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Mission to Mars


Article # : 13104 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 11 / 1987  1,868 Words
Author : S. Fred Singer
S. Fred Singer, Visiting Eminent Scholar at George Mason University and former director of the U.S. Weather Satellite Program, is a pioneer in unmanned space science. His early work included study of primary cosmic radiation and the discovery of the equatorial "elctrojet" current in the Earth's ionosphere. He also proposed to NASA the manned mission to Phobos and Deimos now referred to as the Ph-D Project.

       MARS 1999
       An Exclusive Preview of a U.S.-Soviet Human Mission
       Brian O'Leary
       Stackpole Books, 1987
       160 pp., $14.95
       
       THE MARS PROJECT
       Journeys Beyond the Cold War
       Sen. Spark M. Matsunaga
       New York: Hill & Wang, 1984.
       216 pp., $17.95
       
       A U.S. senator and a scientist/astronaut have, in spite of their different backgrounds and starting points, reached a similar conclusion: The United States should pursue a manned mission to Mars. In addition, each traces, in a very personal way, his search for areas of cooperation between the United States and the Soviet Union that could be substituted for competition between the two superpowers.
       
        The Mars Project is an absorbing story, well told by a man of obvious goodwill and intelligence--a practical dreamer. Between 1982 and 1985, Sen. Spark Matsunaga of Hawaii has introduced seven congressional resolutions for international cooperation in space. He hopes that "aggressive" cooperation can improve U.S.-Soviet relations by increasing contact between the two societies. He envisions a concerted effort to increase our exchanges with the Soviet scientific technical elite, who are presumed to be repressed by the KGB but anxious to have contact with their colleagues in other nations. Yet, Matsunaga recognizes that in the past we have had to withdraw from similar cooperative endeavors when the Soviet nation has egregiously misbehaved, for example, by marching into Afghanistan. With no illusion about the Soviet system then, he wrestles with two major questions:
       
        ·How can the United States cooperate with a political system that not only practices international aggression but withholds elementary freedoms for its own people?
       
        ·How can such cooperation be carried out without the transfer of technology that may have military value?
       
        The answers may lie in the coordination of space projects and the exchange of scientific research data, rather than in the joint development of hardware or in joint space missions. "Joint" projects would not only
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