2 Introduction
The end of confrontation in
space, driven by the Cold War, inevitably
diminished governmental commitments to impressive
space projects and led to tighter space budgets.
The new environment made an international
cooperation in space not just a logical way of
promoting global human development, but also a
potentially resourse-saving approach to solution
of up-to-date tasks.
However, a transitional way
from confrontation to cooperation appeared
blocked by significant problems, which sometimes
raise doubts, whether that is really a way
towards tomorrow. The purpose of this paper is to
address these problems in order to make them
clearer and easier to resolve. The paper begins
with discussion of current situations and
concerns of various space powers. Those conems
are analysed to reveal the general fundamental
problems behind them. Ways of dealing with that
fundamental problems are later discussed, as well
as observed advancements along those ways.
2 Background
A methodological complexity of
the task is determined by the fact, that a
pattern of interactions to be analysed got
drastically complicated after the end of the Cold
War. Previously, a main contradiction developed
between the Eastern and the Western blocks. It
was this main contradiction, which can be focused
on, while neglecting internal peculiarities of
blocks. With respect to space this principal
conflict was sen primarily in confrontation, or a
space race, between the United States and the
Soviet Union.
Nowadays the Eastern and the
Western blocks, which earlier could be considered
as monolithic, revealed their internal structure
and conflicts between their constituent elements
can no longer be ignored. Moreover, an
international space arena now features additional
participants, which earlier could not be taken
into consideration. Those are China, India,
Israel and, in a perspective, a number of states
from South-East Asia. (We will not further
discuss this issue, just note, that it will have
increasing importance in a future.)
Nevertheless, fundamental
problems of relationships between space powers
get their reflection at all the levels, including
various levels:
- general East-West
interactions (inter-block relations);
- inter-state relations,
either inter-block (i.e. that of between
an Eastern and a Western state) or
in-block (between two countries within a
block);
- in-country interactions
(between different forces within a single
state).
Let us consider internal
situations in different space powers and basic
disagreements between them. A primary emphasis
will be given to relationships, involving
countries of the former Soviet Union, as the most
controversial and less clear.
2 Space Powers Problems and Concerns
East (Former Soviet Union)
Russia is a
principal successor of a space program of the
FSU. As such, it carries a burden of sustaining
scientific and technological capabilities and
infrastructure, which before long employed about
800 thousand people in rocket and space sector
and performed up to one hundred space launches
per year. Russia also got a burden of prestige of
the great space power, one of the top two in the
world. A self-rating of the national space
program by majority of people, associated with
it, is in the best terms described by
"Number 1.5", rather than second to the
American.1
Understandably, Russia has
major difficulties in keeping technological
capabilities and space-related infrastructure of
the former Soviet Union. A workforce in
space-related industry squeezed down to 560
thousand in 1993. A level of funding is even hard
to estimate at all with the inflation of 10 to 30
per cent a month throughout
1992 -1993 and funding apporiations taking place
on an occassional basis, rather than through a
steady process. For example, during the first
half of 1994 the Russian Space Agency got only 10
per cent of its annual request.2
A notion of "international
cooperation" has a diverse meaning for
Russia. First, there are two different basic
arenas for international activity - one is the
FSU or a "near abroad", and another is
a "far abroad", i.e. the West and the
Third World countries. Moreover,
"cooperation" has at least two aspects
for each of the two arenas.
One aspect of an inter-FSU
cooperation is a sustainance of a
production cooperation, established under the
USSR. Historically, final space products were
assembled mainly in Russia, with cooperative ties
spread across the Soviet Union. After Russia
accepted a full responsibility for continuation
of space program of the former Soviet Union, it
got a constant pain of sustaining a production
cooperation to keep the program running.
Another aspect of an inter-FSU
cooperation is what was supposed to be a joint
use of results from space activity, both in terms
of scientific research and space applications.
That shared use of benefits from space activity
had to come along with joint funding of it.
However, Russia does not see
appropriate commitment from other members of the
Commonwealth of Independent States to invest into
space program. Hence, Russia believes, that other
republics of the FSU are unwilling to carry a
fair proportional share of space programs burden.
(This applies not only to space program. As
during the Soviet Union, Russia remains a donor
for most of other republics, with up to 8 per
cent of Russia's GNP donated to them.3)
Along with a general reluctance
to sustain other republics at Russian expense,
specific concerns may occasionally arise about
business unreliability of contacts with some FSU
states. Those are fuelled by permanent
policy-driven tensions between various republics,
with Russian-Ukrainian and Russian-Kazakh
relations being of especial importance for this
consideration. Kazakhstan draws a severe
criticism for its "exorbitant demands"
for leasing the Baikonur Cosmodrome out to
Russia. Those demands are considered as little
but desire to raise Kazakhstan's national
well-being at Russia's expense.
As a result of these tensions
and perceived uncertainty about long term
relationships, there is a strong trend in Russia
to develop a self-sustainance in space activity,
especially in defense-related programs.
A cooperation with
Western countries got a powerful
stymulus with a sharp cut of internal financing
during the last year of the USSR and immediately
after its demise (in 1991-1992).
An international cooperation
was then considered as the way of salvation of
national scientific and technological
capabilities. It was then, when the industry and
the science rushed to all kinds of cooperative
ties with foreigners. Noteworthy, in that
movement Russia did not draw a clear distinction
between non-commercial joint international
projects, like space science missions, and
commercial space market operations, like launch
services. That mix-up of a non-commercial
cooperation and a competition for a share in a
global market had an objective reason. By the
time, when that rush to an international arena
started, Russia can not perform on her own even
space science missions, and it had to break an
established principle of international
cooperative projects, a principle of
no-fund-exchange.
That principle had to be
stepped out from first to maintain operations of
the Granat astrophysics observatory beyond a
designed lifetime and later to prepare the
Mars'94 mission.
Having scored just a little
success in attempts to join global space market
and sometimes having faced an open opposition
from the U.S. and other Western powers to those
attempts, a significant part of Russian space
industry and policy-makers considered the Western
opposition as a coherent policy to destroy the
former Cold War adversary, using a
"cooperation" just as a new cover.
To complete a Russian picture
it is necessary to note, that within the national
space program there are some tensions and
discrepancies between the Russian Space Agency
(RSA), which supervises a civil space program and
the Space Forces of Russia (SFR), responsible for
all space launches and spacecraft control.
As a military Force, which
bears primary responsibility for military space
systems operations, the SFR favours a
self-reliance in the space program. It claims
necessity of assured access of Russia to space,
which, as stated, can not hinge on relationship
with another state, not even friendly and a
member of the CIS. Hence, the SFR presses for
development of new launch facilities in Russia
instead of the Kazakhstan-based Baikonur.
As to an international and
commercial activity, the SFR also has claims
against the RSA, which, allegedly, uses
servicemen to do all dirty job and does not even
pay properly, not to say about investing into the
SFR's overworn infrastructure.
The RSA does not has its own
infrastructure, historically operated by the
Space Force. Under current stiff conditions it
can neither establish a new infrastructure, nor
even maintain appropriate segments, if
transferred from the SFR, as recently decided.
The RSA is more abound to an
international coperation by virtue of its
mission, which gives it a responsibility for both
representing Russia in international cooperative
projects, and for licensing Russian companies for
commercial space services operations, including
those, provided to foreign customers. The latter
is seen by the RSA as an important way of
self-support for a national space industry. Yuri
Koptev, the General Director of the RSA,
estimated that "participation in
international space projects could provide Russia
annual income of 200-220 million dollars".4
Ukraine has a
second rating in terms of rocket and space
potential among republics of the former Soviet
Union. Accordingly, Ukraine also has grave
concerns about keeping unique scientific and
technological capability as well as many tens
thousands of space-related jobs.*
In addition to troubles Russia
has in this respect, Ukraine also experiences a
special problem. As its space production is
oriented to a Russian consumer, Russia's claims
about self-reliance are considered as an
intention to kill the Ukrainian space industry.
Moreover, Russia is accused of making unfair
profits from Ukrainian hardware, which is
purchased for rubles and used in missions, for
which Russia gets hard currency. Russia and the
West together are also accused of preventing
Ukraine from entering a global space market.
------------------------------------------------------------------
* No exact figures are
known to the author, but estimated
employment in rocket and space industry
in Ukraine is between 60 and 80 thousand
people.
Kazakhstan has a
special place in the FSU with respect to the
space program heritage. It does not possess a
substantial space-related industry, but hosts a
key element of space infrastructure, the Baikonur
Cosmodrome, which is the sole site for all manned
and interplanetary missions as well as for
launches of geostationary satellites and heavy
reconnaissance spacecraft. Kazakhstan is
interested in getting maximum payback from the
space infrastructure, which it can not use on its
own anyway.
In lengthy and, as of this
writing, yet to be completed debates over
Baikonur Kazakhstan first rejected Russian
proposals to make Baikonur a Russian military
base on grounds of a national sovereignty. Later
it set reimbursement requirements, which Russia
can not accept. Original claims went as far as $3
billions a year. Those seemed to be negotiated
down to $115 millions when the agreement was
signed by Presidents Yeltsin and Nazarbayev on 28
March, 1994. However, soon after that it was
claimed, that $115 millions due each month,
rather than a year. Later was admitted, that $115
million is an annual payment, but it was claimed
to be just a start-up amount for leasing just
space, of the test range, with extras due for
ecological damage, etc., etc.5
Kazakhstan's utmost desire - to
see Baikonur demilitarized and converted into
International Spaceport to perform commercial
launches - again demonstrates interrelation of
international cooperation and space commerce in
views of ex-Soviet states.
West
United States,
the leading space power, faces space budget cuts,
and appropriate challenge of keeping a skilled
workforce, space-related infrastructure, and
ensuring competiveness of an American space
technology at a global market.
In 1993 aerospace industry*
employment in the U.S. reduced by 13% to 909
thousand and 1994 is expected to bring additional
5.4% reduction.6 The National Aeronautics and Space
Administration instead of 10% increase of its
annual budget is now going to face flat funding
until the end of a decade (equivalent to
estimated 4% loss in real terms)
With respect to the task of
ensuring a global competiveness of the American
space technology, the U.S. had already problem
with stiffening competition from Europe,
particularly in space launch services and in
space imagery sales. Nowadays, American suppliers
perceive yet more impressive threat from Russian
services.
A Russian intervention into
established markets is mostly considered by the
U.S. industry as a subversive action. The USSR
and later Russia has been accused of an unfair
competition and an intentional dumping, based on
a subsidized nature of the Soviet economy and
intended to destroy the American defense-related
industry.
Whenever projects for joint
developments with Russia are discussed, concerns
are raised about reliability of Russia as a
partner and benefits from such an cooperation in
terms ofresourse-savings are doubted.
------------------------------------------------------------------
* Note, that for
Western countries employment figures
represent cumulative workforce emioyed
aviation and in missile and space
industry, while in the former Soviet
Union - exclusively in rocket and space
industry.
Europe also
experiences budget pressure for space programs.
The European Space Agency got a 10% budget cut
for 1994 and have to trim $4 billions from its
programs through the rest of a decade.7 To meet that, ESA had to freeze Hermes
spaceplane and scale back other ambitious
man-related projects. In Europe only France was
able to keep a significant national space program
along with participation in ESA activities.
Despite overall French aerospace industry
employment lost some 7000 jobs in 1991-1992 from
a total of 119 thousand,8 the French space agency, CNES was able
to keep a slight but increase in budget outlays.
The European space industry,
which fought for a long time for a competiveness
against the American one, believes, that the
American industry enjoys more support from the
government, and a competition between Europe and
the U.S. is not quite fair.
Europeans are also concerned
about a Russian penetration into a global space
market. However, their reaction seems less noisy,
either because of their less reliance on their
governments, or because they are sure that their
positions at market niches, already won from the
Americans are sound.
Japan has just
reached a long-standing goal of a technological
independence in its national space program. Today
Japan is perhaps in the most favourable condition
compared to other space race participants, who
took start during the Cold War. Unlike them,
Japan has a steady growth of space budget
amounted to about 7% a year.9
Japan, with its traditions of a
stable policy and assured succession, always had
difficult times in cooperating with the U.S. and
other Western countries, because of typical for
the West rapid policy changes.10
One could only imagine Japanese
expectations from pursuing joint projects not
only with the Western countries, but also with
Russia, policy of which is now famous for
unpredictability. No direct comments about that
are known to the author. Nor Japanese were heard
as complaining about improper treatment at a
global market, despite the fact, that their
position there is yet far from desired.
2 Problems essence
From the above discussion one
can derive, that the first fundamental
problem behind all discussed internal
problems is an unapproriate structure of the
national space programs. Major goals of
national space policies as well as associated
establishments and infrastructures, developed
during the Cold War, do not fit the post-Cold War
environment.
During decades of the space
race space agencies of major space powers got
accustomed to big projects and appropriate
funding, to favourable attitude of top leaders.
With an inflated staff and reduced flexibility
and performance-driven approach they were not
prepared for more stiff and competitive
environment.
Mechanisms for setting tasks to
national space programs also proved far from
appropriate because of decades of more or less
distorted goal-setting in accordance with the
Cold War demands.
This is not to say, that all
space-related structures were completely
unappropriate. However, it was a presence of an
irrational component, which determined severity
of a restructuring problem after the Cold War was
over. The larger was that irrational component,
the greater problems national space program runs
into.
The above consideration,
demonstrates, that the more efforts country spent
to the Cold War-driven space race, the more its
space program suffers after the end of the Cold
War. The two key players in the space race, the
former Soviet Union and the United States, are
the principal victims of it.
The second
fundamental problem, appearing from above
analysis, is the problem of misunderstanding
or misinterpretation.
All the time estimates of
intentions and moves of one side by another have
little if anything to do with original
motivations. While an A party never raised a
specific task of destroying or subverting а В
party as a competitor, it is exactly this, what
а В party perceives to be a primary objective
for A. Furthermore, A itself suspects В to have
a subversion of A as its primary goal, despite A
does not set its own priorities that way.
More specifically, Russia never
set a goal to destroy the Ukrainian space
industry, as well as the United States never
claimed destruction of the Russian industry as an
aim. Similarly, nobody in Russia not even ever
mentioned, that joining the International Space
Station project would give Russia a capability to
blackmail the United States, as feared by some
American politicians.11
This inability or unwillingness
to understand viewpoints of each other is also a
heritage of the Cold War. This rooted thinking
gravely complicates the first fundamental
problem.
Except of the two formulated
fundamental problems there is one important
detail to mention here. It is misleading to
present a trasnsformation of global space
activity in a post-Cold War era exclusively as a
transition from confrontation to cooperation.
In reality, the transition occurs from
confrontation to competition and
cooperation, as there are
areas, where competition always remains. A mix-up
of these two different aspects additionally
complicates already difficult problem of mutual
understanding.
2 Basis for Optimism
The above discussion of
postures of different states demonstrates, that
neither party formulates its primary task as to
infringe another. The top priority for anyone is
to ensure one's own survival, rather than to
destroy an adversary or a competitor.
This minor difference bears a
chance for achieving a compromise to assure
mutual survival. However, to find and execute
that opportunity it is imperative to overcome a
contradiction between self-perception by every
party of its own problems and actions and their
interpretation by other parties.
As said, the Problem #1 in a
post-Cold War environment is to restructure space
programs and establishments to increase their
efficiency and suitability for solution of new
tasks.
As long as tasks of global
human meaning as concerned, doubts barely appear,
that an international cooperation in its
traditional understanding holds a great promise
for exp'ansion of overall capability to solve
those tasks by virtue of unifying the best
scientific capabilities, available from various
countries.
It is not as commonly accepted,
that an international integration of space
activities would be a good thing for optimisation
of national space-related capabilities.
However, one may argue, that
expansion of a basis for competition beyond
national borders could eventually promote more
optimal development of capabilities, available
for solution of national tasks.
Therefore, a general
recommendation about the Problem # 1 is to expand
and level off an area for international
competition in space-related services.
In this respect, political
decisions are called for establishing common
rules, rather than to create artificial barriers.
At the expanded field and with extended pool of
capabilities normal economic competition is
capable of faster and more effective developments
to meet common demands for performance.
No doubts, there are areas of
specific national sensitivity in space
capabilities, with national security applications
being a clear example. However, even they can
benefit from expanded international competition
in space developments. (An idea of launching
national security payloads on foreign launchers,
recently recommended for consideration by the
U.S. Senate is not as outrageous as it looks from
traditional standpoint. Noteworthy, the Russian
Space Force now already uses foreign -
Ukrainian-made -launchers to deliver national
security payloads. To say more, those sensitive
payloads are even manufactured in Ukraine!)
The above should not be treated
as an appeal just to open doors for Russian or
ex-Soviet expansion. This call applies to a
reciprocal process as well. Moreover, one can
expect even in a near term, that Russia will
become a greater consumer of space services than
a supplier. The internal Russian demand for
space-related services grows and will continue
so, while national suppliers are traditionally
less flexible and cutomer-oriented, than foreign.
The first examples of that kind are already
available, with a Russian steel corporation
purchased satellite communications equipment from
the Japanese NEC corporation, rather than from a
national supplier.12
Nevertheless, a transitional
character of a modem situation and close
involvement of its primary participants with key
national interests, have to be constantly
remembered while suggesting ways to overcome
todays problems. Few would accept promises of
prosperity somewhere in the future, if a way to
those future heights goes through a dip today. An
appeal to supreme national interests (no matter,
real or imagined) would be an effective tool to
negate such proposals. Therefore, one must look
for transition ways, as plain as possible and
offering some benefits in a short, rather than a
long run.
2 How this works in reality?
Some recommendations to fit the
above condition has been put forward by the
author last year.13 A recommended way was to establish
direct business relationships between Eastern and
Western industries, with particular emphasis to
joint ventures, which would enable second tier
Western players to increase competiveness up to a
top level in their respective country of in the
West as a whole. That approach would
simultaneously disclaim charges of unfair
competition, addressed to the East.
With particular respect to use
of space-related capabilities of the FSU the
proposal was predated by two important
prerequisites to be executed:
- independent republics of
the FSU - nembers of the Commonwealth of
Independent States - should have restored
normal economic relations to ensure
succession of the ex-Soviet space
capabilities;
- Russia should have
completed formation of an appropriate
environment, favourable for foreign
participation in space activity.
During a year passed,
integration trends began to prevail in the CIS.
In Russia, a legislation on space activity has
been accepted, which declared equal rights of all
participants in space activity, both domestic and
foreign.14
Despite all changes in top
political pattern, the President and the
Government adopted decisions geared to protect
and attract foreign investments.*
As to advances in the
prescribed way of business development, new
examples appeared, to prove this trend and also
to demonstrate its diversification (see table 1).
A major push in this direction was provided by
the U.S. government plans to stimulate conversion
of the former Soviet defense industry by
providing a seed money to develop commercial
ventures in conjunction with the U.S. companies.15
Along with now-academic
examples of Lockheed -Khrunichev and Pratt &
Whitney - Energomash ventures, where American
companies picked up Russian lead suppliers of GEO
launch vehicles and of large liquid rocket
engines, in order to raise up to the level with
superior national competitors, there are also
cases, where leading U.S. companies approach
Russian ones in apparent attempt to diversify
their core business.**
Aerojet Corporation studies a
variety of Russian engines, from low-trust
electric jets to 150 tons thrust oxygen-kerosene
engines originally designed for the N-l moon
launcher.16 Space Systems/Loral, one of leading
manufacturers of communications satellites,
studies joint projects with NPO Mashinostroyenia,
which never designed comsats, but is proficient
with missiles and Earth monitoring platforms.
The Russian leader in
communications satellites development, NPO PM of
Krasnoyarsk-26, has an agreement with a Canadian
group, including Spar Aerospace, ComDev, et.al,
which can be in effect considered as a
"second tier" competitor to American
companies.
Similar trend to use Russian
capabilities to increase competiveness on the
all-Western, rather than just national arena is
seen, also in intention of the American EOSAT
company to start selling Russian images, which
feature the world best commercially available
resolution of 2 meters. EOSAT, a Landsat
spacecraft operator, is now #2 seller of
satellite imagery in the world after European
Spot Image.
Unlike early expectations, the
Russian involvement was not as substantially used
by European countries to increase their
cumulative capability to the level comparable to
that of the United States. One reason for that
was that when new eagerness to cooperation
appeared, Russians first turned to the U.S., as
to a fellow space superpower. Secondly, and,
perhaps, more important, a direct Russian
involvement into joint projects apparently proved
unequal for Europeans, as it was felt, that
Russian capabilities are too extensive and would
overwhelm European independent developments.
It was these grounds, on which
the study of joint development of Hermes
spaceplane was abandoned. It became clear, that
Russians already have everything but funding to
do the project without Europeans.
Presumably, Europe,
particularly France, would be more interested in
joint developments with Ukraine. Ukraine also
inclines to France. Notably, Ukrainian
self-rating of domestic rocket and space
capabilities gives her "numbers 3-4 in the
world, shared with France."
A first milestone in
cooperation between France and Ukraine was seen
in signing an agreement between Aerospatiale and
Yuzhnoe Association. Eventually, one may envision
development of joint light-weight satellite
launcher, or, say, the "Ariane-5L"
launch vehicle with Zenit rocket blocks as
"Ariane-5" strapons.
After this optimistic view of
expanding relations between ex-Soviet and Western
space industries, it is necessary to warn, that
an attitude of the Russian space sector towards
contacts with Westerners gradually cools. As
predicted, low success of first attempts to sell
everything available to the West, as well as poor
responsiveness of most Western companies to joint
project proposals, from one hand, stimulates more
aggressive pursuit of domestic support from the
government. From another hand, they heat up
suspicions about "true" goals, for
which the Russian openness is used by the West.
The latter notion returns us
back to an importance of constant watching and
mitigating the Problem #2 -that of
misunderstanding and misinterpretation of each
other.
Remarkable is a fresh example
of the Mars'94 controversy, when the.Russian
Space Agency unexpectedly stated at'the 44th IAF
Congress, that the Mars'94 mission could not be
launched on time, unless Russian side quickly
received at least $10 millions. That statement,
which can be readily used to illustrated a
"threat of a Russian blackmail", was in
fact, a reflection of a Russian tradition
"not to carry garbage out of a house",
i.e. try to resilve problems internally, without
exposing them to the public.
In a similar twist, two weeks
after NASA has been notified in writing, that the
Mars'94 launch will not occur in 1994,17 the AIAA group was told at the RSA,
that "we're doing everything possible to
make it on time". That was also an inherited
institutional custom to release information only
on a "need-to-know" basis, rather than
an intentional desinformation.
On the other side, the Russian
space industry and officials do not quite
understand, how such high profile projects, like
the Space Station could have so small margin of
stability in such a wealthy power, like the
United States.
While the problem of
restructuring national space industries demands
primarily concerted efforts of companies, seeking
for enhancement of their competiveness, and of
governments, creating environment for that, the
resolution of problem of mutual understanding in
international relations demands aggressive
efforts from non-governmental and non-industrial
comers, such as experts, consultants and public
interest groups. Independent, non-aligned views
are imperative for timely identification of
emerging or potential conflicts and preventing
build-up of misunderstanding above a critical
point.
------------------------------------------------------------------
* The author would not
state, that Russia has a coherent policy.
Russian policy is rather a net result of
multiple pushes from different comers. As
a result, basically simultaneously with
decrees about protection and attraction
of foreign investments, the central
establishment, responsible for their
attraction, RAMSIR (Russian Association
for International Cooperation and
Development) was disbanded and that
responsibility was spread across three
Other establishments. Nevertheless, the
observed course of net movement of Russia
even under this conditions of
rope-pulling, sends an encouraging
message. This environment means also,
that a rational strategy is not to wait,
until a policy would become coherent, but
rather apply extra push to assist
movement in a positive direction.
** Diversification of
business in order to become less
vulnerable to failure in one particular
segment of a market is a second principal
approach for attaining business
stability, as opposed to concentration in
a core segment to ensure better
competiveness in it.
Table
1. Cooperative business
activities of Western and ex-Soviet space
companies
Western
partners |
Eastern
partner |
Subject |
Year |
Status |
Spar Aerospace,
ComDev, General Discovery, CANCOM
(Canada) |
NPOPM |
communications
satellites |
1991 |
joint venture |
Space Systems/Loral
(US) SEP (France) |
KBFakel RNII Applied
Mechanics & Electrodynamics |
stationary plasma
thrusters |
|
joint venture |
Lockheed Corp. |
Khrunichev Center NPO
Energia |
launch vehicles |
1993 |
joint venture |
Pratt & Whitney |
NPO Energomash |
large liquid rocket
engines |
1992 |
licence agreement |
Aerojet Propulsion
Div. |
KB Khimavtomatika
KBLyulka NPOTrud |
diverse rocket engines |
1993 |
joint studies |
Space Systems/Loral |
NPO Mashinostroyenia |
communications
satellites |
1994 |
study for joint
venture, Nunn-Lugar seed money |
EOSAT |
Sovinformsputnik or
Priroda Center |
high resolution
imagery |
1994 |
plans |
Aerospatiale (France) |
Yuzhnoye (Ukraine) |
launch vehicles |
1993 |
agreement |
Westinghouse Electric |
NPO Khartron (Ukraine) |
|
1994 |
joint venture, Nunn-Lugar seed money |
|