
China has once again demonstrated its relentless surge in the high technology domain. Barely four years after becoming the third nation to put a man into space, and a few months after it successfully tested an anti-satellite weapon, China has shot off its first lunar probe on Wednesday. Named after a Chinese goddess, who flew to the moon, Chang8217;e 1 satellite is designed to circle round the moon for nearly a year. It is the first step in Beijing8217;s ambitious plans to land a Chinese taikonaut on the moon in 2020. On the face of it, repeating a feat that was performed by the United States more than four decades ago is no big deal. But China8217;s space programme is not about advancing the scientific knowledge of man. Instead, it signals China8217;s resolve to build 8220;comprehensive national power8221; and a determination to contest the US dominance of outer space.
China8217;s launch of Chang8217;e 1 has been greeted by the talk of an Asian space race. This is misleading. While Tokyo has joined in earnest the Asian race to land on the moon, India seems an unwilling competitor. In September, Japan had launched a lunar orbiter and India hopes to do the same next year. Relative to the national energies 8212; political, financial and scientific 8212; that are being invested by China and Japan, India8217;s space effort looks, frankly, pitiful.