China Could Claim Parts of Moon as Own Territory, Force Out US Astronauts, NASA Boss Warns
As the United States and China are racing to resume sending astronauts to the moon, NASA administrator Bill Nelson has warned about the regime’s ambitions as Beijing sets to establish a permanent presence on the lunar surface.“It is true that we better watch out that they don’t get to a place on the moon under the guise of scientific research. And it is not beyond the realm of possibility that they say, ‘Keep out, we’re here, this is our territory,” Nelson said in an interview with POLITICO published on Jan. 1. He pointed to China’s actions in the South China Sea, a contested region where the communist regime has unlawfully constructed a network of artificial islands with military installations. “If you doubt that, look at what they did with the Spratly Islands,” he said, referring to a contested island chain where China has built several militarized outposts. Specifically, Nelson expressed concerns that China might try to limit access to resource-rich areas on the moon from the United States and other nations seeking to explore the lunar surface. NASA Administrator Bill Nelson speaks at an Artemis I mission status briefing on Nov. 28, 2022. (NASA TV/screenshot via NTD) His position echoed that of Terry Virts, a former commander of the International Space Station and Space Shuttle and a retired Air Force colonel. “There is potentially mischief China can do on the moon,” Virts told Politico. “If they set up infrastructure there they could potentially deny communications, for example. Having them there doesn’t make things easier. There is real concern about Chinese meddling.” Virts believes the competition between the United States and the Chinese communist regime has political and security dimensions. “On one level, it is a political competition to show whose system works better,” he said. “What they really want is respect as the world’s top country. They want to be the dominant power on Earth, so going to the moon is a way to show their system is working. If they beat us back to the moon it shows they are better than us.” NASA has just completed its 26-day Artemis I mission, during which an unmanned Orion spacecraft circled the moon. That mission, which was hailed as a success, was the first significant step in NASA’s goal to send astronauts to the moon in 2025 to start establishing a more permanent human presence there. With this success, the NASA chief is optimistic that the U.S. effort to get back to the moon first is on schedule. According to Nelson, the next moon mission, Artemis II, is set to take place “within two years,” and “hopefully we can speed that up,” he said. By 2024, a crew will be launched as part of this expedition. Nelson pointed to $24.5 billion in funding that Congress has approved for NASA in fiscal 2023. Despite the fact that the appropriated amount was about half a billion dollars less than what President Joe Biden had requested, Nelson believes the funding could still cover the essentials as it represents an increase of more than 5 percent from last year. “Don’t look at the topline,” he said. “Look at the essentials,” he added, citing the Human Landing System in the form of SpaceX’s Starliner and a competition for a second lander as examples. China’s Leaps Nelson further made clear his concerns about China’s developments in the moon race. “China within the last decade has had enormous success and advances,” he said. “It is also true that their date for landing on the moon keeps getting closer and closer” based on the country’s announcements. “And there are only so many places on the south pole of the moon that are adequate for what we think, at this point, for harvesting water and so forth,” he added. Zhao Xinguo, head of the aerospace department of the First Academy of China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp., a state-owned contractor responsible for most of China’s space launches, said for the first time that China’s first manned lunar space launch vehicle, known as the Long March-5G, would fly for the first time by 2027, Chinese state-run media China Youth Daily reported in November. The Chinese space program has made a number of significant advancements, according to a recent Pentagon report to Congress. It highlighted China’s capacity to not only set up a communications relay using a satellite that had been launched the year before between the Earth and the moon but also to land on the moon’s far side. The study also revealed that China is getting better at producing space launch systems to enable more human space exploration. Asked whether American astronauts will get back to the moon ahead of China, Nelson responded, “The good Lord willing.” Hannah Ng is a reporter covering U.S. and China news. She holds a master's degree in international and development economics from the University of Applied Science Berlin.
As the United States and China are racing to resume sending astronauts to the moon, NASA administrator Bill Nelson has warned about the regime’s ambitions as Beijing sets to establish a permanent presence on the lunar surface.
“It is true that we better watch out that they don’t get to a place on the moon under the guise of scientific research. And it is not beyond the realm of possibility that they say, ‘Keep out, we’re here, this is our territory,” Nelson said in an interview with POLITICO published on Jan. 1.
He pointed to China’s actions in the South China Sea, a contested region where the communist regime has unlawfully constructed a network of artificial islands with military installations.
“If you doubt that, look at what they did with the Spratly Islands,” he said, referring to a contested island chain where China has built several militarized outposts.
Specifically, Nelson expressed concerns that China might try to limit access to resource-rich areas on the moon from the United States and other nations seeking to explore the lunar surface.
His position echoed that of Terry Virts, a former commander of the International Space Station and Space Shuttle and a retired Air Force colonel.
“There is potentially mischief China can do on the moon,” Virts told Politico. “If they set up infrastructure there they could potentially deny communications, for example. Having them there doesn’t make things easier. There is real concern about Chinese meddling.”
Virts believes the competition between the United States and the Chinese communist regime has political and security dimensions.
“On one level, it is a political competition to show whose system works better,” he said. “What they really want is respect as the world’s top country. They want to be the dominant power on Earth, so going to the moon is a way to show their system is working. If they beat us back to the moon it shows they are better than us.”
NASA has just completed its 26-day Artemis I mission, during which an unmanned Orion spacecraft circled the moon. That mission, which was hailed as a success, was the first significant step in NASA’s goal to send astronauts to the moon in 2025 to start establishing a more permanent human presence there.
With this success, the NASA chief is optimistic that the U.S. effort to get back to the moon first is on schedule.
According to Nelson, the next moon mission, Artemis II, is set to take place “within two years,” and “hopefully we can speed that up,” he said.
By 2024, a crew will be launched as part of this expedition.
Nelson pointed to $24.5 billion in funding that Congress has approved for NASA in fiscal 2023. Despite the fact that the appropriated amount was about half a billion dollars less than what President Joe Biden had requested, Nelson believes the funding could still cover the essentials as it represents an increase of more than 5 percent from last year.
“Don’t look at the topline,” he said. “Look at the essentials,” he added, citing the Human Landing System in the form of SpaceX’s Starliner and a competition for a second lander as examples.
China’s Leaps
Nelson further made clear his concerns about China’s developments in the moon race.
“China within the last decade has had enormous success and advances,” he said. “It is also true that their date for landing on the moon keeps getting closer and closer” based on the country’s announcements.
“And there are only so many places on the south pole of the moon that are adequate for what we think, at this point, for harvesting water and so forth,” he added.
Zhao Xinguo, head of the aerospace department of the First Academy of China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp., a state-owned contractor responsible for most of China’s space launches, said for the first time that China’s first manned lunar space launch vehicle, known as the Long March-5G, would fly for the first time by 2027, Chinese state-run media China Youth Daily reported in November.
The Chinese space program has made a number of significant advancements, according to a recent Pentagon report to Congress.
It highlighted China’s capacity to not only set up a communications relay using a satellite that had been launched the year before between the Earth and the moon but also to land on the moon’s far side.
The study also revealed that China is getting better at producing space launch systems to enable more human space exploration.
Asked whether American astronauts will get back to the moon ahead of China, Nelson responded, “The good Lord willing.”