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Tokyo (AFP) Feb 13, 2007 China does not plan another anti-satellite test, its defence minister was quoted as saying Monday, a month after Beijing became the third country to shoot down an object in space. National Defence Minister Cao Gangchuan also repeated that China had no hostile intent in carrying out the satellite-killer test, said Japan's former defence chief Fukushiro Nukaga, who met with him in Beijing. "China conducted a scientific and technical experiment," Nukaga quoted Cao as saying, according to Kyodo News. "It is not targeted at any country and is not a threat to any country. We do not plan further tests," Cao was quoted as adding. China on January 11 destroyed one of its own orbiting weather satellites in space with a ballistic missile, acknowledging the test nearly two weeks later after it provoked an international outcry. The only other countries to carry out such "Star Wars" experiments were the United States and the former Soviet Union, which entered a moratorium in 1985 amid concern over debris in space. The Chinese test triggered condemnation worldwide, including from the United States and Japan, which both have spy satellites in space. China had earlier pressed the United States for a permanent ban on satellite-killer tests.
Source: Agence France-Presse Related Links Military Space News at SpaceWar.com Taiwan News at SinoDaily.com Read More About the Chinese Space Program Military Space News at SpaceWar.com
![]() ![]() Raytheon has delivered the second of two advanced infrared sensor payloads to Northrop Grumman Space Technology for the missile-warning Space Tracking and Surveillance System Block 6 program. Block 6 R and D satellites will demonstrate the key functions of a space-based sensor within the Ballistic Missile Defense System, passing missile tracking data to missile defense interceptors with the accuracy and timeliness necessary to enable them to successfully intercept missile targets. |
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