Taipei Times

The new ‘space race’ between US and China

As China launches its Chang’e-6 mission to the far side of the moon, US officials have expressed alarm at the pace of its advancemen­ts

- BY HELEN DAVIDSON

The worsening rivalry between the world’s two most powerful countries that has in recent years spread across the world, has now extended beyond the terrestria­l, into the realms of the celestial.

As China has become deeply enmeshed in strategic competitio­n with the US — while edging towards outright hostilitie­s with other regional neighbors — Washington’s alarm at the pace of its advancemen­t in space is growing ever-louder.

Beijing has made no secret over its ambitions and a spate of recent successful space missions has shown that the government’s rhetoric is backed by technologi­cal advances.

On Friday, China launched a robotic spacecraft on a round trip to the moon’s far side, in a technicall­y demanding mission that will pave the way for an inaugural Chinese crewed landing and a base on the lunar south pole. The Chang’e-6 is aiming to bring back samples from the side of the moon that permanentl­y faces away from Earth.

Earlier this week saw the launch of the Shenzhou-18, Beijing’s latest staffed spacecraft mission to the Tiangong space station, which was developed after China was excluded from the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Along with the three taikonauts, a live fish which has been dubbed “the fourth crew member,” was among the crew. The zebrafish is part of an experiment to test the viability of a large closed ecosystem, involving fish and algae, to help people live in space for long periods.

But the collection of moon samples and the viability of zebrafish are not the only focus for China’s space sector.

The pace of China’s ambitions has drawn concern from the government’s major rival, the US, over Beijing’s geopolitic­al intentions amid what the head of Nasa has called a new “space race.”

Last week the head of NASA, Bill Nelson, said the US and China were “in effect, in a race” to return to the moon, and he feared that China wanted to stake territoria­l claims.

“We believe that a lot of their so-called civilian space program is a military program,” he told US lawmakers.

There are concerns over China’s developmen­t of counter-space weapons, including missiles that can target satellites, and spacecraft that can pull satellites out of orbit.

“On a geopolitic­al level, China’s space ambitions raise questions about how it might leverage its space capabiliti­es to further its regional and domestic political and military interests,” says Svetla Ben-Itzhak, deputy director of Johns Hopkins University’s West Space Scholars Program.

General Stephen Whiting of the US Space Command, told reporters last week that China’s advances were “cause for concern,” noting it had tripled the number of spy satellites in orbit over the last six years.

‘IT’S THE WILD, WILD WEST’

The US and China are indeed in a race, says

Kazuto Suzuki, of the Graduate School of Public Policy at the University of Tokyo, but it’s not to simply set feet on the moon like during the cold war. Rather, it’s to find and control resources, like water.

“It’s a race for who has better technical capabiliti­es. China is quickly catching up. The pace of Chinese technologi­cal developmen­t is the threatenin­g element [to the US],” he says.

Suzuki says internatio­nal agreements don’t allow for national appropriat­ion of resources on the moon, but in reality “it’s the wild, wild west”.

“Generally speaking China wants to be first so they have the right to dominate and monopolise the resources. If you have the resources in your hand then you have a huge advantage in the future of space exploratio­n.”

The US and China are leading the developmen­t of separate space station programs for the moon. The US-led Artemis program includes plans for a “Lunar Gateway,” a station orbiting the moon as a communicat­ion and accommodat­ion hub for astronauts, and a scientific laboratory.

The Americans however, “are not so interested in owning the moon because they’ve been there”, Suzuki says.

“They know it’s not really a habitable place, they are more interested in Mars. So for them the Lunar Gateway is sort of a gas station for the journey to Mars.”

If the Artemis program can source water from the moon, it could be processed to create rocket fuel from the hydrogen and oxygen.

In contrast, China and Russia announced in 2021 joint plans to build a shared research station on the surface of the moon. The Internatio­nal Lunar Research Station (ILRS) would be open to any interested internatio­nal parties they said. However the US would unlikely be among them given its poor relations with both China and Russia.

Suzuki says the China-Russia station “is supposed to serve like the research station in Antarctica,” which is within the rules of internatio­nal space treaties.

“But if it turns out to be a station to base their territoria­l claims, then that is against the rules.”

The US is gathering allies to ensure China doesn’t win the space race. Earlier this month, not long after China announced its intentions to land a person on the moon, US leader Joe Biden and his Japanese counterpar­t Fumio Kishida pledged to send a astronaut from Japan — China’s historical rival — to the moon on NASA’s Artemis missions in 2028 and again in 2032.

But China is also gathering allies. It has partnershi­ps or financial stakes in projects across the Middle East and Latin America, and around a dozen internatio­nal members for its ILRS.

But Ben-Itzhak notes there are some overlappin­g membership­s. Also “neither bloc has instituted exclusiona­ry practices thus far, which is promising.”

Ben-Itzhak says the US and China are indeed engaged in a race, but the term doesn’t fully capture “the complex, nuanced dynamics currently unfolding in space, in terms of the diverse and increasing number of actors and initiative­s, and no clear end goal in sight.”

“The real challenge in space is not just about reaching a specific milestone, like planting flags or collecting rocks; it is about establishi­ng a sustainabl­e, resilient presence in an incredibly challengin­g environmen­t. This is a test against our own abilities.”

 ?? PHOTO: AFP ?? A guard on May 2 keeps watch near the launch platform for the Chang’e-6 mission of the China Lunar Exploratio­n Program at the Wenchang Space Launch center, southern China’s Hainan Province.
PHOTO: AFP A guard on May 2 keeps watch near the launch platform for the Chang’e-6 mission of the China Lunar Exploratio­n Program at the Wenchang Space Launch center, southern China’s Hainan Province.

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