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The space program is not very transparent at all,” said Morris Jones, a space analyst based in Sydney, Australia. “The Chinese have an obsession with secrecy when it comes to their space program.”
The Tiangong 1, the module already in orbit that Shenzhou 8 docked with, has two large telescopes directed at the Earth that can photograph anything on the surface. These are probably used for some military purposes, Jones said.
Experts agree that China’s current space technology is about the level of the U.S. in the 1960s-era Gemini program. While not exceeding U.S. space technology, China does have the political will and money to support an ambitious space program, said Joan Johnson-Freese, a space expert at the U.S. Naval War College in Newport, R.I. in September.Despite the lag in technology, China advances more with each launch.
“Within only seven or eight years, China's space experts have completed what their foreign counterparts took three to four decades to achieve,” said Wang Yongzhi, chief designer of previous Shenzhou craft, according to the New China News Agency. |
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