NASA wants international partners to go to Moon too

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WASHINGTON, Oct 22, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – As it looks to return to the Moon,
NASA is open to the idea of international participation, which could mean a
non-American setting foot on Earth’s natural satellite for the first time in
history, global space chiefs said Monday.

“I think there’s lots of room on the Moon, and we need all our
international partners to go with us to the Moon,” NASA administrator Jim
Bridenstine told reporters at the 70th International Astronautical Congress
held in Washington.

“If we can come to agreements on the contributions of all the nations and
how they’re going to be a part of the architecture, then certainly I would, I
would see that there’d be no reason we can’t have all of our international
partners with us on the Moon,” he added.

The Americans are developing a spacecraft (Orion) and a mini space station
(Gateway) that will remain in lunar orbit, which will in theory be used for a
first crewed mission in 2024, Artemis 3.

Only one element of the mission will be produced outside the US: the Orion
service module that will supply it with electricity, propulsion, thermal
control, air and water in space and is being delivered by the European Space
Agency (ESA).

Only once the Gateway is expanded will non-Americans be able to make the
journey too.

“We are in discussion also with NASA, so that we have European astronauts
on the surface of the Moon — this is of course the European intention,” said
Jan Worner, head of the ESA, at the same press conference.

“2024 is for sure something which is purely American,” he later told AFP.
For Europeans, it could be “2027, 2028, something like that.”

For its part, Japan also wants to take advantage of the new US program to
write a new chapter in its own history.

“It’s a very simple question to me because JAXA would like to send Japanese
astronauts to the surface of the Moon,” said Hiroshi Yamakawa, president of
the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.

The building of the ISS in the late 1990s and 2000s appeared to usher in a
new era of space cooperation between the US and Russia following the Cold
War, but this time around, Washington is in no mood to work with geopolitical
rivals.

Specifically, the US Congress has explicitly prohibited any cooperation
with China, the world’s biggest economy and an emerging space power.

During his speech inaugurating the weeklong conference, Vice President Mike
Pence repeated seven times that the US wanted to work with “freedom-loving
nations.”