NASA's visit to China is called a 'get-acquainted session'

Published: Sunday, Sept. 24 2006 12:00 a.m. MDT

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — U.S. space officials will get a peek behind the closely guarded doors of China's space program this week during a visit that many experts believe is more about diplomacy than cooperation in technology.

President Bush asked NASA Administrator Michael Griffin to go to China last spring, following a visit from Chinese President Hu Jintao. During the four-day trip that starts todayS, a delegation led by Griffin will meet with the head of the Chinese Aerospace Bureau and visit the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing before traveling to China's launch facility in the Gobi Desert.

"This is a get-acquainted session and it's nothing more," Griffin said.

The United States has never had significant space discussions with China, even though both countries, along with Russia, are the only nations that can launch people into orbit.

The chief obstacle to more space cooperation has been the military influence over China's space program. The military's presence proved dicey for some U.S. companies that tried to work with the Chinese in the late 1990s and early 2000s on launching satellites. They were accused by the U.S. government of giving the Chinese satellite and rocket technology that could be used for intercontinental missiles.

NASA says there will probably be no space cooperation agreements with China like the one the U.S. space agency produced from Griffin's visit to India in May. The U.S. space agency has agreements with other spacefaring nations, most notably Russia, Europe, Canada and Japan, in building and operating the international space station.

The only areas where the United States and China might work together are in exchanging data on Earth science, managing the radio frequency spectrum, and controlling orbital debris, one NASA official suggested.

Some experts, though, doubt the United States would gain much from cooperating with China in space, especially since the U.S. program is so much more advanced.

James Lewis, director of technology policy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank, described the NASA visit as merely a "goodie bag" offered by President Bush during Hu's visit.

"Talking is swell ... as long as we get something in exchange other than that warm, fuzzy glow of knowing we're all friends," Lewis said. "I don't know what we get out of cooperation with the Chinese. I know what they get out of it — they get prestige. Maybe they get a little help with technology and spaceflight."

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