"I hope that China will continue with space exploration. It would be logical to have international co-operation. I hope that it will come about and that I can be involved in it"
About this Quote
There is a quiet pragmatism in Leroy Chiao's hope: space isn't a flag-planting contest so much as a supply chain, a risk profile, and a long game. When he says China's continued exploration would be "logical", he's doing more than endorsing another nation's program. He's reframing it as inevitability - and implying that resisting it is the irrational position. In the astronaut's mouth, "logical" carries a particular authority: the logic of oxygen, orbital mechanics, redundancy. Space punishes ideology.
The subtext is also personal and pointed. For an American astronaut to wish for cooperation with China is to brush up against the reality that U.S. policy has often treated Chinese human spaceflight as a security threat first and a scientific opportunity second. Chiao's language sidesteps the usual Washington theater. He doesn't argue politics; he argues physics and operational sense. International cooperation isn't framed as moral progress, but as good engineering.
"I can be involved in it" adds another layer: this is not abstract idealism but a working professional wanting access to the most consequential projects of his field. It hints at a frustration shared by many in aerospace: careers built on collaboration, constrained by geopolitics.
Context matters. Post-ISS, space is drifting toward a split-screen future: competing lunar architectures, parallel stations, duplicative missions. Chiao's quote reads like a preemptive plea against that waste - a reminder that, up there, borders don't provide backup systems.
The subtext is also personal and pointed. For an American astronaut to wish for cooperation with China is to brush up against the reality that U.S. policy has often treated Chinese human spaceflight as a security threat first and a scientific opportunity second. Chiao's language sidesteps the usual Washington theater. He doesn't argue politics; he argues physics and operational sense. International cooperation isn't framed as moral progress, but as good engineering.
"I can be involved in it" adds another layer: this is not abstract idealism but a working professional wanting access to the most consequential projects of his field. It hints at a frustration shared by many in aerospace: careers built on collaboration, constrained by geopolitics.
Context matters. Post-ISS, space is drifting toward a split-screen future: competing lunar architectures, parallel stations, duplicative missions. Chiao's quote reads like a preemptive plea against that waste - a reminder that, up there, borders don't provide backup systems.
Quote Details
| Topic | Science |
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