From WAshington Times, op ed piece: CHENG: China’s space challenge to America
ANALYSIS/OPINION:
At the dawn of the Space Age, China lagged far behind the United States and the Soviet Union. Beijing didn’t even launch its first satellite until 1970.
But China
has made remarkable progress. On June 24, three Chinese astronauts
successfully docked their Shenzhou spacecraft with the orbiting
Tiangong-1 space lab. The mission underscored again China’s
interest in manned spaceflight. And the manual docking itself marked a
major step toward a greater Chinese presence in space, as docking and
extended missions are essential to any space station or lunar mission.
China’s
manned space program results from longstanding indigenous development
efforts, leavened with some foreign technology. Aerospace efforts have
been a top research priority for the People's Republic of China
since March 1986. That’s when senior political and military leadership
established Plan 863, formally termed the National High-Technology
Research and Development Plan. These leaders saw space capability as
promoting economic development. Moreover, many viewed space as an arena
where competition with the United States would be both inevitable and
necessary.
With commitment from the top, progress was rapid. By
1990, Chinese scientists approved a space-capsule design that would
serve as China’s vessel to the stars.
China’s space efforts also got a boost with the collapse of the Soviet Union. Cash-strapped Russia happily sold China life-support systems and spacesuit technology. The Kremlin also trained two Chinese astronauts - all for cash.
China
took the Russian technology and improved upon it. The Chinese Shenzhou
spacecraft is more powerful and versatile than its Soyuz cousin.
Similarly, the Tiangong-1 space lab bears little resemblance to the Soviet Salyut space station - not least because the Chinese program isn’t armed with a cannon.
Beijing
has used its space program, including its manned space efforts, to
highlight its technological prowess and to build diplomatic bridges. But
the program also serves to signal the PRC’s growing military
capabilities, and to raise its stature as a great power.
Compared to China,
the United States enjoys a far wider array of space capabilities, but
Washington seems to employ them less effectively. Here are some things
the U.S. can do to get the most out of its space programs.
*Think about space in broader terms. China
sees space not just as an arena for industrial policy, but as a
diplomatic tool. Every Chinese space mission is a form of strategic
communications. NASA’s products are a de facto refutation of claims of
American decline, and should be used as such. U.S. space achievements
such as the return of the X-37B or the departure of the Voyager
spacecraft from the solar system (marking the farthest distance any
man-made object has ever traveled) should be far more publicized
worldwide.
*Rely on American strengths. A few weeks before the
Shenzhou mission, a Dragon spacecraft - operated by SpaceX Corp. -
resupplied the International Space Station. It was the first commercial
spacecraft to dock with the ISS. The United States should encourage the
commercial sector, ever intent on reducing costs, to play a greater
role. Space exploration arguably requires the government; the business
of space exploitation, whether resupplying the ISS or promoting space
tourism, does not.
*Be cautious in engaging in space cooperation
and interaction. Many Americans embrace the idea of international
cooperation in space, especially when it comes to manned missions. But China’s
emphasis on indigenous development suggests that Beijing will focus
more on political than budgetary burden-sharing. It also suggests that China
will pursue technological “cooperation” that favors itself in any joint
space ventures, such as demanding establishment of R&D facilities
in China and
preferential transfers of technology. Equally important, Chinese
interest in legal warfare should make the U.S. wary of creating new
international covenants or codes of conduct regarding space. Beijing may
well try to use such instruments to constrain American efforts to
prepare for potential space conflicts. Cooperation needs to be mutually
beneficial.
The late-arriving entry from the Far East must be
taken as a serious - and tough - player in the international competition
to tame “the final frontier.”
• Dean Cheng is a research fellow in the Heritage Foundation’s Asian Studies Center.
No comments:
Post a Comment