Russia enters the new space race

Posted By : Telegraf
6 Min Read

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One of the best scenes from the 1990s hit science-fiction series The X-Files depicts two US government agents walking up to a crashed UFO in Pennsylvania. One agent frets about how the Russians will react to news that the US government has recovered an alien craft, despite the fact that the Soviet Union was collapsing.

The other agent, the series’ lead villain known for his penchant for smoking cigarettes, ruefully retorts, “Haven’t you heard? There are no more Russians.” 

That quip perfectly encapsulated American and Western attitudes toward Russia in the post-Cold War environment. It continues to define American attitudes toward Russia. I have also, at times in my public career, fallen prey to these notions. 

Russia is not the superpower it once was. But it is not a failed state (yet). In fact, President Vladimir Putin’s main foreign-policy goal is not one of restoring Russian power in the aftermath of the Cold War. Rather, Putin’s true aim is to remind the world that Russia is a great power. 

Two years ago, for example, as the Donald Trump administration was boldly restoring America’s ailing mission in space, the Kremlin announced that Venus was Russian territory. After all, the former Soviet Union was the first major power to land a probe on the hostile Venusian surface. As the inheritor of the Soviet Union’s power base, the Putin regime believes that the Russian Federation has a viable claim on the second planet from the sun.

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