ASSESSMENTS

China's Space Program Tries to Catch Up

Jun 26, 2013 | 11:00 GMT

The rocket carrying the Shenzhou 10 spacecraft blasts off June 11.
The rocket carrying the Shenzhou 10 spacecraft blasts off June 11.

(ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images)

Summary

China's strategic focus on space is less about national pride than about the importance of space for both the military and economic progress of the country. The Chinese space program has developed rapidly over the past decade, illustrating the importance of the program to Beijing. Shenzhou 10, a 15-day mission that began June 11 and returned to Earth the morning of June 26 marked China's fifth manned mission to space. An increasing, ongoing presence in space is essential for civilian and military communications. Satellites' functions include navigation systems such as GPS, weather data and communications relays. But the significance of space goes beyond satellites. Technological advancement and development is required for countries such as China that want to participate in future resource development in space.

China is behind when it comes to exploring and potentially developing the next frontier....

Keep Reading

Register to read three free articles

Proceed to sign up

Register Now

Already have an account?

Sign In