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The succesful launching of the Shenzhou V, the Divine Vessel, on 15 October 2003, with taikonautYang
Liwei on board, marked a giant leap forward in the Chinese space
program that saw its origins in the 1960s. With this result, China
joined the club of space-travelling nations that previously had been
limited to the United States and the Soviet Union/Russian Federation. A
previous Chinese launching, in 1970, had already brought a satellite into orbit that endlessly broadcast Dongfang hong
(东方红,The East is Red), not the national anthem, but probably one of the
best known Chinese tunes, eulogizing Mao Zedong. The success of this
mission was solely ascribed to the genius of Mao Zedong Thought, which had guided the scientists and workers. In reality, Qian Xuesen,
a rocket engineer formerly attached to the Jet Propulsion Lab in
Pasadena, California, U.S., who had been expelled in the 1950s for
suspected Communist sympathies, designed China's first missiles,
earning him the accolade of being the father of the space program.

In the early 1970s, the Chinese space program was brought to a halt as a result of the political turmoil of the Cultural Revolution. After Deng Xiaoping returned to power in the later 1970s, the program was revived in the 1980s. Clearly, the military industrial complex also benefitted greatly from this development, thus enabling the People's Liberation Army
to demonstrate how well it responded to the political demands to
modernize. Space also appealed to the popular imagination, as can be
seen from the relatively abundant use of space-related imagery in
posters published in the 1980s and 1990s.
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Under Jiang Zemin,
however, the program, now named the 921 project, really took off in the
1990s. Successes in space exploration are very much seen as results of
the CCP's support for advanced scientific projects that is part and
parcel of his theory, the 'Three Represents'.
The Party has appropriated the space mission rather as another
justification for its continued rule, and attempts to use it even
further to fan patriotism. In this
patriotic discourse, space activities are another indication that demonstrate that China has shaken
off the humiliation it has suffered in the past at the hands of the
Western imperialist powers and is becoming a nation once more to be
reckoned with.
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Moreover, space exploration and scientific research
in general are part of the Party strategy to combat specific religious
behavior that it sees and terms as superstition. Even in materials
aimed at Falun Gong adherents, space imagery has been used in an attempt to bring them back into the fold.

Aside from the numerous benefits for the CCP's
legitimacy, military developments and further space exploration, it
stands to reason that the Shenzhou-mission
will be exploited endlessly for propaganda purposes. Colonel Yang, for
example, immediately was turned into an instant hero. According to
media reports, 10.2 million sets of commemorative stamps have been
issued. Unfortunately, no commemorative posters seem to have been
published! In their absence, I reproduce some earlier artists'
impressions
of Chinese space travel below.
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Aside from the political use of the space mission,
its success really has struck a chord with the people. They feel proud
and consider China's joining of the space family as another indication
that the country is regaining some of the splendor and importance it
had during its imperial past. As a result, a number of Chinese
companies have included the Chinese conquest of space in their printed
and television advertising. Jianlibao, a sports drink, already featured a Chinese taikonaut walking on the moon in one of its television commercials broadcast in early 2003.

On 12 October 2005, China launched its second manned spacecraft, the Shenzhou VI,
for a multi-manned, multi-day mission. Colonels Fei Junlong (mission
commander) and Nie Haisheng (mission operator) embarked on a flight
scheduled to take three to five days, during which they will undertake
a number of scientific experiments. The launch is part of a more
encompassing space program that
will include space walks, the docking of a capsule with a space module
and the launch of a permanent space lab. Moreover, in 2006, China will
start with the selection of women astronauts.
External Links:
Biography of Yang Liwei (in Dutch)
China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology
China National Space Administration
Chinese Academy of Space Technology
China's Space Activities--PRC Government White Paper of 22 November 2000
Sources:
Leonard David, Shenzhou Secrets: China Prepares for First Human Spaceflight
Matthew Forney, "Great Leap Skyward", Time Asia, vol. 162, n. 12 (29 September 2003)
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