On Sunday, the three
Chinese astronauts on board the Shenzhou-9 manually docked their
spacecraft to the Tiangong 1, an orbiting space lab.
On the same day, a
Chinese manned submersible vehicle set a deep-diving record when it
descended 7,020 meters into the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean.
The three men on board
the sub -- dubbed oceanauts in China -- sent greetings to the three
astronauts on the Shenzhou-9 spacecraft."We wish for a great success of the manual docking and brilliant
achievements in China's manned space and manned deep-sea dive causes,"
Xinhua quoted Ye Cong, Li Kaizhou and Yang Bo as saying.
Both endeavors have been a
source of pride for China and could help bolster support for the
Chinese Communist Party as it undergoes a once-in-a-decade leadership
transition later this year and handles the fall-out from the demise of
former politician Bo Xilai.
"Scientific achievements
like this allow the Party to again remind the population of what has
been achieved under their leadership," said Dean Cheng, a research
follow at The Heritage Foundation in Washington.
"It buys credibility and justification for their continued rule, even as scandals like Bo Xilai eat away at their authority.
"I would expect additional such displays in the coming months, especially if reports of a troubled succession are correct."
Mastering the technique
of joining spacecraft together manually is also seen as an essential
step toward China's goal of building a space station in 2020.
Until now, the docking had been done by remote control from the ground.
Local media reported that China also plans to start building a deep-sea station to accompany its march into space.
The three-man sub
Jiaolong, named after a mythical sea dragon, worked for three hours on
the sea floor, collecting water samples, sediments and placing markers
at the bottom of the sea.
Xinhua said the 11-hour
dive "enabled China to join the ranks of deep-sea faring countries" like
the US, Japan, France and Russia.
Cheng said that the
ability to undertake such deep-sea dives also had commercial
applications and would help China drill for oil and undertake deep-sea
mining.
China has been funding
oceanographic research for more than a decade after it was added to the
country's 9th Five Year Plan in 1996, he added.
Meanwhile, a spokeswoman
for China's manned space missions said the program, which began in
1992, would cost a total of almost 40 billion yuan (US$6.27 billion).
"These programs are emblematic of sustained Chinese investments in the human capital and infrastructure of science," said Cheng.
"This should be a warning call to the U.S. and Western Europe that their traditional dominance in science is in jeopardy."
But some Chinese
internet users, while lauding the achievements, questioned whether these
exploits were the wisest use of China's new-found wealth.
"Diving into the sea and flying out to space. China now can do them both," said one user of the Twitter-like portal Sina Weibo.
"It marks the
development of technology and we are proud of it. But can the government
care more about its people's well-being too?"
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