Russia says foreign power may have caused spy satellite loss

seruriermarshal

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– Mon Feb 14, 11:58 am ET
MOSCOW (AFP) – The Russian space agency suggested Monday that a foreign power may have been behind the space accident that disabled one of the country's most modern military satellites earlier this month.

Russia on February 1 launched a high-tech Geo-IK-2 craft to help the military draw a three-dimensional map of the Earth and locate the precise positions of various targets.

News reports said the satellite was a vital part of Russia's effort to match the United States and NATO's ability to target its missiles from space.

But the craft briefly went missing after its launch only to re-emerge in a wrong orbit that left the craft unable to complete its assigned task.

The Russian military and space agency set up a joint task force to probe the accident but it has presented no official results thus far.

One unnamed space official told Interfax however that initial evidence suggested that the craft went off target after one of its booster rockets inexplicably reversed course.

"The probable cause may involve electromagnetic intrusion on the automatic controls," the unnamed space official said.

The official did not identify the country he suspected of trying to derail the Russian military mission. But Moscow frequently accuses Washington of attempting to "militarise" space.

The space official conceded that there may have been other reasons for the launch failure. These included the wrong operations being programmed into the guidance system and other software mistakes.

But the Russian source stressed that the accident occurred between the first and second burns of the Briz-KM upper-stage booster rocket -- an area in which the craft makes no contact with ground control.

The official suggested that the electromagnetic pulse may have been aimed at the Russian craft "from a land, sea, air or space vehicle."

The Geo-IK-2 mishap came less than five weeks after President Dmitry Medvedev fired two top space officials for a launch failure caused Russia to delay the deployment of its own navigation system.

Investigators said that accident was caused by a basic fuel miscalculation that made the craft too heavy to reach its required height.

The three Glonass satellites would have completed a system whose research had been started by the Soviet Union in 1976.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110214/sc_afp/russiaspacemilitary
 
Should you mix unnamed idiot's assumptions - if he exists at all - with truth?
 
seruriermarshal said:
But the craft briefly went missing after its launch only to re-emerge in a wrong orbit

Hmm. I wonder, has such a thing ever happened before??

polyus.jpg
 
Insiders here have much lulz here discussing AFP release. Previous time other 'unnamed source' stated that Bauman state university 'student' micro sat failed on orbit due to HAARP:)
When you need to find guilty, last one tries to make public believe in any BS. Absence of telemetry data makes things even more funny. State commission will bring preliminary results on Feb.20.
 
It is never Russia's fault. Somebody else always does something to their vehicles (Kursk).
 
Byeman said:
It is never Russia's fault. Somebody else always does something to their vehicles (Kursk).
many just can't live in comfort without an enemy slapping around
Geo-IK-2 fate explanations brings up some memories of funny shit that happen to some
stuff circling Earth during 8/8/8 war...but I better bite my tonque
 
While I agree that the most simple explanation (malfunction) is usually correct, its not inconceivable that the satellite could have been attacked during a vulnerable moment during orbital insertion. ???


http://www.fas.org/spp/military/docops/army/ref_text/chap08.htm
 
"Rosaviakosmos just has launched the first tourist satellite. Satellite has no definite task - it just will circle Earth a few times and examine its many attractions." (c) not mine
 

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