Based on China's ownership claims and belligerent expansionist actions toward the entire South China Sea, it should not seem far-fetched that it is planning a similar takeover of the moon. And NASA's chief is now saying just that.
In a two-part analysis in August 2021, I wrote about the upcoming potential battle with China for a moon base site.
I wrote that: “There may be only a few locations on the moon where it would make economic sense to build a base, said Bleddyn Bowen, a professor at the University of Leicester and author of War in Space: Strategy, Spacepower, Geopolitics, and this is driving the concern.”
Tara Copp explained in Defense One:
“If you have a situation like that, where you're trying to do something in the exact same spot, it's essentially who gets there first,” said Alex Gilbert, a researcher and space resources doctoral student at the Payne Institute at the Colorado School of Mines. “And if you're not first, then the only alternative is to forcibly remove the current occupant.”
And now Bill Nelson, the head of NASA, is warning about the same thing — that China is preparing to lay claim to key areas of the moon.
“There is a new race to space — this time with China,” the NASA chief told Bild in an interview published Saturday.
Bild also noted that China plans to work with Russia to establish a base on the Moon by 2035 — something I also wrote about in April 2021.
Nelson said: “We must be very concerned that China is landing on the moon and saying: It's ours now and you stay out.”
He added that “China's space program is a military space program.”
“What do you think is happening on the Chinese space station?” Nelson said, referring to China's Tiangong space station. “They learn there how to destroy other people's satellites.” (RELATED: China's Hypersonic Spaceplane Nuke Based on Old Chinese American's Design for NASA)
In April, the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) described various potential Chinese space-based weapons including the Shijian-17 satellite, which is equipped with a robotic arm the agency believes could be used to grab and damage other satellites.
On Monday China rejected the NASA chief's warning that China might “take over” the moon as part of a military program, saying it has always called for the building of a community of nations in outer space. (RELATED: No One is Buying Chinese Weapons, and Now Fewer Russian Ones)
But as I wrote in part two of my moon-base piece, this concern is partly what prompted:
President Trump's 2020 promise to have U.S. ‘boots on the moon' by 2024 via the Artemis Base Camp project, led by NASA and partnering with several allied countries.
I added that “This ambitious U.S.-led effort is outlined in the Artemis Accords. But neither Russia nor China are expected to join these accords.”
It is therefore very likely both the China-Russia and U.S.-led efforts will build their moon bases without any sort of de-conflicting agreement in place. And that's where the Space Marines I have long advocated for may come in handy. (RELATED: Space Marines or Starship Troopers? – Rocket-Launched US SpecOps to Deploy Worldwide)
But we will need new doctrine as well as Space Marines and capabilities to achieve that.
So, it's definitely now time for the U.S. and its allies to start aggressively preparing for a potential battle on the surface of the moon. Space Marines to the ready. ALD