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an address to the United Nations, US President John F. Kennedy presented
the idea of a joint mission between the United States and the Soviet Union
saying, "Finally, in a field where the United States and the Soviet Union
have a special capacity - in the field of space - there is room for new
cooperation, for further joint efforts in the regulation and exploration
of space.
I include among these possibilities a joint expedition to the moon. Space
offers no problems of sovereignty; by resolution of this Assembly, the
members of the United Nations have foresworn any claim to territorial
rights in outer space or on celestial bodies, and declared that
international law and the United Nations Charter will apply. Why,
therefore, should man's first flight to the moon be a matter of national
competition?"
"I like this line. It would be great to see N.A.S.A
[National Air and Space Administration] changed to U.N.A.S.A. [United
Nations AeroSpace Authority] to co-ordinate man\'s adventures in space.
Also we could have private concerns making the first steps instead of
being edged out by a government authority intent on keeping itself in
business." - reader's commentsAfter the speech, Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko said that the notion was a "good sign" and
presented it to USSR Premier Krushchev. He had backed the Russian space
program in its early days, beating out the United States by launching the
first satellite, putting the first man in space, and being the first to
orbit Earth. Krushchev saw no need for a joint mission; it was merely the
American capitalists seeing the expense of going to the moon and looking
to place the burden upon the working class.
The political climate soon changed dramatically. Kennedy was killed only
months later in Dallas, Texas, while Krushchev was muscled out of office
and replaced by Leonid Brezhnev. Brezhnev worked to increase Soviet
influence, especially by expanding the Soviet military, and the new US
president Lyndon Johnson redoubled his predecessor's efforts on the space
race. The worst days of the Vietnam War came in 1968 just as an aide,
while looking for documents pertaining to the Civil Rights Movement, came
across Kennedy's outline for a political dealing with Russia for a joint
mission. LBJ set upon it as a solution to the war.
"Unfortunately I suspect that as in our history it
would have remained politically impossible, for the same reason 1940s-era
proposals for international xontrol of nuclear technology foundered:
East/West distrust would simply be too strong. Can you imagine even the
master politician LBJ selling this to Southern and Western conservatives
in Congress, on top of hisGreat Society social programs? And on the Soviet
side, there\'d have ben suspicion that the U.S. was simply trying to
manufacture a means of spying on, and perhaps sabotaging, the USSR\'s
space program. And I can\'t see how a joint moon mission would have
helpped \"solve\" the Vietnam war. The Soviets were poorly placed to act
as mediators, since on the one hand U.S. conservatives distrusted them (to
put it mildly) and on the other, Soviet-Chinese relations had teteriorated
so badly by the late 1960s that the two Communist giants nearly went to
war" - reader's commentsPresented in a combination of backroom and
public deals, the Soviet Union would act as mediator between the North
Vietnamese / Chinese and South Vietnamese / American forces, separating
Vietnam as they had Korea. By February, peace talks had begun as well as
cooperative training programs between NASA and the Soviet space program.
The war was proclaimed ended by September of 1968, giving plenty of time
for LBJ to shift praise toward his vice-president, Hubert Humphrey, who
would ride the success to beat Republican Richard Nixon in the November
election.
The next year, Apollo 11 carried astronaut Neil Armstrong and cosmonaut
Alexei Leonov to the moon. Reportedly, the two flipped had a coin to see
who would be the first to set foot on the extraterrestrial surface, and
Armstrong won. The two planted their respective nations' flags beside one
another along with a flag for the United Nations. Eight lunar missions
would follow.
Through the 1970s, increasing international cooperation would improve the
effectiveness of study in space as the International Space Station (also
known as Alpha, Eden, and Mir) grew in orbit. The Space Shuttle program
revolutionized launch in the 1980s, but, by the late 1990s, space programs
had become stagnant. The Russian Federation remained an important part of
space, but domestic and economic issues weakened its position. In 2001,
the decommissioned Alpha, pockmarked with micrometeors and burdened with
ancient technology, would be de-orbited and burn up over the Pacific.
The new space station, Beta (with nicknames such as Eagle and Freedom),
began construction with increasing Chinese influence as the world's most
populous nation came into the forefront of international politics. By
2010, suggestions that humanity returns to the moon have been embraced,
perhaps using it as a stepping-stone for a mission to Mars. Projections
place a potential landing in 2027, though each year they are modified to
match budgetary issues.