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  • This is the International Space Station.

  • It orbits the earth 16 times a day, 250 miles up.

  • It's where astronauts from more than a dozen different countries

  • have been living since the year 2000

  • mostly Russians and Americans.

  • And for the last 10 years, basically the only way anyone got up or down

  • was in a Russian Soyuz.

  • At least in space, countries like Russia and the US depend on each other.

  • But when Russia invaded Ukraine, the US levied major sanctions in response

  • including some meant to...

  • "degrade their aerospace industry, including their space program."

  • The head of Russia's space agency responded that

  • perhaps they'd crash the Space Station.

  • They even made a fake video showing Russians leaving an American astronaut...

  • and then detaching the Russian segment.

  • Relations between the West and Russia are the tensest they've been

  • since the International Space Station has been in operation.

  • So, what happens to it now?

  • During the Cold War, the US and the Soviet Union

  • were in the Space Race.

  • Who could develop the technology to reach the stars first?

  • But space is also where the two countries have tried to get along.

  • After the Soviet Union launched the first satellite

  • and put the first man into space

  • but before the US landed on the moon

  • there was actually talk of going to the moon together.

  • "The cold reaches of the universe must not become

  • the new arena of an even colder war."

  • It actually ended up being something discussed in Congress.

  • Of course, that was where it then fizzled out.

  • But I think it was important that these discussions took place.

  • It led to the two countries eventually collaborating on compatible docking system.

  • Even joining spacecrafts in 1975.

  • The handshake was the symbol of

  • We see each other as equal partners in this."

  • "We recognize and respect each other, at least here in space.”

  • Soon after the US would begin its Space Shuttle program

  • bringing astronauts and satellites into space in reusable shuttles.

  • And the Soviet Union would create the first modular space station, Mir

  • where cosmonauts could live long-term.

  • At the same time, the US, Japan, Canada and several European countries

  • began planning to build their own space station together.

  • But after the Soviet Union felland the Cold War ended

  • the US and Russia began peace talks.

  • One of the first things they agreed to was collaboration in space.

  • Soon US shuttle astronauts docked with Mir.

  • Russian cosmonauts joined Shuttle launches.

  • "And liftoff on Discovery, of a bold new era of space flight

  • between the United States and Russia."

  • And Russia was added to the joint station plans.

  • "Instead of building weapons in space

  • Russian scientists will help us to build the International Space Station."

  • The first parts of the space station went up in 1998.

  • It was designed to be collaborative and interdependent.

  • It's made up of these individual modules.

  • Some controlled by Russia, some controlled by the US

  • along with several other countries.

  • The Russian side controls the navigation and the US provides most of the electricity.

  • That was a purposeful design, to sort of work in international cooperation

  • into the actual technicalities of the space station.

  • They've conducted thousands of experiments to learn about

  • diseases, climate change on Earth and

  • importantly for space exploration

  • whether humans can actually live in space long-term.

  • How does food grow, or a human body change?

  • The space station is sort of this major stepping stone

  • for more exploration of space

  • going back to the Moon, onto Mars.

  • It's to learn about human survival in space.

  • And international cooperation in space has largely worked out really well.

  • The US even retired its shuttle program

  • and became completely reliant on Russia's Soyuz rockets

  • to reach the space station.

  • But then...

  • "Russian tanks, choppers, and troops..."

  • "Vladimir Putin moves to annex Crimea."

  • In 2014 Russia invaded and annexed Crimea from Ukraine

  • and the US imposed harsh sanctions.

  • Just like he would again years later

  • the head of Russia's Roscosmos threatened to pull Soyuz access

  • suggesting the US should get to the space station on "a trampoline".

  • But the two countries weren't serious about bringing conflict on Earth to the space station.

  • At least the head of NASA then wasn't worried about the tweets.

  • President Obama and President Putin put sort of a bubble

  • around the International Space Station

  • and we continued the space diplomatic relations.

  • That says something about the value of that bilateral relationship.

  • "The military has escalated its attacks on civilians."

  • "He believes Russia is committing war crimes."

  • "He is a war criminal."

  • Today, the diplomatic relationship between the US and Russia

  • is at the lowest point since the Cold War.

  • But the space relationship between them remains fairly untouched.

  • The Russians didn't leave the US astronaut behind

  • and brought him back to Earth in a Soyuz.

  • "Touchdown."

  • "I never perceived those tweets as anything to take seriously."

  • "I just had too much confidence in our cooperation to date."

  • They even sent a new crew of cosmonauts to the space station.

  • "People have problems on Earth."

  • "In orbit, we're not lying, we are one crew."

  • For now the space station continues to run

  • mostly insulated from the geopolitical problems on Earth

  • just as it was designed.

  • Emphasis on: for now.

  • The truth is, the space station is old.

  • It was only designed to last until 2015.

  • And while the countries have agreed to continue operations several times

  • right now that agreement only goes until 2024.

  • The US wants to extend until 2030.

  • Russia has yet to sign on.

  • But even if they do

  • the two countries have different plans in space in the future.

  • Private companies are planning to build their own

  • space stations in the coming decade.

  • NASA wants to depend on those.

  • They're focused on developing the Artemis program.

  • Going back to the moon, establishing a presence there, and eventually, traveling to Mars.

  • In collaboration with other countries.

  • With two notable exceptions.

  • Russia is currently planning and building its own space station.

  • So is China, who plans to finish their station, already in orbit, this year.

  • They're also planning a mission to the moon.

  • I think we're still going to seewe must seeinternational cooperation in space.

  • But the question is just which countries will cooperate with which other countries.

  • As for the International Space Station, if Russia doesn't participate after 2024

  • things they currently control, like navigation, could be designed on the US side.

  • Likely with the help of private companies like SpaceX.

  • SpaceX is already how many astronauts get to the space station.

  • Their first mission in 2020 ended the dependence on Russia's Soyuz.

  • "The trampoline is working!"

  • "It's an inside joke."

  • "Inside joke here."

  • The International Space Station is really one of the best examples

  • in history of human cooperation.

  • It can represent the best of humanity.

  • The war in Ukraine may hasten the end of the space station.

  • But that end was already planned.

  • What it really threatens

  • is the future of these countries finding common ground in space.

  • "My hope is that these types of connections

  • can be maintained and serve as a path forward

  • to try and find that common ground that we need so desperately to find peace."

This is the International Space Station.

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What Russia's war means for the International Space Station

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    tagore00 に公開 2022 年 04 月 21 日
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