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China’s space program shoots for moon, Mars, Venus

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BEIJING (AP) — This year, a rocket will carry a boxcar-sized

module into orbit, the first building block for a Chinese space

station. Around 2013, China plans to launch a lunar probe that will

set a rover loose on the moon. It wants to put a man on the moon,

sometime after 2020.

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While the United States is still working out its next move after

the space shuttle program, China is forging ahead. Some experts

worry the U.S. could slip behind China in human spaceflight – the

realm of space science with the most prestige.

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“Space leadership is highly symbolic of national capabilities and

international influence, and a decline in space leadership will be

seen as symbolic of a relative decline in U.S. power and

influence,” said Scott Pace, an associate NASA administrator in the

George W. Bush administration. He was a supporter of Bush’s plan –

shelved by President Barack Obama – to return Americans to the

moon.

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China is still far behind the U.S. in space technology and

experience, but what it doesn’t lack is a plan or financial

resources. While U.S. programs can fall victim to budgetary worries

or a change of government, rapidly growing China appears to have no

such constraints.

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“One of the biggest advantages of their system is that they have

five-year plans so they can develop well ahead,” said Peter Bond,

consultant editor for Jane’s Space Systems and Industry. “They are

taking a step-by-step approach, taking their time and gradually

improving their capabilities. They are putting all the pieces

together for a very capable, advanced space industry.”

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In 2003, China became the third country to send an astronaut into

space on its own, four decades after the United States and Russia.

In 2006, it sent its first probe to the moon. In 2008, China

carried out its first spacewalk.

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China’s space station is slated to open around 2020, the same year

the International Space Station is scheduled to close. If the U.S.

and its partners don’t come up with a replacement, China could have

the only permanent human presence in the sky.

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Its space laboratory module, due to be launched later this year,

will test docking techniques for the space station. China’s version

will be smaller than the International Space Station, which is the

size of a football field and jointly operated by the U.S., Russia,

Canada, Japan and 11 European countries.

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“China has lagged 20 to 40 years behind the U.S. in developing

space programs and China has no intention of challenging U.S.

dominance in space,” said He Qisong, a professor at Shanghai

University of Political Science and Law. “But it is a sign of the

national spirit for China to develop a space program and therefore

it is of great significance for China.”

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Some elements of China’s program, notably the firing of a

ground-based missile into one of its dead satellites four years

ago, have alarmed American officials and others who say such moves

could set off a race to militarize space. That the program is run

by the military has made the U.S. reluctant to cooperate with China

in space, even though the latter insists its program is purely for

peaceful ends.

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“Space technology can be applied for both civilian and military

use, but China doesn’t stress the military purpose,” said Li

Longchen, retired editor-in-chief of Chinese magazine “Space

Probe.” “It has been always hard for humankind to march into space

and China must learn the lessons from the U.S.”

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China is not the only country aiming high in space. Russia has

talked about building a base on the moon and a possible mission to

Mars but hasn’t set a time frame. India has achieved an unmanned

orbit of the moon and plans its first manned space flight in

2016.

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The U.S. has no plans to return to the moon. “We’ve been there

before,” Obama said last year. “There’s a lot more of space to

explore.” He prefers sending astronauts to land on an asteroid by

2025 and ultimately to Mars. But those plans are far from

set.

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Instead, NASA is closing out its 30-year space shuttle era this

month, leaving the U.S. dependent on hitching rides to the space

station aboard Russian Soyuz capsules at a cost of $56 million per

passenger, rising to $63 million from 2014. The U.S. also hopes

private companies will develop spacecraft to ferry cargo and crew

to the space station.

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China, having orbited the moon and starting collecting data on it,

is moving toward sending a man there – and beyond. It hopes to

launch the rover-releasing moon probe in about two years. Chinese

experts believe a moon landing will happen in 2025 at the

earliest.

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“The lunar probe is the starting point for deep space exploration,”

said Wu Weiren, chief designer of China’s moon-exploring program,

in a 2010 interview posted on the national space agency’s website.

“We first need to do a good job of exploring the moon and work out

the rocket, transportation and detection technology that can then

be used for a future exploration of Mars or Venus.”

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In testimony in May to the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review

Commission, which reports to the U.S. Congress, former NASA

official Pace said what China learns in its space program can be

applied elsewhere: improving the accuracy of ballistic missiles and

quality controls for industry.

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China also offers space technology to developing countries to

secure access to raw materials, said Pace, now director of the

Space Policy Institute at George Washington University.

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There may also be economic reasons to explore the moon: It contains

minerals and helium-3, a potential rich source of energy through

nuclear fusion.

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“But that’s way ahead,” said Bond, the Jane’s editor. “A lot of it

would be prestige, the fact that every time we went out and looked

at the moon in the night sky we would say the Chinese flag is on

there.”

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Associated Press researcher Yu Bing contributed to this

report.

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