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The final McMahon Line

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Ajey Lele Posted: Sep 30, 2008 at 0026 hrs IST
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: In the ’50s, Chairman Mao Zedong complained that China could not even shoot a potato into space. Hu Jintao’s China has come some distance since then: on September 27 a Chinese astronaut went outside his vessel to walk in space, China becoming in the process only the third country in the world to conduct a successful spacewalk.

China, naturally, has used this achievement with its customary ability to shore up domestic support for its programme and for the government. Chinese television broadcast live the takeoff the Shenzhou 7 spacecraft from the Jiuquan satellite launch centre in Gansu province on September 25 and it subsequently broadcast, also live, the 13-minute spacewalk by the mission’s commander Zhai Zhigang. Live coverage is not easy to organise; it demonstrates, among other things, the professionalism and competence of China’s scientific community.

Apart from its technological and domestic dimensions this mission has international political dimensions as well. The success of this launch allows China to remain in the centre of global attention. For the last few months the world has been focused on China, and full of admiration for its organisational ability; first, because of their sumptuous organisation of the Olympics in August and then the Paralympics. Raising its international profile, stirring national pride, has benefits in terms of the Chinese Communist Party’s control of its own population. The party is expected to parade the astronauts after they return, at national day celebrations on October 1.

The present Chinese space progamme is often mentioned as a mix of a Russian help and Chinese hard work; though it would be inappropriate to minimise the contribution to this success of the Chinese intelligence agencies, and their ability to organise technological espionage. Few hard facts are known; but just a day before this launch the FBI arrested a Chinese-born physicist in Virginia, on charges of illegally exporting space launch technical data and services to China beginning in January 2003.

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The Shenzhou 7 spacecraft, launched aboard a 19-story Long March 2F, marked China’s third manned spaceflight and comes a mere five years after its initial 2003 lift-off. This riskiest of spacewalk was monitored and supported by five satellite tracking ships: four ships in the Pacific Ocean and one in the Atlantic and by space telemetry network supported by some 20 terrestrial surveying stations.

The Shenzhou has no space station to dock with, but China intends to remedy that; it intends to build...

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View all Messages [ 3 ]
India is not behind China by Abhishek Dwivedi on 2008-10-01 15:55:43.177723+05:30
NASA, ESA and ISRO protested China's targeting of a satellite not because of fears of a new military threat, but because the debris generated by the blast can collide and damage other satellites. ISRO's chief Mr. G Madhavan Nair has publicly stated that India too can easily replicate China's test, but it chooses not to be irresponsible. India is actually ahead of China and even Russia in the field of remote sensing satellites, which can also be used for espionage. China is often forced to rely on foreign nations for remote sensing data. Another area which India is actively pursuing is hypersonic vehicles, of which ISRO has already conducted a successful ground test. So, it would still be premature to write-off India in the military use of space, compared to China.
The final McMahon Line by S Kiran on 2008-09-30 10:07:38.951491+05:30
Thanks Mr. Lele, a nice writeup.
space technology by nike on 2008-09-30 07:37:44.544749+05:30
Deeds not words !
View all Messages [ 3 ]
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