NASA suspends cooperation with Russia over Ukraine

NASA says it will continue to work with Roscosmos to maintain a safe and stable operation of the ISS. Source: Nasa.gov

NASA says it will continue to work with Roscosmos to maintain a safe and stable operation of the ISS. Source: Nasa.gov

In a statement issued by NASA, the U.S. space agency has announced that it is severing ties with Russia on space cooperation in all areas except the International Space Station. America currently depends on Russia to transport astronauts to and from the ISS.

The U.S. National Directorate of Aeronautics and Space (NASA) has issued a statement declaring the almostcomplete suspension of its cooperation with Russia.

NASA employees are now barred fromtraveling to Russia before obtaining a special order, as well as being forbidden to conduct teleconferencing, joint activities, and e-mail correspondence with Russian counterparts. The conditions also include a ban on Russian officials visiting NASA sites.

At the same time, NASA says it will continue to work with the Russian Space Agency to "maintain a safe and stable operation of the International Space Station."

According to the American organization, this cooperation will last as long as NASA does not renew its own manned spacecraft launches.

Since the closing of the U.S. space shuttle flight program, American astronauts have been delivered to the International Space Station by Soyuz ships, for which Russia receives $70 million for each astronaut transported.

The Russian Federal Space Agency, Roscosmos, has as yet provided no official reaction to the statement. However, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, who oversees the rocket and space industry in the Russian government, expressed skepticism toward the message, noting that in the past cooperation between Russia and NASA in the space industry was also limited to working together on the ISS.

According toYury Karash, a member of the Tsiolkovsky Russian Academy of Cosmonautics, collaboration between Washington and Moscow as part of the ISS project will continue.

“For the U.S., it will be forced cooperation, because at the moment the United States cannot send its astronauts to the station except on board the Russian Soyuz. However the events surrounding Ukraine and Crimea will push the U.S. to accelerate its work on the creation of its own manned spacecraft," said Mr.Karash in an interview with the Interfax news agency.

According to Karash, in two years’ time, when NASA’s new U.S. Dragon manned spacecraft, the new Dream Chaser mini-shuttle, the Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle and the Boeing-made CST100 capsule come into service, "it is possible that any significant cooperation between the U.S. and Russia in the field of space will live on only in textbooks."

"Moreover, such actions by Russia, of course, would be another ‘wooden stake’ that Russia could drive into any possible future international projects with the participation of Russia and the United States. I would not do this," said Karash.

Karash noted that cooperation in space exploration between the USSR and the U.S., and then between the Russian Federation and the United States "always depended on the general political context of relations between the two countries."

That is why any worsening in relations, according to experts, led to the almost complete cessation of cooperation in the space sector, and in particular "bilateral exchanges of high technology, informing the partner about the country’s missile potential, etc."

Cooperation with NASA began in Soviet times as joint projects in the fields of medicine, biology and geodetics in the 1960s.

In 1972, the Soviet Union and the United States signed an agreement on cooperation in the peaceful use of outer space, and 1975 saw the famous "handshake in space" – the docking of the Soyuz and Apollo spacecraft.

In the 1990s, NASA and Russia expanded their cooperation, including in the joint use of the Mir orbital station, which was essentially the predecessor of the current International Space Station.

At the time of NASA’s declaration of suspension of cooperation with Russia, a number of joint programs were in effect:

·  Monitoring the Siberian taiga

·  Space geodesy

·  The AERONET Program for Atmospheric Research

·  The Northern Eurasia Earth Science Partnership Initiative (NEESPI), aimed at studying the climate and ecosystems of the north of the continent

·  The SAGE III Project, dedicated to the long-term monitoring of the Earth's atmosphere

·  Long-term research, including studies related to the preparation of a manned flight to Mars.

· Exploration of outer space, including the establishment of manned stations on the moon as a first step in the solar system’s further development.

Based on materials from Newsru.com, aif.ru and Interfax.

Read more: What happened to the Soviet space shuttle Buran?

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