60 years ago China set out on its
space program with the establishment of the 5th Academy of the Ministry of
National Defense. At its helm was rocket scientist Qian Xuesen – also known as
Tsien Hsue-shen – who is now regarded as the father of China’s space and
missile programs.
14
years later, Beijing sent its very first satellite (the Dongfanghong-1) into
space and its first astronaut followed on October 15, 2003.
40 years after Apollo 11 embarked
upon the first spaceflight that led to the lunar module landing with commanders
Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, China successfully launched its very own space
lab module called Tiangong-1. Not long afterward, Tiangong-2 made its way into
orbit.
For decades, China appeared to be
trailing behind or merely catching-up to the world’s two major space pioneers –
the United States (US) and Russia – until this past August 2016, when China
assumed its position as the world’s first country to launch a quantum satellite
called “Micius.” Micius is designed to “establish ultra-secure quantum
communications by transmitting uncrackable keys from space to the ground,”
noted China’s state news agency, Xinhua.
Furthermore, “It could also conduct experiments on the bizarre features of
quantum theories, such as entanglement.” As a result, Micius has fortified
essential communications lines between Earth and space.
The quantum field is still
embryonic, but China has quickly forged its position as a leader, setting the
overall pace of research, and it could become the leader in establishing a
worldwide network of laboratories dedicated to furthering quantum research in
both space and the international space race. Shortly after China sent its
satellite into orbit several months ago, China rocketed the Shenzhou-11
spacecraft into orbit from Jiuquan base for the longest space mission China has
undertaken to this day. It connected with Tiangong-2, hosting two
Chinese “taikonauts” for just over a month-long stay. This achievement
follows on the previous mission of Tiangong-1, which carried Nie Haisheng,
Zhang Xiaoguang, and Wang Yaping (China’s first woman in space).
China has shown no signs of receding
in its space activities. In 2018, Beijing plans to launch one of the main
components of its future habitable space satellite or space station, which will
become a permanent feature of Earth’s spacescape. China’s sights are also set
on Mars, with a small, unmanned rover destined for the red planet which the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) claims to have an
atmosphere. If successfully reached, China’s space agency, China National Space
Administration (CNSA), will be the 5th to reach the planet named after the
Roman god of war. Furthermore, in 2022, China plans to send its permanent space
station into orbit, to be followed by a mission to the Moon in 2025. This
signals the unwavering determination of China to establish an entire spectrum
of “firsts” in the context of space exploration. It already became one of the
leaders in space, yet Beijing’s focus sets it apart from its Cold War rivals;
they focused more on space as a means of geopolitical and popular rivalry,
besting the other in a show of political, technological, and economic
superiority, in order to illustrate the virtue of their respective value
systems.
China, on the other hand, has set
its sights on the long-term of space exploration with the view to establish a
permanent presence in space. Those wheels are already in motion. Only a few
years after China plans to launch its space station some 250 miles above Earth,
the International Space Station (ISS) is set to expire. NASA Director, Charles
Bolden, Jr., announced the ISS will be finished in 2028,
thought the date could be sooner. The life expectancy of ISS has already been
extended several times.
The end of the ISS means a lot of
work for NASA and its partners. It will likely have to be brought back down the
same way it was put up: piece-by-piece. Building
began back in 1998 and even then it was established that the entire structure
would eventually have to come back down. Missions centering on its
deconstruction and movement back to Earth will come at a high price. The
original task of putting the satellite up in space required no less than 40
missions.
When the ISS comes down, China will
maintain the predominant presence in space, and will have successfully
overshadowed a number of NASA’s previous achievements while at the same time
establishing a considerable distance over other countries space programs. While
NASA’s budgets have been diminishing over previous years, China has shown no
signs of tripping over the financial costs associated with its space ventures.
Beijing’s presence will put a damper on Washington’s commitment to its space
presence.
Over the past 15 years, the
administrations of George W. Bush and Barack Obama pledged to maintain
America’s presence in space. The US will be hard-pressed to even temper its
decline in the face of China’s burgeoning space program. The Apollo space
shuttle is a relic. The STS-135 signaled the final mission of the American
Space Shuttle program, using the shuttle Atlantis for its final ISS logistics
mission. The 2004 Vision for Space Exploration was supposed to have been
Project Constellation, using the Ares 1 and Ares 2 launch vehicles in addition
to the Orion Spacecraft. That program was eventually cancelled. Subsequent
programs centered mainly on bringing the necessary equipment into space to
service the ISS.
If the stage is set for intensive
geopolitical rivalry in space between China and other countries, the major
question would center on which side would intensify that rivalry. China’s
primary objectives are to establish a permanent presence and to generate
resources. Its long-term goals would not converge well with geopolitical
rivalry, given its strategic interests and current position. Beijing is open to
cooperating with other states in it space programs. Unlike the US, who welcomed
astronauts from 15 countries, aboard the ISS, which was supported by facilities
in Canada, Spain, Russia, Denmark, Japan, Switzerland, and numerous others,
China has so far not barred anyone from potentially setting foot on its space
station. Federal law prohibits NASA
from working with the CNSA and Chinese citizens affiliated with China’s space
program.
Despite its friendly disposition
devoid of directly confronting or challenging the space ambitions of other
countries, particularly the US, China is maintaining the view to further leaps
and bounds in the space realm unilaterally if need be. Not only does Beijing
want its “taikonauts” to be walking on the moon in just over a decade, it aims
to be the first to land humans on Mars. The feedback effect of China’s space
missions will be enormous but will likely need a great deal of time to build
momentum, with newer and more sophisticated robotics, avionics, and artificial
intelligence (AI) technologies likely to emerge.
We can expect those developments to
have many positive effects for other governments as well, providing them with
critical information about weather patterns and climate changes, better and
safer communications, enhanced navigation systems, and critical platforms that
should augment existing security and defense instruments. Beijing has aptly
eyeballed the area of advanced technologies as a critical aspect of China’s
future economy. In this, it has the ability to inspire over thousands, even
tens-of-thousands, of private ventures.
Further research and development
figures prominently in China’s current Five-Year Plan and those to follow, with
China’s latest satellite leading the charge in space science exploration. This
is truly a collaborative venture, with Chinas’ Academy of Sciences (CAS), the
CAS’ Shanghai Institute of Technical Physics (SITP), and the University of
Science and Technology of China (USTC), all playing a collaborative role. In
its approach to space science, China has done a fine job in bringing together a
broad spectrum of institutions and organizations, sort of like a “full
spectrum” approach.
Director-General of China’s National
Space Science Center, Wu Ji, along with many other top researchers in the
country requested that Beijing step-up its spending
in the space science sector to support China’ progress. The request was made to
triple its nearly 5 billion yuan ($700 million USD) investment between 2011 and
2015, to a minimum of 15.6 billion yuan (over $2 billion USD) between 2026 and
2030. NASA’s final 2016 science
budget was $5.5 billion USD and is projected to oscillate between $5.6
billion and $5.7 billion over the next four years.
With this support, China is poised
to make an actual “great leap forward” but in a way that could benefit each and
every person on the planet. China has made a gargantuan departure from its
space science spending a decade ago. Further intensive research in the area of
communications could catapult existing systems and computational capacities to
levels never before experienced. But those systems should be expected to
provide the very latest and best to China first, particularly China’s defense
and security sectors/institutions.
Despite the impracticalities still
associated with space science investment, China is continuing its pursuit of
benefits that would likely be realized years down the line. Perhaps the mystery
behind China’s space program is what worries people most, including those in
the US and allied countries. It is possible that China turns its spending to
more practical utilities that yield immediate benefit, for instance, rockets
and missiles, military satellite systems, and other types of military craft and
apparatuses. Perhaps China has the potential to develop a new “NASA” or maybe
concern is merely driven by China’s space science research acceleration at the
same time the US slows
down or “struggles” to maintain its pace.
US congressional members, during a space
subcommittee hearing, recently asked if America is losing the space race to
China. Washington will simply be unable to extract the same level of potential
political and economic benefit from its space ambitions if they fail to
stack-up to those of China. Vincent Chan, a Managing Director of Credit Suisse
in Hong Kong, noted that in the past 15 years, “China has leapfrogged other
countries in terms of technology development” and that, “[t]he potentially
disruptive implications of China’s innovative drive should not be
underestimated.”
In 2015, the World
Economic Forum reported, “[i]ndicators show that China has what it takes to
rise to the forefront of global innovation. This includes soaring R&D
spending (China’s R&D expenditure reached 1.18 trillion yuan ($193 billion)
in 2013, a 15% increase year-on-year, and is set to overtake the European
Union and the United States to be the top R&D-invested country by the
end of this decade), a large number of corporate patents, a new generation of
entrepreneurial CEOs and high number of engineering and science
graduates.”
China’s “Long March” to space began
over half-a-century ago, when Mao
Zedong sought to rocket China into third place as a country with a
satellite orbiting Earth. Beijing has put more than 100 satellites into space
since the 1970s. As mentioned previously China today is looking at a number of
“firsts” and has been lauded for becoming one of the world’s foremost defense
technological power. The country’s technological innovation and development in
the space industry has set a trajectory of “upward and onward” that China has
so far fulfilled. Beijing also recently flipped the switch on its “Tianyan”
(“Heavenly Eye”) – the world’s largest aperture radio telescope occupying a
space equivalent to 30 football fields in size. Beijing exclusively owns the
intellectual-property rights of that awesome piece of technology, which costs
somewhere in the vicinity of 1.2 billion yuan (approximately $180 million USD).
In contrast to previous space
projects undertaken by the US and Russia, China’s space ventures in the
contemporary period extend beyond the confines of prestige
and status. They have the potential to harness real military power.
Planning a network of satellites in the coming years, Beijing is slowly
creeping toward a position to supercharge its quantum computer network,
building a magnificent quantum communications network reaching over 1,000
miles. The University of Science and Technology of China’s Professor
Pan Jianwei recently explained how “China is completely capable of making
full use of quantum communications in a regional war. The direction of
development in the future calls for using relay satellites to realize quantum
communications and control that covers the entire army.”
Michael Raska, at the
Institute of Defense and Strategic Studies, Nanyang Technological University in
Singapore, spoke of China’s immense network capable of serving “as a dual-use
strategic asset that may advance the [PLA’s] capacity for power projection
through a constellation of space-based intelligence, surveillance, and
reconnaissance platforms, tactical warning and attack assessment; command,
control, and communications; navigation and positioning, and environmental
monitoring.”
The network ascribes China a
superposition of power in which, “establishing ‘space dominance’ (zhi tian
quan),” writes Raska, “is an essential enabler for ‘information dominance’ (zhi
xinxi quan) – a key prerequisite for allowing the [People’s Liberation Army]
PLA to seize air and naval superiority in contested areas.” What we are seeing
now is the result of China’s careful observation of wars fought by other states
over the past several decades, wars such as Operation Desert Shield and Desert
Storm, US/North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) military action
in the Balkans, America’s ensuing 9/11 wars (Afghanistan, Iraq, and long strand
of counterterrorism/counterinsurgency operations and campaigns), and even
Russia’s sundry military engagements). Vietnam and the 1973 Arab-Israeli war
also served as valuable lessons for the PLA.
Beijing has long-since established
that the key to winning wars is zhi xinxi quan, and determined that wars of the
future will be “local wars under informationized conditions” (xinxihua tiaojian
xia jubu zhanzheng). In short, the exploitation of information leads to the
successful outcome of wars irrespective of where they are fought. Zhi xinxi
quan is also a fundamental determinant of defensive systems protecting a
country against military aggression. Augmenting the military aptitudes of the
PLA has become a priority in China, occupying a part of PLA military/strategic
doctrine that complements its formal doctrine for military space operations.
One such project demonstrating
China’s willingness to pursue this path is its new 35-meter-diameter parabolic
antenna/space-monitoring
base, located in Patagonia, Argentina (coordinates: 38.1914°S, 70.1495°W).
The facility is a tracking, telemetry, and command center run by a PLA unit.
The facility is outfitted with the latest technology, complete with
accommodations for military personnel and state-of-the-art power generator
valued at some $10 million USD. Its purported function is the facilitation of
deep-space exploration and the eventual lunar mission but will have, according
to Beijing, “no military use.” That is not to say the base cannot be used to
support military operations of various sorts.
Beijing need only look through the
history books, reading up on the different courses of action the US pursued to
boost its military clout in different places and at different point in time.
During the Kosovo
intervention alongside NATO,
the US military fielded dozens of satellites. Those were used synchronically to
great effect, enabling the US military and those of its close allies during the
campaign to employ unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) along with other aircraft to
basically see every single thing that moves in and around the battlespace –
solely with the ironic exception of the Chinese embassy bombing, which was the
result of faulty intelligence.
During a 2015 Congressional
testimony, Senior Research Fellow for Chinese Political and Security
Affairs at the Heritage Foundation, Dean Cheng, explained that, [s]pace systems
are judged to have provided 70 percent of battlefield communications, 80
percent of battlefield surveillance and reconnaissance, and 100 percent of
meteorological data, and did so through all weather conditions, 24 hours a
day.” Such extensive oversight cannot only enhance one’s strike capabilities,
but also substantially augment the precision factor of offensive systems.
He underscored China’s development
of “a number of anti-satellite systems, including a demonstrated capacity for
direct-ascent kinetic-kill vehicles, co-orbital anti-satellite systems, and cyber
tools that could interfere with space control systems. Future developments may
include more soft-kill options that would lead to ‘mission kills’ on
satellites, preventing them from gathering or transmitting information, rather
than physically destroying the system.”
China’s potential space dominance is
in a sense misleading, as dominating space is a means of dominating other
(terrestrial) areas. China’s government and military institutions repeatedly
indicate that dominating space offers an attractive way of managing that which
what takes place on the Earth’s surface. This is true with considerable
crossover between civilian/peaceful and military areas. The same logic has been
applied within China’s space programs, intertwining civilian and defense sector
efforts and activities. “China’s space program is integrated. Unlike the United
States,” writes Ashley
J. Tellis, at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, “where a
significant divide exists between civilian and military space activities, and
where diversity, heterogeneity, and atomistic competition are the norm in both
realms, civilian and military space programs in China are not only centrally
directed but are also mutually reinforcing by design.
Just as China is able to use
space-based systems to improve its offensive military capabilities, it can also
increase its defensive military capabilities. If those systems are improved
over time, which will surely be the case, China could prevent another country
from coming even remotely close to its space-based systems. The development of
co-orbital jammers and other systems capable of interfering with enemy
satellites, for instance, and even hijacking them could go a long way in
maintaining China’s space dominance. In this, its ongoing space science and
exploration programs could turn its superposition of power into a superposition
of superpower.
Fortunately, the very nature of
space technology means that so-called “space dominance” is quite difficult to
achieve. If a country wants to prevent an adversary with the same level of
space technology from utilizing the space, that opponent can retaliate with
relative ease. Both sides would be denied from the space. This rationale
explains why there was no space arms race during the Cold War, despite the fact
that anti-satellite
systems existed. Little has changed since. The prospect of waging a “space
war” in the foreseeable future remains low given the costs that would be
involved. While leading space actors will not and cannot monopolize space, we
can expect that space will remain part of the global commons.
China’s space program can no longer
be described as “a mystery within a maze.” There is little doubt that China’s
space ambitions present the US with a daunting challenge to check the rise of
China as a soaring power even if the US possesses a limited range of immediate
and long-term options as a response. But this does not spell the end of
America’s role or presence in space, or that of any other country, for that
matter. What ought to be considered, however, is whether or not China is better
suited to lead future space science ventures and programs, even if it means
China may be seen as “dominating” what has been popularized as the ultimate or
final frontier.
This article was published by Geopolitical
Monitor.com
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