Apollo Anniversary Hype
7/13/99
A typical piece of slop that passes for 'reporting'.No comment about the massive waste of resources.
No comment about the destabilizing effects of the space race.
No coment about the NAZIscientists involved in the programs.--------------------------------------------------------
Russia ponders loss of moon race
KOROLYOV, Russia (Reuters via CNN)
When sending a rocket ship to the moon became possible,
Soviet scientists proposed setting off a nuclear blast there
to show off its scientific prowess."In 1958 there was a plan to send an atomic bomb to the moon so that
astronomers across the world could photograph its explosion on film,"
said Boris Chertok, 87, a leading rocket scientist
from the earliest days of the Soviet space program."That way no one would have doubted that the Soviet Union
was capable of landing on the surface of the moon,"
he said in an interview.
"But the idea was rejected as physicists decided the flash
would be so short-lived because of the lack of an atmosphere
on the moon that it might not register on film."The Soviet leadership eventually set its sights on sending a man to the moon,
setting off on a decade-long race with the United States that ended with
an American taking the first step on the moon 30 years ago, on July 20, 1969.For engineers and cosmonauts involved in the Soviet effort,
the anniversary revives often-bitter memories of their loss
and contradictory explanations of what went wrong.
Vasily Mishin, 82, who headed the Soviet moon program from 1966 to 1974,
says it was an unfair contest, pitting the vast financial resources
of the United States against a far weaker Soviet Union.'We understood we could not win'
"It was not a fair race," he told Reuters.
"First of all, America was richer than we were, especially then,
and Russia was weakened by the fight against German fascism
and weakened by the costs of the arms race.
As soon as American began the moon race, we understood we could not win."Despite these disadvantages, the Soviets achieved impressive results in putting their mark on the moon.
They were the first to hit the moon with a probe in 1959 and to land an unmanned spacecraft in 1966.
The unmanned Soviet Luna 10 first orbited the moon later that year,
broadcasting the "Internationale" to the Communist Party Congress in Moscow.In 1968 the Soviet Union sent the first space ship to orbit
the moon with life aboard, returning turtles back to Earth.The U.S. space agency NASA took the Soviet challenge very seriously,
and in 1968 sped up its program as a result.When the day came that Neil Armstrong was ready to step out of
the lunar module Eagle and make his historic walk on the moon,
top Soviet scientists and cosmonauts gathered to view
the event via a bootleg cable hook-up from Europe."We were delighted as engineers as they had done wonderful work,"
said Chertok, deputy for 20 years to Sergei Korolyov,
the father of the Soviet rocket program.
"But on the other hand we felt disappointment.
Why them and not us? It was bitter."Pravda gave moonwalk a brief mention
Soviet television did not broadcast live images of Armstrong
on the moon and Soviet daily Pravda carried only a
brief mention of the historic walk on the front page.
Inside, after extensive coverage of 25 years of Polish socialism
the paper offered another article and a fuzzy photo taken from
a television image of Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the moon.Soviet authorities explained they were not first to the moon
by denying they had been trying to get there.
The secrecy surrounding the moon effort at the time was such
that Mishin was often airbrushed out of photos.
The official line also said America took needless risks to put a man on the moon.Mishin, who is now finishing an updated memoir,
says he no longer remembers the day the Americans
landed on the moon but still feels the blow of losing.
"Of course it pains me," he said. "We made mistakes."After the end of the Cold War and collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991,
secrets of the moon quest began to emerge, including the
atomic blast idea Chertok described in an interview this month.Rocket scientists ponder why
Those involved in the Soviet moon program still disagree
-- often strongly -- about what went wrong.
Rocket scientists say they were not even close to landing a man on the moon
as they lagged in devising a way of getting a cosmonaut
from the moon's orbit to the surface and back.
They were close to flying a man around the moon
but lost that race to Apollo in December 1968.Alexei Leonov, the cosmonaut who might have been the
first human on the moon if Mishin's efforts had succeeded,
is still bitter three decades later about the program's failures."Some people today say there wasn't enough money. Nothing of the kind.
We had the money but we only needed to spend it properly,"
Leonov told Reuters.
"Mishin says the Defense Ministry didn't give us money.
This is not true. We did not properly analyze things. ... That was his mistake."
Mishin's response? "Leonov is a mouse. He doesn't understand anything," he said.In addition to money woes, Mishin says he lost time with
rocket design mistakes and said the Soviet leadership
wasted resources by running competing space programs.
Soviet rocket scientists, unlike their NASA counterparts,
also had the burden of building nuclear missiles as well as space rockets.Korolyov's long shadow
Leonov and others say the Soviet moon effort
never recovered from the death of Korolyov in 1966."We had everything to fly around the moon. We had the rockets,
the space ship, the crew was ready, but we didn't have Korolyov,"
said Leonov, who keeps small framed U.S. and
Soviet flags flown on Apollo 11 on his office wall.
"But even with Korolyov, we would not have
beaten the Americans to be the first on the moon."The men who took over from Korolyov still live in his shadow.
Mishin has a home in a town near Moscow named after
the scientist and Chertok lives on a Moscow street honoring him.
For the cosmonauts who trained for moon missions,
the Soviet failure could not erase their longing to take a closer look."Sometimes I take out binoculars and look at the moon,
and of course the thought arises: Could it have
happened that I would have flown close by?"
said Vitaly Sevastyanov, who trained to make a trip around the moon."I don't allow myself to say perhaps I could have landed on the moon,"
said the former cosmonaut, who is now a member of parliament.
"That couldn't have happened, but perhaps I could have flown around the moon.
But it didn't work out. Of course there is a certain regret."
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