The safe landing of China's first spaceman on the grassland of north China's
Inner Mongolia Thursday morning has made China the third country in the world
that has successfully sent man into space following the United States and the
former Soviet Union.
On the same day 39 years ago, the country exploded its first atom bomb,
shocking the rest of the world. It was followed by the successful explosion of
an H-bomb three years later. Then the first satellite that sang the tune of
"Dong Fang Hong" (the east is red) declared to the world that China had mastered
the artificial satellite technology.
The bombs and the satellite enabled China to snatch a commanding post in the
height of the world's science and technology and enhance the strength of
national defense, thus securing an important position in the international
arena. The world-shaking events made China, this ancient civilization where the
four major inventions of the world were born, able to stand aloft among the
forest of nations with great self-confidence.
The achievements have testified to the correctness of the policy decisions
the first generation of Chinese leadership headed by Mao Zedong took after
sizing up the then international situation following the A-bomb dropped by the
United States in Hiroshima, Japan.
"Without the A-bomb and the H-bomb and the satellite since the beginning of
the 1960s, China would not have been called a big power that influences the
world and China would not have had such an international position as it has
today. These things reflect the capabilities of a nation and also the hallmark
of prosperity of a nation and a country," said Deng Xiaoping, the late Chinese
leader who masterminded the economic reform and opening-up.
As the Chinese people were still immersing in the success of the A-bomb,
H-bomb and the satellite, a space dream was in the making. But the dream did not
come true until the 1980s due to limited economic strength. The manned space
flight program was not put on the agenda until March 1986, when China listed the
manned space flight program in the hi-tech development program 863 against the
background that the United States was engaging in a star war, Europe launched
the "Eureka" program and the former Soviet Union launched the accelerated
development strategy.
Since China put the first satellite on orbit, China launched more than 50
satellites in 15 categories, with a success rate of more than 90 percent and the
satellite recovery technology reaching advanced world levels.
From the launch of the first rocket, the country has developed 12 types of
rockets, which have sent 70 Chinese and foreign satellites into the low earth
orbit, the geostationary orbit and the sun-synchronous orbit.
The space exploration project started toward the turn of the century. The
country launched four unmanned Shenzhou spaceships before proceeding with the
manned space flight.
Without the atomic and hydrogen tombs and the first satellite, there would
not have been commercial satellite launch service, nuclear power plants,
satellite-based communications and remote sensing or computer and
microelectronics industries, said an expert who is directing China's manned
space flight project.
Over the past four decades, the space program has attracted a number of
China's top brains.
Among the first generation of Chinese space scientists and technicians, many
returned from abroad. They included renowned physicists Qian Xuesen, Zhao
Zhongyao and Peng Huanwu.
When asking about the reasons why they returned, Peng Huanwu, the first
Chinese physicist who had obtained the professorship in the UK, said: "There is
no need of stating reasons for the return. What needs stating reasons is not to
return."
The R&D of space equipment has brought up a full generation of young
scientists. They include the 27-year-old rocket trouble detecting system
commander Liu Feng, the 29-year-old cosmonaut trainer Chen Xin, the 32-year-old
spaceship environmental control and life insurance system commander Liu Xiulian
and the 37-year-old spaceship system deputy chief designer Qing Wenbo.
Among the space program contingent, more than 70 percent are young people
below 35. Among the designers and commanders of the manned spaceship, more than
80 percent are young people under 40.
"There is a full force of successors to China's space program," said Wang
Yongzhi, 70-year-old academician of Chinese Academy of Engineering.