Friday, March 29, 2024

Why Communist China is Freaking Out Over NASA’s Artemis Moon Mission

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ANALYSIS – While 's Artemis mission has suffered massive cost overruns and numerous delays, including the two recent last-minute launch scrubs on the launch pad, isn't happy with America's new moon program.

As a matter of fact, as shown by its state-run mouthpieces, it is freaking out.

And it has good reasons for losing it.

The , greatly accelerated by former president in 2019, combined with Trump's creation of a , now aims to put American, and possibly allied, boots on the moon by 2025.

This will make America the only country to put people on the moon twice.

It will also likely stymie Chinese efforts to establish a foothold on the moon, even as it maintains a robotic base on the far side of the moon today — the ‘Chang E-4' mission.

Robots aren't the same as people. Especially when you are looking to say you won a piece of the moon. Which the Chinese certainly want to do.

And as their media outlets gaslight NASA, their true intentions seep through.

One article in the Global TimesChina's English-language mouthpiece, used snark to mask its feeling of impotence as America gets closer to sending creating a new manned lunar presence which China still only aspires to.

“As NASA is trying hard to relive its Apollo glories, China is working on innovative plans to carry out its own crewed moon landing missions,” the article stated.

And despite China's accelerating efforts to weaponize and dominate space, it also accused the of fomenting a new space race: “China's crewed moon landing is more in line with scientific principles, but NASA might grow more hostile against China in the space domain given the huge pressure it is facing to maintain its global leadership in moon exploration.”

Yes, this is called gaslighting.

But as recently suggested, the U.S. is engaged in a space race.

But it is one China, and to a lesser extent, Russia began several years ago, with the two deploying everything from anti-satellite weapons to China's most recent fractional orbital bombardment space plane test last year, to the current robotic far side moon base established by China in 2019.

China and Russia also announced plans last year for a planned joint moon base.

“There is a new space race — this time with China,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson told the German newspaper Bild in July. “We must be very concerned that China is landing on the moon and saying: ‘It's ours now and you stay out.”

But what does Nelson mean by that?

Well, there are limited spots on the moon ideal for a space base and also for mining lunar resources.

I have written about this issue several times. Most recently in my piece: “Yes, Communist China is Planning to Take Over the Moon – And We May Need to Fight for It.”

I wrote: “There may be only a few locations on the moon where it would make economic sense to build a base, said Bleddyn Bowen, a professor at the University of Leicester and author of War in Space: Strategy, Spacepower, Geopolitics, and this is driving the concern.”

Tara Copp explained further in Defense One:

“If you have a situation like that, where you're trying to do something in the exact same spot, it's essentially who gets there first,” said Alex Gilbert, a researcher and space resources doctoral student at the Payne Institute at the Colorado School of Mines. “And if you're not first, then the only alternative is to forcibly remove the current occupant.”

And now, SpaceNews notes that NASA and China's space agency have identified multiple similar landing sites for their lunar missions — Artemis 3, NASA's first crewed mission to the lunar surface in 2025, and China's uncrewed robotic Chang'e-7 lunar rover mission slated for 2024.

These lunar sites include the Shackleton, Haworth and Nobile craters located near the lunar south pole.

According to SpaceNews, both the U.S. and China have likely chosen these spots because of their high elevations, good lighting and proximity to shadowed craters which may be able to trap lunar water-ice.

So, with both rivals claiming the same lunar real estate, what will be done to resolve the conflict?

Some argue for negotiations and diplomacy, but Chinese intransigence and aggressive moves on Earth, history and current geopolitical conditions don't provide much hope for that solution.

Instead, as I noted earlier, we may need “to fight for it.”

And having people on the moon will give us a distinct advantage to do that.

But we may need more than just people. As I have argued, we will need a Space Force capability not currently on the books, something akin to — Space Marines.

Read more about this option in my two-part piece: “Space Marines – Will US Need to Battle China and Russia for a Moon Base Site?

Let's give China even more to freak out about — Let's give them U.S. Space Marines! ALN

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of American Liberty News.

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Paul Crespo
Paul Crespohttps://paulcrespo.com/
Paul Crespo is the Managing Editor of American Liberty Defense News. As a Marine Corps officer, he led Marines, served aboard ships in the Pacific and jumped from helicopters and airplanes. He was also a military attaché with the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) at U.S. embassies worldwide. He later ran for office, taught political science, wrote for a major newspaper and had his own radio show. A graduate of Georgetown, London and Cambridge universities, he brings decades of experience and insight to the issues that most threaten our American liberty – at home and from abroad.

7 COMMENTS

  1. So, let me make sure I understand…
    Through our own inept macroeconomic policies and strategic overextension we now play second fiddle to China. Yet, we seek to export hegemony to a vacuumed sphere that really offers no advantage to America other than boosting Raytheon stock. It sounds like Doctor Stangelove is running the pentagon once again: “We must not allow a moon base gap to develop!” 🤣

  2. This will make America the only country to put people on the moon twice.

    Uh, America landed 12 men on the moon. And America is the only country to put people on the moon period.

    Nice to try to make something out of this, but the statement makes no sense…

    • Huh? How many times has the U.S. landed people on the moon then? Twelve times? Does each person count as a separate landing? When an airliner touches down, how many landings is that? Does it depend of how many are on board?

  3. Excellent point, Mr. Crespo! My sainted Father, a consummate Marine, fought to take the Chosin Reservoir in what is now North Korea and the Chinks fired at him. He lost many comrades. When he came home he advised us over dinner several times that ‘in the Far East human life does not have the same significance that it does here. The life of the individual is of negligible value.’ This was true then it is true today, and will be true outside the earth’s atmosphere.

    • Your father was right. Asian cultures operate more like a hive, while individuals are more valued in traditional Western culture—with the exception of Communism and Socialism, of course. Communists and Asians in general are much more comfortable with launching human-wave attacks where the number of dead don’t count as much as success by the hive. Example are WWII, Korea, and Vietnam, to name just three.

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