Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 25 – The appointment
of Dmitry Rogozin, who had been a deputy prime minister, to head Roskosmos, has
gotten so mixed up with an American news agency report about the failure of a
launch of a missile Vladimir Putin had invested his prestige in that the larger
picture has been lost sight of.
And that larger picture is this:
Rogozin is a fading politician, and the agency he has been named to head is
failing to the point that many Russian commentators speak about it as a “dying”
institution headed toward a complete demise (ria.ru/analytics/20180525/1521350957.html
and lenta.ru/articles/2018/05/21/cosmos/).
The
Russian space agency is in trouble, with a rising tide of failures and massive
corruption and an especially bad first quarter in which the US report captured
only a tiny part of its problems (rbc.ru/politics/24/05/2018/5b05adbe9a7947eca126fa9d?from=main,
https://lenta.ru/articles/2018/05/21/cosmos/
and rurik.us/archives/9689).
The American media reported about a
single missile failure in a test flight (cnbc.com/2018/05/21/russian-missile-with-unlimited-range-crashed-after-only-22-miles.html),
but in fact there have been at least four unsuccessful missile tests in recent
weeks (graniru.org/War/Arms/Nukes/m.270161.html).
The new space facility in the
Russian Far East isn’t ready, the victim
of corruption and mismanagement, even as Moscow pulls out of its former
center at Baikonur in Kazakhstan (ura.news/news/1052335407
and newsland.com/community/4765/content/putin-prikazal-pereselit-s-baikonura-150-ofitserov-s-semiami-eto-ne-nachalo-begstva/6348458).
And as a result of both sanctions
and American investment at home, Russia is only months away from losing its only
winning card in this sector: the ability to send astronauts and cosmonauts to
the international space station (newsland.com/community/8223/content/rossiia-priznala-poteriu-monopolii-v-pilotiruemoi-kosmonavtike/6349631).
Rogozin
has thus been given an Augean stables to clean out. If he succeeds, he will likely
resume a more successful political career. But if as more likely he fails, both
his career and Russian space aspirations are likely to be put on hold for a
long time to come.
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