Townsville Bulletin

Russia out of US moon orbiter

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WASHINGTON: Russia is unlikely to participat­e in the moon-orbiting station planned by the US, a Russian official said on Monday (US time), marking the probable end of the type of close co-operation seen for two decades on the Internatio­nal Space Station .

The proposed new station, called the Gateway, “is too UScentric, so to speak”, Dmitry Rogozin, the head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, said, adding Russia was “likely to refrain from participat­ing in it on a large scale”. Speaking by videolink to the 71st Internatio­nal Astronauti­cal Congress, Mr Rogozin pointedly described the ISS as “a truly internatio­nal project” — it was

Internatio­nal Space Station.

built by the two nations and has been occupied by Russians and Americans since 2000.

Europe, Canada and Japan also participat­e in the ISS.

The ISS has avoided the sharp deteriorat­ion of political relations between Moscow and Washington, with Roscosmos and NASA operating the station hand-in-hand and American astronauts using Russian rockets to get there since 2011.

But the ISS is nearing the end of its life, probably by 2030, and NASA has unilateral­ly launched a lunar exploratio­n program without consulting Russia and other partners.

The Gateway was announced under President Donald Trump as part of plans to return American astronauts to the moon in 2024 — for the first time since 1972 — under a program that has been dubbed Artemis.

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