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Relations good – space war solvency



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China Relations Core - Berkeley 2016
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Relations good – space war solvency



China wants to partner with the US in space


Harrington, 16
Rebecca Harrington is a reporter on Tech Insider's science section and just received her Master's degree from New York University's Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program. She also received a B.S. in Biology and a B.A. in Journalism from the University of Minnesota. Rebecca has previously written for Popular Science, Scientific American, the Minneapolis Star Tribune and the Minnesota Daily. April 21, 2016. “China plans to reach Mars by 2020 and eventually build a moon base” Tech Insider http://www.techinsider.io/china-plans-mars-moon-landings-2016-4
Weiren told the BBC that China wants to partner with the US on space missions, too. "We would like to cooperate with the US, especially for space and moon exploration," he said. "We have urged the US many times to get rid of restrictions so scientists from both countries can work together on future exploration." A clause in the 2011 bill funding NASA prohibits the space agency from collaborating with China, citing the possibility for espionage. But Aldrin predicts countries will have to work together soon. "I think we will be organizing the other three - Russia, Europe, Japan - so that they will be cooperating and coming along soon after China, because we're helping all of them," he said. "So it's going to be cooperation at the moon and cooperation at Mars."

China and the US have the same space goals


Dalby, 15
Chris Dalby is a Mexico-based analyst of Chinese politics and economics. December 20, 2015. “China and US should work together on space travel” Global Times http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/959567.shtml
A famous, if slightly warped, statistic states that for every dollar the US spends in outer space, it gains eight dollars in economic growth. The long-term American dominance of space may have made that true but it now has severe competition. China's space goals are beginning to look similar to NASA's. No longer is it satisfied with sending up satellites or manned Shenzhou missions. The country is now planning a permanent space station by 2020 accompanied by manned missions to the Moon and Mars. But what will China get from it? Prestige? Acclaim? Those things might have been enough in the past but, especially with a slowing economy, the conquest of space needs to turn a profit. At 10 percent growth a year, China's space program is getting pricey. However, there are numerous avenues to make it affordable. China already lets foreign satellites piggy back off its rockets, space tourism is now being discussed, and in the long-term, China may even take the lead in asteroid mining. Seeking to analyze or understand China's space program on the basis of its price tag alone is an exercise in futility. Unlike NASA, which has seen its shuttles grounded and its budgets restricted for years, China may not value each space venture on its own cost but as part of a larger order. Furthermore, as China's own GDP has grown steadily, so has its space budget. In pure dollar terms, China is still only spending about $2 billion a year on its space program as opposed to NASA's $18 billion. However, that $2 billion is going toward supporting numerous pillars. The Jade Rabbit rover, which landed on the Moon in 2013, showed China's focus on our satellite. Construction of the Tiangong 2 space lab was delayed but it is now set to launch in 2016, giving China a permanent foothold in space. It should be completed around 2022, near when the International Space Station will be retired. But how quickly will tangible benefits warrant China's investments? After all, while space travel generated unparalleled public enthusiasm in the US, NASA's budget was slashed after the collapse of the USSR. Without the rivalry of the Cold War, the US' interest in being the leader of space exploration waned. The geo-political climate of today means that China is unlikely to run into similar problems. Tangible benefits cannot be easily quantified economically, but seeing people, whether Chinese or American, walk on the Moon once more will work toward a tangible purpose: the joint exploration of space. While Russia and the US have worked together consistently on the International Space Station (ISS), China has not been invited to take part, at the insistence of Congress. While concerns about intellectual property and national security may have some basis, this is nothing more than a colossal wasted opportunity. Treaties exist to prevent the militarization or colonization of outer space and surely the best way to enforce them is to ensure all space players work toward the same goals. China is focused on lunar exploration while the US seems bent on getting to Mars. The private space sector is blooming in the US with Space X and Blue Origin making great strides and now refueling the ISS. Private launch pads being built will hopefully lighten the load born by the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Competition drives success and innovation but another space race between China and the US is not what the world needs. Arranging such long-term collaboration would require the setting aside of old grievances but doing so could lead to a currently unthinkable objective: a Space X rocket, carrying a crew of Russians and American astronauts to the Tiangong 2 Space Lab. This also makes solid business sense. The desire to fund space exploration waxes and wanes as governments change. A true international cooperation, bringing together the US and Europe with emerging players such as China and India, would see the expense of space travel shared by all, as well as the costs of manpower, equipment and payloads.

Actions taken now will determine future of US China space relations



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