http://www.atimes.com     
  
 India races into space
By Siddharth Srivastava 

NEW DELHI - India recently successfully placed its
11th remote-sensing satellite Cartosat-1 into orbit -
blasted into space by a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle
(PSLV) - stretching further its record to 12 launches,
including broadcast satellites, without any failure,
though there have been glitches. 

The stage is now set for the Indian Space Research
Organization (ISRO), run by the government, to carry
out a fully fledged commercial launch, with a little
help from the US, by the removal of sanctions on
dual-use technologies. India considers its missile,
space and nuclear programs as closely inter-linked,
with nuclear deterrence against Pakistan and China and
benefits to the people through satellite technology
and nuclear energy being critical factors. 

But first, the significance of the satellite launch.
The latest launch, carried out from a newly built
second launch pad with an estimated cost of US$100
million, will provide the flexibility that exists with
the Space Shuttle of the US and Europe's Ariane
rockets. Indian launchers can now be assembled on a
mobile platform in a separate work area and then
transferred to the pad just days before launch. With
this arrangement, one rocket can be at the pad while
another is being commissioned. This was also the first
time that the ISRO had launched two satellites in a
single flight from Sriharikota (near the city of
Chennai, in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu), the
other on this occasion being the much smaller Hamsat
for amateur radio broadcasts. 

The launch "reaffirms the emergence of India as a
major space power", Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told
parliament in New Delhi. India has committed to
sending a probe to the moon in two or three years, but
its space program has been mainly aimed at harnessing
high technology for the masses. 

While India's space program, largely developed by
indigenous scientists with help from European partners
and the US earlier, deserves kudos, similar technology
is being used to build synergies into another arena -
India has also announced that it will test-fire its
longest range (3,000 kilometers) surface-to-surface
missile, Agni III, capable of delivering nuclear
payloads, by the end of the year. This range
effectively covers China and Pakistan, unlike the
earlier two versions. The development of India's
missile program is a contravention of missile control
and test-ban treaties, which India opposes as being
biased toward major powers. 

India's Agni project, which was launched in the late
1980s, has been under the US microscope, with the
country using every persuasive power, including
sanctions, to delay it. Indeed, progress in missile
technology has happened concomitantly with the strides
in space research as the motors used in the launch
vehicles of satellites have been incorporated into
missiles. 

ISRO is developing two categories of rocket - the
PSLVs are designed for earth observation and
scientific missions, such as Cartosat-1, and the
forthcoming Chandrayaan moon mission. The larger
Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) carry
communications satellites into geostationary orbit
36,000 kilometers above the earth, at which height
they can "hover" over the same place. The GSLV motors
form the critical stages of operations of the
long-range Agni. 

Keeping India's interest in overcoming hurdles in
procuring dual-use technologies, by getting US export
control procedures simplified, the Indian parliament
recently passed the Weapons of Mass Destruction and
their Delivery Systems (Prohibition of Unlawful
Activities) bill, which the government has emphasized
does not "in any manner constrict" India's nuclear
program, either strategic or civilian. 

The nuclear bill is important in light of India's
emergence as a "nuclear state", and meets the
country's commitments under United Nations Security
Council Resolution 1540 passed in April 2004. 

"For us, nuclear energy is an important means to
address this challenge [energy security]. As such, we
intend to maintain and expand our indigenous nuclear
power program. This would also ease the strain on
conventional energy supplies globally. Since India's
record in non-proliferation is impeccable and
acknowledged to be so internationally, the current
restrictions on cooperation in nuclear power
production with India have become anachronistic and
counter-productive," Manmohan said in parliament
recently. 

The US, too, has had a change in strategy and has
agreed to cooperate with India on nuclear energy,
given India's record as a "responsible" nuclear power
nation after successfully testing nuclear weapons in
May 1998, unlike Pakistan, which has been accused of
systematically peddling nuclear technology. India has
not signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty as it
feels that the agreement is biased toward the
possessors of nuclear weapons. 

Indeed, in the arena of space, too, many feel that the
time is ripe for India to embark on a government-led
campaign to win launch orders from other countries by
putting in competitive bids, especially to developing
countries. As in several other fields, India can
follow the lead taken by China, which has joined hands
with Brazil and which won an order last year to build
and launch a communications satellite for Nigeria.
Russia, the US and Europe continue to lead the world
in space launches, followed by China. 

In the past decade, the ISRO has launched eight PSLVs
and three GSLVs without encountering any failure.
Cartosat-1 is the 12th successful consecutive launch
in 12 successive years. Cartosat-1 will join what is
already the world's largest cluster of non-military
remote-sensing satellites. Six Indian spacecraft are
already observing the earth with a wide range of
instruments. The INSAT series of satellites has given
90% of the population access to satellite television.
The most recent launch in September last year was
Edusat, used for building a distant-learning network. 

Indian launch vehicles are not yet powerful enough for
India's heaviest satellites, which have been launched
on Europe's Ariane. But the ISRO plans to become
self-sufficient in this sector from 2008, when its
GLSV-3 launcher is due to be ready. 

Last year, the ISRO won a $10 million contract to
launch its first satellite for the European Union.
Four satellites of Germany, South Korea and Belgium
have been launched by the ISRO, which is set to launch
an Italian satellite, Agile, early next year. India
may launch Russian satellites for a global
navigational system next year, a Russian space chief
said earlier this month. India will send an Indonesian
micro-satellite into space on an indigenous launch
rocket by early 2006. The target is to garner a 10%
share of all commercial space launches in the world in
the next five years. 

Space, nuclear energy, nuclear deterrence, it is
always treading a fine line. 

Siddharth Srivastava is a New Delhi-based journalist. 

(Copyright 2005 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights
reserved. Please contact us for information on sales,
syndication and republishing.) 
   
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 



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