Neutral Zone
Junior Member
Unlike most of you, I'm VERY HAPPY at this development and hope this pushes the other nations toward militarization of space and beyond.
Like it or not, military is often at the front of technology R&D that'd eventually trickle down to non-military uses. If there was no military threat from space, governments are not going to spend a lot of $$ on space related technologies, and toss toss agencies like NASA a bone or two. But heaven forbid, if the "enemy" it out there, then by Gawd we gotta rush to build and close that gap. Here comes the billions in funding!
Hopefully this will lead to increased spending on space research, which initially will be military, and eventually the same technologies will benefit civilian colonization of outer space. I'd like to see manned stations on the moon at least before I die.
I don't know if "very happy" are the words I'd use, but you are right that the civilian and scientific space exploration programmes only became possible because of the Cold War. The US and the USSR were engaged in a propaganda war and the space programmes were a way of impressing potential allies. While in the 60's the World's attention was on the Apollo programme, the USAF was building up an extensive space programme of it's own, the recon satellite we all know about, but they had a programme for their own manned space station, The Manned Orbital Laboratory.
This may also give a boost to NASA's Constellation programme for returning to the Moon by 2020.
I have always thought that if China showed evidence of a manned lunar programme, that timeframe would shrink dramatically. I think we'd all settle for China and the U.S. locked in a contest to establish the first permament lunar base, that would be of much greater benefit to the World than both countries firing missiles across the Pacific.