China Daily (Hong Kong)

Russia and US look to revive space links

- By REN QI in Moscow renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

The freeze in relations between the Russian and the US space sectors may be thawing as both sides took key steps on Saturday.

The Russian state space corporatio­n, Roscosmos, has sent an official invitation to the top officials of the US National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion, or NASA, to visit Russia, Russia’s space agency said, citing Sergey Savelyev, its deputy director general for internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

Savelyev said Roscosmos would like to discuss a wide range of projects, and is looking forward to a positive response from its US counterpar­t.

“We formally invited the top officials of NASA to come to our country, but we have received no reply so far. I hope that we will receive it and that it will be positive.”

The relationsh­ip has been rocky since NASA administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e rescinded an invitation to Roscosmos head Dmitry Rogozin to visit the United States in January last year due to the mounting criticism from Capitol Hill.

Bridenstin­e said later that the invitation was an attempt to maintain good relations with his Russian counterpar­t, but was blasted by some US senators as Rogozin was put on a sanctions list by the Obama administra­tion in 2014 over Russia’s military actions in Ukraine when he was a deputy prime minister.

NASA on Friday announced the creation of the Artemis Accords, a new set of standards on how to explore the Moon.

Reuters reported that NASA hoped that other countries would agree to the terms, which set out how humanity will act on the Moon, including how to mine resources from the lunar surface and ways to protect the heritage Apollo sites.

The accords were introduced after President Donald Trump signed an executive order allowing the US to mine resources from the Moon and other bodies in early April, arguing that it does not conflict with the Outer Space Treaty, a deal signed by the US, the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union in 1967 that forms the basis of internatio­nal space law.

According to Bridenstin­e, although some countries such as Japan and Canada are interested in this approach, “Russia was not pleased with the idea of the Artemis Accords”, and Rogozin argued that “the principle of invasion is the same, whether it be the Moon or Iraq”.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov also said that the Moon exploratio­n projects require a thorough review from the standpoint of the internatio­nal law.

Positive answer

Acting associate administra­tor for NASA’s office of internatio­nal and interagenc­y relations Michael Gold rejected media reports that US was not willing to include Russia in its draft agreement on Moon exploratio­n.

“I think it’s unfortunat­e that there were a lot of media leaks that did not properly describe what the Artemis Accords were, so I’m not surprised at some of those reactions,” he said.

Gold gave a positive answer to Russian media during an interview on whether the US viewed Russia as its partner in Moon exploratio­n, and whether Moscow could count on signing an agreement with Washington within the framework of the Artemis Accords if it wanted so.

“I’m very hopeful that now that we come out and have described what’s in these accords and that they are grounded on the Outer Space Treaty, that Russia will be able to take a hard look at this kind of thing now,” Gold said.

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