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#Russia has lost its power over NASA and in the space business: experts

“Russia has lost its power over NASA and in the space business: experts”

Russia continues to degrade its role in the space industry, alienating itself from international customers it has long supplied space resources to because President Vladimir Putin refused to back down from the attack on Ukraine.

Since Russia began its invasion last week, the head of Russia’s space agency Roscosmos Dmitry Rogozin refused to launch a UK-satellite company’s payloads and stopped supplying Russian-built rocket engines to US customers and threatened to cut ties with its International Space Station partners, including NASA.

The most delicate ongoing space policy issue is the International Space Station.

For over 20 years, NASA and Russia worked together to build and maintain the orbiting laboratory 200 miles above Earth. The first modules were American and Russian. The first two astronauts to enter the space station when the lights were turned on were an American and Russian cosmonaut together, an intentional choice by STS-88 mission Commander Robert Cabana.

When the space shuttle program ended, the US lost its ride to space for American astronauts. It began purchasing seats on the Russian Soyuz spacecraft for more than $80 million for nine years until SpaceX began launching astronauts under NASA’s Commercial Crew Program.

Since Elon Musk’s company began launching Americans from Florida in May 2020, NASA had purchased fewer seats from Russia and was negotiating for a cosmonaut to launch on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon when the Ukraine invasion began.


Get the latest updates in the Russia-Ukraine conflict with The Post’s live coverage.


Rogozin has threatened to pull out of the ISS altogether and ended on-orbit science activities between cosmonauts and their international astronaut counterparts.

A two-stage United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket lifts off from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida for Boeing’s Orbital Flight Test, Dec. 20, 2019.
American astronauts may no longer be allowed to ride on Russian aircrafts in space.
NASA/Mike Vrbanic

University of Central Florida space policy expert Roger Handberg said Russia has lost its upper hand.

“They’re not getting money because a good part of their space program had been selling seats on Soyuz missions to the United States,” Handberg said. “The Russians have lost their leverage, as you say, over the United States because they provided the access. Now we have independent access.”

In April, NASA Astronauts Mark Vande Hei is set to undock from the space station with two cosmonauts and return to Earth on a Russian spacecraft landing in Kazakhstan. He may be the last American to fly on a Russian vehicle if the relationship deteriorates.

A Soyuz-2.1b rocket booster carrying British OneWeb satellites is transported to a launch pad in Kazakhstan on March 2, 2022.
A Soyuz-2.1b rocket booster carrying British OneWeb satellites is transported to a launch pad in Kazakhstan on March 2, 2022.
Roscosmos Press Office\TASS via Getty Images

Secondly, the US, Europe and Japan are working to extend the life of the ISS until 2030, but Russia has only committed to 2024, and those negotiations were also underway.

If Russia drops out by 2030, that’s where things get complicated.

“Does that mean we have to disassemble and take their modules off? That’s the kind of complicated question. We’re not there yet,” Handberg said.

The International Space Station
Russia’s space program has promised to maintain the International Space Station until 2024.
NASA

Since the end of the shuttle program, the ISS has depended on Russian spacecraft to lift the space station and move it in debris avoidance maneuvers. 

However, the Northrop Grumman cargo spaceship Cygnus might be capable of taking on that job. A recently docked Cygnus at the ISS will conduct the first US reboost test while in orbit, potentially providing an alternative option.

If Russia chooses to take immediate action and sever ties with its International Space Station partners, it’s unclear how that would work. The ISS was not designed to be divided.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches with NASA’s Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) spacecraft onboard from Launch Complex 39A, Thursday, Dec. 9, 2021, at 1 a.m. EST, from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX is anticipated to contribute more into American space travel as NASA abandons the Russians.
NASA/Cover Images/INSTARimages.com

“Many things are intertwined. So are we no longer allowed to use the Russian modules on this space station? Or vice versa, we don’t allow them to use our modules,” Handberg said. 

“In the confined circumstances they’re in, that gets pretty bizarre.”

Handberg believes Russia is locked into the ISS until 2024, but there is always uncertainty with Putin.

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