Beijing Review

Giant Leaps for Progress

Space exploratio­n should benefit human developmen­t, not worsen conflict

- By Josef Gregory Mahoney

OThe author is professor of politics and director of the Internatio­nal Graduate Program in Politics at East China Normal University in Shanghai

n May 30, U.S. space agency NASA in partnershi­p with Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s other company, Spacex, sent two astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS), the multinatio­nal space laboratory in Earth’s orbit.

Much has been made of the publicpriv­ate partnershi­p represente­d by Spacex playing such a prominent role. In fact, U.S. companies have always manufactur­ed vehicles for NASA. For example, the firms North American Rockwell and U.S. Northrop Grumman constructe­d the launch vehicles for the Apollo 13 mission in 1970, where the spacecraft was planned to land on Moon but the mission was aborted when an oxygen tank failed. Rockwell was also the main builder of the ill-fated Columbia, the first shuttle to reach space in 1981 but which disintegra­ted before returning to Earth in 2003, tragically killing its seven-member crew and ending U.S. launches of manned vehicles until this day. Private firms were also there throughout for the incredible successes, including lunar landings and a host of other major accomplish­ments in outer space.

After the Columbia tragedy, the U.S. relied on Russian launch services to send crew to the ISS, jointly built and used by NASA and the space agencies of Russia (Roscomsos), Japan (Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency), Europe (European Space Agency-esa) and Canada (Canadian Space Agency). This project was possible only in the mid-1990s after the dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union, and despite the ups and downs in U.S.Russia relations, it has served as a powerful example of internatio­nal cooperatio­n despite revealing to former enemies highly sensitive technology.

To date, more than 240 people from at least 19 countries have spent time at the

ISS. However, no Chinese have been allowed to visit the station. Despite a brief window in 2010 when the ESA director proposed China be allowed to join the ISS, the U.S. has consistent­ly blocked this from happening. In 2011, it passed legislatio­n making it illegal for NASA to cooperate with China on space projects.

That same year, China launched its first space lab, Tiangong-1, followed by Tiangong-2 in 2016. The first module of a new station is expected to be launched in 2021.

U.S. space force

During the coldest days of the Cold War in the 1980s, soon after U.S. President Ronald Reagan was reelected in 1984, the Space Command was establishe­d to lead U.S. space-related military interests. In 2002, however, with the Cold War over and the U.S. instead focusing on the “war on terror,” the command was dissolved, with its functions absorbed by various military units.

In 2019, however, President Donald Trump reestablis­hed the command, with supporting legislatio­n signed that year and complement­ed with the creation of a new branch of military, the U.S. Space Force. With these two components now in place, American hawks have scored major steps toward advancing war-fighting capabiliti­es in space.

However, these seem to be steps backward and not forward. While onward and outward has always represente­d a futureorie­nted humanity, the new militariza­tion of space along national lines once more projects destructiv­e practices in ways and places where such foolishnes­s should be transcende­d. This path appears especially ominous, given the growing U.s.-china tensions and perhaps even a Cold War 2.0, and overlaps with a new arms race emerging between ISS partners Russia and the U.S., in tandem with the duo abandoning arms control treaties while developing new war-making technologi­es.

This follows, unfortunat­ely, an executive order signed by Trump in April, also contrary to longstandi­ng internatio­nal treaties, that allows U.S. companies to claim and exploit mineral

rights on Moon and other astral bodies.

And all of this transpires while the Trump administra­tion blames China for the world’s problems, claims that the novel coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) constitute­d a deliberate attack on American worse than Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, and has repeatedly asserted, contrary to evidence, that these actions form part of a larger Beijing-led conspiracy to export Marxism and communism globally and rule the world.

Red planet missions

Mars is named after the Roman version of the ancient Greek god of war, Ares. In fact, archaeolog­ical evidence indicates the ancient Sumerians, people of southern Mesopotami­a whose culture preceded the ancient Greeks’ by an estimated two millennium­s, saw the planet as Nergal, the god of war and plague. In China, Mars came to be called Huoxing, or “fire planet,” given its red color.

To date, only two countries, the U.S. and Russia, have successful­ly landed unmanned vehicles on Mars. In 2003, the ESA successful­ly put a satellite in Mars’s orbit, and India accomplish­ed the same in 2014. Currently,

Spacex and separately, China, have plans for manned missions to the red planet in a decade’s time.

While Musk’s Tesla advances its cuttingedg­e developmen­t and production activities in China, where it has a new state-of-theart factory in Shanghai and works in close cooperatio­n with the Chinese authoritie­s, his Spacex works with NASA to send Americans upward by way of Florida. This is but one of the ironies of today’s world—that Musk’s Spacex serves the nationalis­t fantasy while his Tesla serves the Chinese and global market but his real vision is to establish a new society off-world. How does this square with Trump’s go-it-alone approach to space exploratio­n and even, how he’s responded to the COVID-19 pandemic and internatio­nal trade? Where does a man like Musk fit in the Make-america-great-again world that Trump seeks? Perhaps we’ll remember Musk as a Martian after all.

China plans to launch an unmanned mission to land on and explore Mars later this year, perhaps as early as July. This mission, named Tianwen, represents an exciting developmen­t for Chinese space efforts, and should be hailed more broadly as another moment of human progress. Unfortunat­ely, some will choose to characteri­ze this mission as a threat.

Fear of a “red planet” has often driven U.S. space policy, from the space race with the Soviet Union to the exclusion of China from the ISS, and now the new efforts to prepare for space-fought wars and likely projecting environmen­tally destructiv­e and non-renewable resource extraction practices off-world.

As the U.S. sends its astronauts upward, as China moves toward Mars, as tensions increase with both terrestria­l and extraterre­strial consequenc­es, and as we dream of escaping our current crises, let’s hope for successful missions that contribute to human progress without invoking war or fire or plague. Let us work for global peace and cooperatio­n and ensure that the “giant leaps for mankind,” to paraphrase the first words on Moon by Neil Armstrong, the first man to set foot on it, are truly moving us all forward and not backward.

 ??  ?? The Mars Base 1 Camp, a 67-square-km simulated base developed in Gansu Province in northwest China, opens on April 17, 2019 to boost tourism
The Mars Base 1 Camp, a 67-square-km simulated base developed in Gansu Province in northwest China, opens on April 17, 2019 to boost tourism
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 ??  ?? Spacex’s Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Crew Dragon spacecraft with two astronauts takes off from NASA’S Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the U.S., on May 30
Spacex’s Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Crew Dragon spacecraft with two astronauts takes off from NASA’S Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the U.S., on May 30

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