China exploiting the entire domain of space to enhance its international credibility---key to peaceful rise
Pollpeter 2008 (Kevin, China Project Manager for DGI’s Center for Intelligence Research and Analysis, “BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE: CHINA’S PROGRESS IN SPACE TECHNOLOGY DURING THE TENTH 5-YEAR PLAN AND THE U.S. RESPONSE,” US Government publication, http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/pub852.pdf)
China’s burgeoning space program provides opportunities for China to use the benefits derived from space power to become a more influential and respected nation. While China does not have an official grand strategy, the Chinese leadership appears to have reached a consensus on a plan which sustains the conditions necessary for economic growth and military modernization in the context of operating in a unipolar world dominated by the United States. This strategy is designed to ultimately usher in a multipolar world in which China is one of several great powers by protecting China’s core national interests against external threats and by shaping the international system in which it operates.
To this end, China’s space program is intended to portray China as a modernizing nation committed to the peaceful use of space while at the same time serving China’s political, economic, and military interests. It
viicontributes to China’s overall influence and provides capabilities that give China more freedom of action and opportunities for international leadership. Militarily, the People’s Liberation Army is undergoing reforms to transform itself into a military that is reliant on information for winning wars. Economically, China’s support for its space program lies in its potential as a driver for economic and technological advancement. Commercially, China is positioning itself as a low cost provider of space technologies and launch services. Commercial services not only increase revenues for the space industry but have also been used to advance China’s diplomatic interests with oil-rich countries. Politically, China’s expanding international cooper- ation on space activities portends a more influential for- eign policy. Domestically, by developing a robust space program and participating in high-profile activities such as human space flight, the Communist Party demonstrates that it is the best provider of material benefits to the Chinese people and the best organization to propel China to its rightful place in world affairs.
Soft power link
Lele 09 (Ajey, Research Fellow at the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, New Delhi, Institute for Defence Studies & Analyses, “Space Technology and Soft-Power: A Chinese Lesson for India” http://www.idsa.in/idsastrategiccomments/SpaceTechnologyandSoft-Power_ALele_051009)
For the last few years China is using its space industry to extend its Soft-Power. It is establishing linkages in the space arena with countries in Africa and South America, including Nigeria, Venezuela, and Brazil. China’s ultimate objectives are the natural resources and markets in these parts of the world. China is talking its friendship with Pakistan to a higher plane by helping the latter in the space field as well. It signed an agreement with Pakistan a fortnight back, granting a $200 million loan for satellite construction. China has also promised Bolivia help in developing its space programme within three years and in the launch of its first satellite. It has also been reported that China would be building and launching a communications satellite for Laos.
China is strategically positioning itself as a focal point for all space-related activities, from providing financial assistance to manufacturing, and launching facilities for states in Asia, Africa and South America. This approach has multiple benefits – an increase in China’s global footprint, flow of benefits to the Chinese space industry, experimentation with new technologies, and win friends.
The space domain is a critical source of diplomatic influence for China
East Asian Strategic Review 2008 (“The national Institute for Defense Studies Japan” Chapter 1: China’s Space Development— A Tool for Enhancing National Strength and Prestige, http://www.nids.go.jp/english/publication/east-asian/pdf/2008/east-asian_e2008_01.pdf)
In addition to serving national security and domestic civilian use of space, China’s space activities are also being used as a tool for diplomacy. The nation’s space- related international cooperation efforts, which began with a bilateral arrangement for satellite development, have blossomed to include the establishment of satellite tracking stations and a leading role in multilateral frameworks. China’s pursuit of such international cooperation is expected to expand in the future, and will likely help the nation to secure its necessary supply of resources and energy. In light of this posture and China’s growing efforts to provide African nations with official development assistance and debt relief, projects like the China-Nigeria partnership in communication satellite development and launches can be seen as examples of China’s exploitation of space activities as a diplomatic tool.
Space program leads to a “peaceful” rise
Chambers 09 (Rob, Naval Postgraduate school, revised by Moltz, Dr. James Clay, Naval Postgraduate School, “China’s Space Prgoram: A New Tool For PRC “Soft Power” In International Relations?” http://edocs.nps.edu/npspubs/scholarly/theses/2009/Mar/09Mar_Chambers.pdf)
Clearly, for a nation to successfully achieve manned spaceflight is a tremendous accomplishment with significant second-order impacts. Dean Cheng, CNA China space expert, notes, “At the very least it seems the manned programme is about international prestige. China’s space capability says to the world, ‘We are an advanced nation’”.173 Cheng also asserts that “Another driver is diplomacy. A wide-ranging space programme showed the rest of the world that China had arrived on the international stage. That fits with hosting the Olympics, that fits with a burgeoning economy, and that fits with the world’s largest foreign capital reserves”.174 William Burrows offers the label of “international power,” and that for China to develop such a complex, multi-faceted program with ambitions for a space station and the Moon “requires a huge, advanced scientific and technological base that suggests a stable and powerful political system; what used to be called national ‘might’”.1
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