Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Mars

ESA Fully Cuts Mars Mission Ties With Russia (france24.com) 177

The European Space Agency has officially terminated cooperation with Russia on a mission to put a rover on Mars, with Russia's space chief furiously responding by banning cosmonauts on the ISS from using a Europe-made robotic arm. France 24 reports: The ESA had previously suspended ties on the joint ExoMars mission, which had planned to use Russian rockets to put Europe's Rosalind Franklin rover on the red planet to drill for signs of life, due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. ESA Director-General Josef Aschbacher tweeted on Tuesday that because the war and resulting sanctions "continue to prevail," the agency would "officially terminate" ties with Russia on ExoMars and its landing platform.

The firebrand head of Russian space agency Roscosmos Dmitry Rogozin issued an angry response. "Has the head of the European Space Agency thought about the work of thousands of scientists and engineers in Europe and Russia which has been ended by this decision? Is he prepared to answer for sabotaging a joint Mars mission?" Rogozin said on Telegram. "I, in turn, order our crew on the ISS to stop working with the European manipulator ERA," he added.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

ESA Fully Cuts Mars Mission Ties With Russia

Comments Filter:
  • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @02:15AM (#62701552) Homepage Journal

    "Has the head of the European Space Agency thought about the work of thousands of scientists and engineers in Europe and Russia which has been ended by this decision?"

    Has the head of state considered not invading other countries?

    Honestly, I'd like to see more of this shit done against superpowers when they unilaterally perform "special" operations [wikipedia.org]. Russia just happens to have the unfortunate distinction of being the first nuclear power held accountable for their actions. Tough luck, Putin.

    • by Narcocide ( 102829 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @03:34AM (#62701632) Homepage

      Here's the thing you need to understand to grasp the mindset of these Russians: They're literally brainwashed, but they don't believe in a possible world where everyone else isn't also brainwashed. To them, there's no such thing as rational people, there's just competing brands of brainwashing. So of course they are highly hypocritical but the last thing they would expect is for anyone to blame them for that.

      • Yes, the so called "reverse cargo cult". They think that other people's airplanes are also made of straw, but they are pretending that it is not the case.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          Yes, the so called "reverse cargo cult". They think that other people's airplanes are also made of straw, but they are pretending that it is not the case.

          Nice one! Was not familiar with the term so far. Makes a lot of sense.

      • I run into a similar problem when I talk to my fellow Americans. For some, any criticism of the policies of my elected representatives somehow transforms into an emotional jihad against my country. Nationalism, it's a hell of a drug.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          I run into a similar problem when I talk to my fellow Americans. For some, any criticism of the policies of my elected representatives somehow transforms into an emotional jihad against my country. Nationalism, it's a hell of a drug.

          Pretty much. Nationalism allows you to believe you are one of the "good guys" in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. And that is pretty much the present situation.

      • This. The outlook Russians are brainwashed to have on the world is a highly destructive and dysmal one. No one knows anything for certain; everyone everywhere is corrupt; but no point trying to do anything about it anyway; all states and government are as bad as each other, just in different ways. It's just plain awful.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by SuperDre ( 982372 )
      Well, the US invaded other countries and yet we still work with them.
      • by Bruce66423 ( 1678196 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @04:09AM (#62701668)

        And left again, leaving the form of democracy, and often the reality: Grenada, Panama and even Iraq a bit. Russia has annexed (stolen) Crimea and shows every inclination to slice bits of Ukraine, using whatever brutal methods it can.

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Bullshit. In the last few decades, US has left jack shit except for pain in misery for the countries that it invaded. If it's not invasions it's sanctions that go far beyond simply US businesses doing business with certain countries US doesn't like. It threatens that any business that dares to do business with such country will be cut off from any ability to use SWIFT, etc., and will be sanctioned.

          Basically US tolerates authoritarian governments, so long if the ruler is their fucking bastard. The US als

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

            Basically US tolerates authoritarian governments, so long if the ruler is their fucking bastard. The US also has had their hand in undermining democracies around the world, overthrowing governments that were elected if the country's people decide to elect a leader it doesn't like.

            All of what you said is true, and yet Russia would like to be worse, and only is not for lack of opportunity. We know this is true because we can look back at the Soviet Union, and we can look at what Russia is doing right now in Ukraine.

            We can and should hold both governments (and people!) accountable. Yes, I realize that means me. When we don't stop what's done in our names, we become responsible.

          • by tragedy ( 27079 )

            There's definitely a lot to complain about as far as the behavior of the US in the world goes. A number of them seem to stem from what you might call a doctrine of infinite US jurisdiction. For example, invading Panama (a country that the US originally created, just so it could control the Panama canal) to arrest Noriega. Its occupation of Guantanamo Bay based on the flimsy premise that the current Cuban government once cashed a single one of its tiny rent checks as decided by a US judge. Flying drones into

          • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @08:58AM (#62702156)

            Bullshit. In the last few decades, US has left jack shit except for pain in misery for the countries that it invaded. If it's not invasions it's sanctions that go far beyond simply US businesses doing business with certain countries US doesn't like. It threatens that any business that dares to do business with such country will be cut off from any ability to use SWIFT, etc., and will be sanctioned.

            Basically US tolerates authoritarian governments, so long if the ruler is their fucking bastard. The US also has had their hand in undermining democracies around the world, overthrowing governments that were elected if the country's people decide to elect a leader it doesn't like.

            Bullshit.

            The US has made a lot of awful foreign policy decisions, from supporting dictators, to invading countries to try deposing dictators, to deposing somewhat democratic government to install friendly dictators during the Cold War.

            But you comment is false equivalency at its worst. Absolutely nothing the US has done compares to Russia invading and partially annexing a neighbour completely without provocation.

            • Absolutely nothing the US has done compares to Russia invading and partially annexing a neighbour completely without provocation.

              Not recently, but we sure did a whole lot of that in the 1800's.

              • Because sensibilities haven't changed at all in 200 years?

                300 years ago it was legal to round up people from Africa, ship them in brutal conditions across an ocean and sell them like cattle in Virginia. If Russia started selling slaves, would you bring that up as some kind of bullshit false equivalency?

                The long arc of time shows that things improve, and reaching back centuries in order to play the whataboutism game just makes you look like a fucking idiot.

              • I'll take whataboutism for $200 bob. I heard two of our ancestors clubbed each other to death, from that I conclude you're a dangerous arsehole.

          • Two wrongs don't make a right. The rest of the world should have boycotted the US more for it's meddling in foreign affairs. I am glad that the US is on the right side of recent history for once.
          • business with such country will be cut off from any ability to use SWIFT

            Actually being locked out of SWIFT is only a slight escalation on that scale. For the most part, it is sufficient for the US to simply require a choice: "do business with them, or do business with us; these choices are mutually exclusive".

            Now ask yourself why very few countries and companies ever choose to abandon the US market over whatever backwater dictatorship is being sanctioned in this way.

            The Russians, Iranians, North Koreans and other dictatorships, in their powerless impotent rage, are frequent

        • And USA annexed Hawaii, Texas, and tried it with Cuba ... there are probably plenty of more examples.

          • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @10:51AM (#62702484) Homepage Journal

            There was a significant geopolitical change after WW2 that made imperialism and annexation less tolerated by the international community than it once was. For the most part borders change due to civil wars rather than direct military assault. And the Cold War further changed the field, so now many civil wars really just proxy wars between larger powers. (perhaps with the exception of central Africa where most of the world seems to ignore what goes on there)

            More importantly to my original point. Why shouldn't the US be held accountable for future actions as Russia is facing now. If the US unilaterally invades the Middle East again, maybe Europe should do more than talk and put their money where this mouth is?

            When China complains that the US is a destabilizing element in world. They're not entirely wrong. They're full of shit of course, but the kernel of truth is that in acting as a peace enforcer for the world the US gets involved in internal politics where it doesn't belong and disrupts the lives of millions of people where wars are staged and fought. The rub is in response to China if we asked, would the world be better off if the US did nothing? Probably not. It's one of those damned if you do, damned if you don't situations.

            P.S. The US already owns part of Cuba. And the Bay of Pigs Invasion was initiated by Cubans and not the US government, even if in the end they financed the whole thing. I realize I'm splitting hairs here.

        • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @07:38AM (#62701938) Homepage

          I was a huge critic of the Iraq War. But then Iraq elected a Iranian-influenced government, and the US did nothing to prevent that from happening or it taking power, and then the Iraqis asked the US to leave, and the US did.

          Pretending that the US's brand of BS is equivalent to Russia's brand of BS, which involves overthrow of democracies that are not at war, annexation of them into itself via flattening them with unguided MLRS and artillery, ethnic cleansing their populations through filtration camps (TWO MILLION deported thusfar) and replacing them with your nationals, and trying to eradicate their very culture and sense of existence... I'm sorry, but NO. Not all wrongs are on the same level.

        • There's absolutely nothing to be proud of about what the US did in Iraq. The best thing that can be said is that the world has one less dictatorial shithead in it, but there's more than enough of those to take his place. Unfortunately, the cost of removing that shithead was tens of thousands of other lives, and trillions of dollars.

          Not. Fucking. Worth. It.

      • Putin's invasion of Ukraine is different. It portends the invasions of many other European countries with a great many killed and 10s of millions of people, sophisticated white European people, being displaced and their homes destroyed.
        • by _merlin ( 160982 )

          10s of millions of people, sophisticated white European people, being displaced and their homes destroyed

          So it's somehow worse because it's going to happen to "sophisticated white European people" rather than unsophisticated, brown, non-European people? Fuck off with your white supremacist attitude.

          • by tragedy ( 27079 )

            I think - although I'm not 100% sure - that they were being sarcastic about the fact that more attention is being paid to what's happening in Ukraine vs. when this has happened to other populations who weren't so white. That criticism (if that's what it was) is not unfair. It is not particularly useful though without a call to be more vigilant about dealing with this sort of thing in the future regardless of the ethnic makeup of the oppressed population. The facts is that what's going on in Ukraine currentl

            • No, the criticism is unfair. It's just more of the same woke tendency to try and cast all world events as being affirmation of their own race-obsessed priorities. Ukraine is in Europe. It neighbors Poland, a NATO country. Russia is nuclear sabre-rattling and openly discussing on national television nuking European cities. It is far more relevant to European and American concerns than what's happening in Myanmar.
              • by tragedy ( 27079 )

                You're certainly not wrong that the circumstances are different and it is more directly relevant to European and American concerns for good reasons not related to the color of your typical Ukrainian. I probably should have qualified "not unfair" more. I think there are very good reasons for involvement in this conflict. Frankly, I think that they should have done what was requested and set up a no fly zone right at the start and sent in troops and that the half measures to support Ukraine so far are a bit t

              • Not only is it more relevant but the situation is also simpler. There isn't a long political history that one has to unravel to understand the situation. Ukraine was an independent country part of the NATO peace partnership with EU aspirations. There weren't any internal civil wars.

                At the *start* of the warn, most Americans knew nothing about Ukraine. Similar to how little is known about Myanmar. But the Ukrainians did a fantastic job of making their case around the world. Was that easier because

          • I believe the term needed here is "wooosh".

            That was very clearly sarcasm, pointing out the hypocrisy of caring when this happens to Ukraine, but not when the exact same thing happened in Syria.

      • "Whutabout dem dumb Mericans!"

        Fuck off troll boy....

    • by splutty ( 43475 )

      "Your boss is a dangerous psychopath." seems a perfectly valid reason to me.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Sethra ( 55187 )

      Has the head of state considered not invading other countries?

      Does no one ever question the "WHY" of this conflict? Do intelligent people really believe that Russia, out of the blue, simply decided to invade Ukraine?

      I encourage anyone who wants to fully understand what is happening over there to take a peek at the Minsk Agreements which were mediated by France and Germany all the way back in 2014.

      I'm not taking a stand here, I'm simply suggesting that knowing "WHY" this 8 year old conflict finally escalated is important for anyone who wants to talk rationally about i

      • by fazig ( 2909523 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @07:35AM (#62701932)
        Yes, you are taking a stand. Or you're ignorant of European history while being distracted by the rest of the world.
        Most people living in Eastern Europe who remember the Soviet Union are not surprised at all by these developments.

        To many of us, Russia has been a pain in the ass for a long time. With the the UK, France, and Germany pretty much out of the picture as they're all in some kind of peaceful alliance, it's pretty much only Russia who has not abolished it's imperialist attitude towards its neighbors in Europe.
        Honestly, I'm surprised why so many Westerners appear to have difficulties to wrap their heads around the little fact that the Soviet Union has essentially raped Eastern Europe for decades and for some reason believes that those countries owe them and being unfaithful looking for different "partners". Are history classes so bad?

        At the end of the day, who poses the greater potential threat is quite contextual.
        Like if you told someone in Palestine that Israel aren't actually the bad guys, it's Russia that are the bad guys. It wouldn't make much sense to them because to them it's Israel, who is the greatest immediate threat.
        Likewise to many non brainwashed Europeans it was the Soviet Union and their glorified monster Stalin who was responsible for millions of deaths in Europe (Hitler of course as well), not the US.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I can tell you that UK schools, at least when I was at one, don't teach that stuff. The only European history was in relation to the invasions of the UK and the wars we had (mostly with France, later with Germany). Eastern Europe was more of a footnote.

        • by Voice of satan ( 1553177 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @09:14AM (#62702210)

          Are history classes so bad?
           

          Yes.

          At least in Belgium. In my history classes there was no word about the atrocities of the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe. Worse, we were even told the soviet "liberated" the territories they conquered.

      • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @08:22AM (#62702064) Homepage

        You mean, the Minsk agreements that Ukraine was FORCED INTO when Russia INVADED THEM, and to which RUSSIA never lived up to their obligations?

        The total number of civilians killed in 2021 on the Donbas front (on both sides) was a whopping 25. Many of them from land mines.

        Ukraine was a *neutral country* when Russia invaded them. They had disarmed on promises from Russia that Russia would never invade them. They had had their military hollowed out by corrupt pro-Russian politicians. Making Russia's job of taking their land all the easier. Ukraine didn't even decide to try to join NATO until the fall of 2014; it stubbornly stuck with its plans to try to remain neutral, *even while Russia was invading it*.

        The fact that countries keep trying to join NATO is not NATO's fault, it's that THEY'RE TERRIFIED OF THEIR NEIGHBOR. Demanding that countries submit to the will of their bigger neighbors is sheer colonialism / imperialism, and its defenders should be ashamed. Read a poll sometime [kiis.com.ua]:

        Support for a ceasefire without returning Donbas and Crimea is 17% for/66% against.
        For a ceasefire on the current bounds, it's 12% for/81% against.
        Zelensky has a 88-7% approval rating.
        90% want / 87% expect Ukraine to be an EU member.
        73% want / 65% expect Ukraine to be a member of NATO
        27% want / 24% expect to be a third party state
        3% want / 3% expect to be part of the Eurasian Economic Union, ruled by Russia.

        But no, we have people here like Sethra who want to Westsplain to them that they should be happy to be annexed and ethnically cleansed by Russia, and entirely willing to discount the viewpoints of ~40 million people about the issue.

        Putin literally openly admits [theguardian.com] that he sees himself in the role of Peter the Great, returning "historically Russian lands" to the Motherland. Denies the entire existence of Ukrainians - as a nation, as an identity, as an ethnicity. They're "wayward, Polish-influenced 'Little Russians'". The fact that *Ukrainians* have an identity and a language and a culture of their own is not relevant. They must be returned.

        Shortly after the invasion, Russian state-controlled media accidentally published (then quickly removed) a prescheduled editorial [archive.org] about Russia's "victory" in Ukraine. Key points:

        Russia is 'restoring its unity'
        There will be no more Ukraine
        Ukrainians are once again "Little Russians"
        The invasion is "the solution of the Ukrainian question" (that rhetoric is nearly straight from the Third Reic.h)
        Russia has remedied a "national humiliation - when the Russian house first lost part of its foundation (Kyiv)

        Of course, that's nowhere near the worst of what's been published in state-controlled media since then, many of which have been outright genocidal. Indeed, the literal Nazi [google.is] Putin put in charge of developing Russia's nuclear missiles - Dmitri Rogozin - not long ago called for the Final Solution against Ukraine [twitter.com] on Twitter.

        Russia is an

        • Of course you know what else was once part of Russia? Alaska

          Russian politicians have had fever dreams of taking back Alaska for many years now. It makes for good rhetoric, but they know full well they'd get quickly crushed if they ever tried, even before they got much of their eastern forces killed fighting in Ukraine.

        • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

          If you find yourself caught between a wolf and a bear growling at each other, and the bear starts chomping on your neighbor, it's only logical to start edging toward the wolf -- even if all they do is ignore you, they're not attacking.

      • by tragedy ( 27079 )

        Does no one ever question the "WHY" of this conflict? Do intelligent people really believe that Russia, out of the blue, simply decided to invade Ukraine?

        Of course we've asked why. The answer is mostly perfectly obvious. Putin is getting old and close to death (aside from any rumors of cancer or Parkinson's, he's well past the average life expectancy for a Russian of his generation, which is terrifyingly low) and he wants to leave his mark by restoring Russian "greatness" in the literal sense by re-assembling the territory of the Soviet Union. He has pretty much said as much in speeches.

        • He wrote an entire paper on the History of Russia and Ukraine or some such. It's basically a long-winded historical recounting of how Russia and Ukraine were always BFF until Western powers began to contaminate their thinking and steer them away from what's best for them. He, perhaps humorously, concludes by deciding it's up to the Ukrainians to decide what's best.

          In reality he's punishing the "Little Russians" for their lack of loyalty. Sometimes you gotta show tough love. Too bad his "special mili
      • by orlanz ( 882574 )

        The Minsky Agreements were signed AFTER Russia Annexed Crimea. The agreed upon neutral monitoring signatory, OSCE, found that the Ukraine Govt and the Russian backed Separatists both repeatedly violated the agreement. Even when the Agreements were redone, the Separatists used it as leverage to push toward Donbas independence from Ukraine. No country can just let their country be split and abandon their people just because some locals want it.

        All this time, Russian didn't help with the Peace talks. They

      • I'm not taking a stand here, I'm simply suggesting that knowing "WHY" this 8 year old conflict finally escalated is important for anyone who wants to talk rationally about it.

        The Why is obvious if you dig deeper than the excuses used for invasion. There is the Putin's goal of establishing a Russian sphere of influence in the World to counter the West's. And less directly stated but also obvious is the effort to establish a totalitarian state not unlike the horrific ones of the past. For example there is the Putin Youth Movement Created to Teach Russian Children National Principles [msn.com].

        If you want to get into the nitty gritty of the Minsk agreements. We can fast-forward to where it a

    • Russia is not a superpower in any metric that really counts, except perhaps the number of nuclear warheads they command. It is a distincly Russian narrative, which should not be propped up, that because the Americans have, allegedly or in fact, done X at some point, the Russians are equally justified to do X - the implication being that they are, after all, the Americans' equal on the world stage. They aren't - the good old saying quod liced Iovi, non licet bovi applies, at least to some extent.

      Btw you've

    • Honestly, I'd like to see more of this shit done against superpowers when they unilaterally perform "special" operations [wikipedia.org].

      Desert Shield is not a good example of your point, since it was defending a country that was being invaded, and it was not at all unilateral. Were you thinking of the later invasion of Iraq under Bush Jr.? That would be a much better example.

  • by franzrogar ( 3986783 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @02:25AM (#62701556)

    Quote: "Roscosmos Dmitry Rogozin issued an angry response. "Has the head of the European Space Agency thought about the work of thousands of scientists and engineers in Europe and Russia which has been ended by this decision?"

    Has Rogozin thought about the dead/destroyed life of MILLIONS of Ukrainians and their exodus in Europe and their kidnapping in Russia which in turn mandated this decision?

    Of course not, because he's a murderer supporter.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @03:15AM (#62701614)

    Rogozin grabbed his sputnik and declared his departure from the playground.

  • I've seen this one. Eventually the fighting turns Jupiter into a second star.
  • ...started a project to repaint planet Mars from red into blue and yellow.
  • by Serif ( 87265 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @08:08AM (#62702034)

    I hope that Rogozin's words are given due consideration, and thought given to the thousands of Russian scientists and engineers who will now be looking for gainful employment. Just a pity that the West doesn't have a shortage of such skills and wouldn't be happy to welcome them with open arms.

    • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

      Like they'll be allowed to leave. Some of them might, but if it becomes more than a trickle, you can expect that gate to close hard and fast.

  • by necro81 ( 917438 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @09:06AM (#62702184) Journal
    Crazy Uncle Dmitry needn't be too concerned for the scientists an engineers of Europe. The mission can still go ahead, catching a ride on an American rocket (probably for less cost!) or an Ariane.

Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (10) Sorry, but that's too useful.

Working...