Misplaced Pages

Space Race

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by AlexG (talk | contribs) at 15:30, 23 August 2004 (more on moon missions). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 15:30, 23 August 2004 by AlexG (talk | contribs) (more on moon missions)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

The Space Race was an unofficial competition between the United States and the USSR in space exploration and technology, and especially to the race between the two nations to land a human being on the moon in the second half of the 1960s.

In the eyes of the world, first in space means first, period; second in space is second in everything.
Lyndon B. Johnson writing to John F. Kennedy; April 28, 1961.

Significant events in the Space Race include:

The term "space race" was coined by analogy to the arms race between the Soviet Union and United States. The Cold War sense of cultural competition required each nation to try to outdo the other, in order to "demonstrate" which had the better system. Space technology was a particularly important arena for this conflict, because of its futuristic image - rocketry was still a comparatively new field - and obvious military applications.

The Soviets beat the Americans in most firsts, but did not manage to beat them to the moon. After so many early Soviet successes, especially Gagarin's flight, President John F. Kennedy was keen to find an American project that could capture the public imagination. The idea of the Apollo program was developed during the Eisenhower administration, but discarded because the President thought the operation was too expensive, and had little scientific or military reward. Kennedy, however, seized upon the project as the ideal focus for American efforts in space. He ensured continuing funding, shielding space spending from the 1963 tax cut and diverting money from other NASA projects - to the dismay of its head, James E. Webb, who urged support for scientific work. In conversation with Webb, Kennedy said:

Everything we do ought to really be tied in to getting on to the moon ahead of the Russians otherwise we shouldn't be spending that kind of money, because I'm not interested in space The only justification for is because we hope to beat to demonstrate that instead of being behind by a couple of years, by God we passed them.
(From a tape recording in the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library.)

Whatever was said in private, it was clear that a different message was needed to gain public support. Later in 1963, Kennedy asked Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson to investigate the possible technological and scientific benefits of a moon mission. For the program to succeed, it would have to defeat criticism from politicians of the left, who wanted money spent on social programs instead; and of the right, who favored a more military project. By emphasising the scientific payoff, and playing on fears of Soviet space dominance, Kennedy and Johnson managed to swing public opinion: by 1965, 58% of Americans were in favor of Apollo, up from 33% two years earlier. Once Johnson was President, his continuing defense of the program allowed it to succeed in 1969, as Kennedy had originally hoped.

Meanwile, the USSR was much more ambivalent about going to the moon. Soviet leader Nikita Krushchev was unwilling to be "defeated" by any other power, but equally unwilling to be drawn into such an expensive project. In October 1963, he said that the USSR was "not at present planning flight by cosmonauts to the moon", though this statement was qualified by his insistence that they had not dropped out of the race. It would be another year before the nation would fully commit to a moon landing attempt. At the same time, various joint programs had been suggested by Kennedy, including a possible moon landing by Soviet and American astronauts, and the development of better weather-monitoring satellites. Krushchev, sensing an attempt to steal superior Russian space technology, rejected the idea: if the USSR went to the moon, it would go alone.

While unmanned Soviet probes did reach the moon before any American craft, the American Neil Armstrong was the first human visitor - an event watched by millions of people around the world. This has come to be recognised as a defining moment of the twentieth century.

Technology and especially aerospace engineering advanced greatly during this period. In the sense that it was contested during the 1960s, the space race is usually considered to have been ended by the joint Apollo-Soyuz mission in 1975.

In 2003, with the successful manned space flight by China, there has been speculation of a new space race with the United States considering creating a permanent base on the Moon and/or a manned mission to Mars.

The Ansari X Prize, a competition for private suborbital spaceships, has also been called the new space race.

References

  • John F. Kennedy: an unfinished life, Robert Dallek (2003).

External links