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To: Cincinatus' Wife
Hmmmm.

You pose several very interesting points.

I tend to think that even though our manned space program is in a holding pattern right now, we have technology on the shelf that could do the job, if there was an imperative reason to do so. The money to do so would be available if we stopped paying millions to study the sex habits of quail etc.

The Chinese are just now developing manned space technology, and the Russian have very little $$$ to put into exploiting lunar resources. Heck, they have plenty of stuff in Siberia they can't currently get to. I don't see either of them being a threat to the US in space for many years.
7 posted on 10/17/2003 4:54:46 AM PDT by clee1 (Where's the beef???)
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To: clee1
NYTimes: Elated, China Promises Another Space Flight in a Year or Two***In addition, Chinese officials plan within three years to begin orbiting and exploring the moon with unmanned probes and to build a Hubble-like space telescope. There is talk of a Mars mission one day.

The government also offered a rare glimpse into its budget. Western estimates of China's space budget are typically about $2 billion a year. The government now says its manned space program, including the four unmanned Shenzhou launchings, has cost roughly $2.2 billion. That would seem remarkably low by American or European standards, but China has a reputation for being thrifty, and costs are lower here.***

________________________________

Amazing how slave labor can stretch a budget. And when the Communist Chinese military is running the show, no one is going to argue budgets, direction and timetables.

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Spy in the sky *** China's first manned spacecraft did more than simply showcase Beijing's efforts for civilian space flight. The Shenzhou 5, or Divine Vessel 5, spacecraft also conducted intelligence-gathering work for China's military.

Included on the top of the Long March 2F rocket, which boosted Shenzhou into orbit Tuesday, was a new Chinese military intelligence-gathering satellite. The satellite was placed in orbit successfully shortly after the Shenzhou began its 14-orbit mission. No mention of the satellite launch was made in the state-run Chinese press.

Additionally, defense officials said the single-astronaut spacecraft carried an infrared camera that conducted photographic spying. The camera was mounted outside the craft and has a resolution of 1.6 meters, meaning something as small as 5 feet wide can be distinguished.

The space spying highlights China's plans to use space for military purposes, primarily to develop missiles and sensors, and to blind or cripple U.S. communications and intelligence systems in any conflict over Taiwan.

Lt. Col. Mark Stokes, director of the Taiwan desk at the Pentagon, said in a speech Sept. 30 that China's space program is closely linked to the Chinese military.

China's "space assets will play a major role in any use of force against Taiwan and in preventing foreign intervention," Col. Stokes said. It is working to develop networks of satellites that will be used for spying and communications for the military, he said.

China also has shown "significant indications" of developing space weapons, such as satellite-killing missiles and satellites and lasers that can disable U.S. military and intelligence satellites, he said.

The Long March rocket booster also benefited from illegal U.S.-technology transfers in the 1990s, when U.S. satellite companies helped China fix electrical problems with the boosters. The booster improvements also benefited Chinese strategic missiles, which are made by the same Chinese manufacturers of the Long March rocket.***

8 posted on 10/17/2003 5:26:48 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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