Mir-class space station by the end of the decade. Because China's space vehicles use docking mechanisms that appear modeled after Russia's, they should be compatible with the ISS. So China could provide emergency support to the ISS, and symbolic visits are feasible. Just the possibility of this is enough to energize the international partnerships behind the space station. While Beijing officials say China is opposed to the "weaponization" of space, there are probably some military applications for Shenzhou. But these would be mainly in the areas of observing other countries, both with telescope cameras (to see structures on the ground) and with electronic eavesdropping antennas (to locate radars and communications sites). Other nations, the United States included, already have similar space-reconnaissance activities underway. Adding another may be a positive s tep: As the number of countries keeping an eye on each other increases, the chances of military surprises are reduced, thus enhancing international stability. If there is a challenge involved, it is for the United States and other space-faring nations to live up to their ideals and potentials in space. Loss of focus leads to losses of lives and treasure, as we have been bitterly reminded. Shenzhou's charge to other nations is to take space seriously again. As this brave team begins its fantastic voyages, we all can celebrate, just as we hailed the feats of Yuri Gagarin, Neil Armstrong, Arnaldo Tamayo-Mendez, Julie Payette and other pioneering earthlings. Beyond the boundaries of Earth, the accomplishments of all earthlings benefit everyone. James Oberg, who spent 22 years at NASA Mission Control in Houston, is writing a book on the national security uses of space. |
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