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So NASA has said "No" to European and other outside participation in CEV/
Ares. Does anyone care to speculate why? I work on Space Station projects at JSC. I have several amusing stories to tell about working the the Russians, Germans and Japanese. I bet they have similar stories to tell about working with Americans. But overall, it has been rewarding on the personal level to work with them. I suspect that the big picture level, we were better off by partnering with ESA, JAXA, Roscomos etc. And I don't just mean that lack of Shuttle flights. Were there any official statements about why we declined partnership with the other nations? Did any Congresscritter make significant statements on the subject? |
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On Tue, 04 Jul 2006 20:21:13 -0000, in a place far, far away, Robert
Love made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: So NASA has said "No" to European and other outside participation in CEV/ Ares. Does anyone care to speculate why? Because they don't want to put another country on the critical path. I work on Space Station projects at JSC. I have several amusing stories to tell about working the the Russians, Germans and Japanese. I bet they have similar stories to tell about working with Americans. But overall, it has been rewarding on the personal level to work with them. I suspect that the big picture level, we were better off by partnering with ESA, JAXA, Roscomos etc. You are. |
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![]() Rand Simberg wrote: So NASA has said "No" to European and other outside participation in CEV/ Ares. Does anyone care to speculate why? Because they don't want to put another country on the critical path. That worked out just terrible when they did that with the ISS. Core Module, Soyuz, Progress, what a mistake! http://cosmic.lifeform.org |
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On Tue, 04 Jul 2006 17:33:42 -0500, in a place far, far away, Damon
Hill made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: wrote in roups.com: Rand Simberg wrote: So NASA has said "No" to European and other outside participation in CEV/ Ares. Does anyone care to speculate why? Because they don't want to put another country on the critical path. That worked out just terrible when they did that with the ISS. Core Module, Soyuz, Progress, what a mistake! Saved the ISS when Shuttle went down. You say that like it's a good thing. |
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I remember a rather advanced 'camera' that was a joint
effort between the US and other countries. When it came time to line up the bits - the other countries mated beautifully. The US contribution didn't. Why? Because the other countries stuff was done in metric and the US was done in US and then 'converted' to metric. I think all Americans are deeply, subconsciously, xenophobic - even with staunch, never fail allies. Hell - the US is a barely United States at the best of times - the *states* don't even trust each other. I can see a time coming where the US will turn inwards (ala China) and do its own thing for a while. |
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In article ,
Robert Love wrote: So NASA has said "No" to European and other outside participation in CEV/ Ares. Does anyone care to speculate why? Unfortunately, the US has learned the wrong things from ISS: instead of "choose partners carefully; trust them enough to put them in the critical path so they actually save you from having to do some things; don't keep switching plans on them without warning", the lesson drawn has been "can't trust them dagnab furriners". There were/are *two* foreign countries in the critical path on ISS. Only one has caused significant problems. (And even that wasn't always entirely their fault. Zvezda, aka the Service Module, got a lot of blame for delays, but in fact the US modules slated to follow it were about as far behind schedule, and for less pardonable reasons too.) Were there any official statements about why we declined partnership with the other nations? I don't believe anybody has bothered to explain it; it's just taken for granted that foreign partners would be a bad idea. And of course, because nobody has actually spelled out the reasons, it's impossible to assess how sensible they are. -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
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On Wed, 5 Jul 2006 12:27:25 +1000, in a place far, far away,
"BlagooBlanaa" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: I remember a rather advanced 'camera' that was a joint effort between the US and other countries. When it came time to line up the bits - the other countries mated beautifully. The US contribution didn't. Why? Because the other countries stuff was done in metric and the US was done in US and then 'converted' to metric. I think all Americans are deeply, subconsciously, xenophobic - Yes, that's right. *All* Americans are xenophobic, and no one else is. |
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So NASA has said "No" to European and other outside participation in CEV/
Ares. Does anyone care to speculate why? I don't imagine there is a particularly simple answer to that. People who like international space projects are likely to claim things like (a) they enable a group of nations to take on a project which done of them could do alone, (b) they cement friendships between nations (e.g. US-ESA), provide a foot in the door for potential friendships (e.g. US-Russia especially in the 90's), and other non-space benefits, and (c) it is harder to cancel a project if doing so would let down your international partners. People who don't like them are likely to say (a) the increased costs as a result of the budgetary uncertainties in each country, need to coordinate, etc, outweigh any savings from being able to get each country to pay for part of the mission, and (b) the space program should not be held hostage to foreign policy objectives. Apparently those in charge of Area/CEV are of the non-international thinking, whereas those in the Clinton and Bush I (or was it Reagan? I don't remember when Europe and Japan were brought in to ISS) administrations were of the international thinking. |
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On 04 Jul 2006 22:47:41 -0400, in a place far, far away, Jim Kingdon
made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Apparently those in charge of Area/CEV are of the non-international thinking, whereas those in the Clinton and Bush I (or was it Reagan? I don't remember when Europe and Japan were brought in to ISS) administrations were of the international thinking. Europe and Japan were in from the beginning (Reagan)--Clinton brought in the Russians. |
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