Interkosmos Explained

Interkosmos program
Country:
  • (1967-1991)
  • (1992-1994)
Organization:
Purpose:crewed and uncrewed space mission for Soviet allies
Status:Completed
Duration:1967–1994
Launchsite:Baikonur
Native Name A:Russian: Интеркосмос Космическая Программа
Native Name R:Interkosmos Kosmicheskaya Programma

Interkosmos (Russian: Интеркосмос) was a Soviet space program, designed to help the Soviet Union's allies with crewed and uncrewed space missions.

The program was formed in April 1967 in Moscow.[1] [2] All members of the program from USSR were given the Hero of the Soviet Union medal or the Order of Lenin. The program included the allied east-European states of the Warsaw Pact, Eastern Bloc, CoMEcon, and other socialist states like Afghanistan, Cuba, Mongolia, and Vietnam. In addition, pro-Soviet non-aligned states such as India and Syria participated,[3] [4] and even states such as the United Kingdom, France and Austria, despite them being capitalist states.[5] [6]

Following the Apollo–Soyuz, there were talks between NASA and Interkosmos in the 1970s about a "Shuttle-Salyut" program to fly Space Shuttle missions to a Salyut space station, with later talks in the 1980s even considering flights of the future Buran-class orbiter to a future US space station.[7] Whilst the Shuttle-Salyut program never materialized during the existence of the Soviet Interkosmos program, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union the Shuttle–Mir Program would follow in these footsteps in the mid-1990s and eventually pave the way to the International Space Station.

Beginning in April 1967 with unpiloted research satellite missions, the first crewed Interkosmos mission occurred in February 1978. So called joint crewed spaceflights enabled 14 non-Soviet cosmonauts to participate in Soyuz space flights between 1978 and 1988. The program was responsible for sending into space the first citizen of a country other than the USA or USSR: Vladimír Remek of Czechoslovakia. Interkosmos also resulted in the first black and Hispanic person in space, Arnaldo Tamayo Méndez of Cuba, and the first Asian person in space, Phạm Tuân of Vietnam. Of the countries involved, only Bulgaria sent two cosmonauts in space, although the second one did not fly under the Interkosmos program, and the French spationaut Jean-Loup Chrétien flew on two separate flights.[8]

The Soviet Union also made offers of joint human spaceflight on a commercial basis to the United Kingdom and Japan resulting in the first British and Japanese cosmonauts. In the early 1980s, an offer was made to Finland as well, with test pilot Jyrki Laukkanen mentioned as one of the potential Finnish cosmonauts. The pilots of the Test Flight (Koelentue) refused on the grounds that participation would not benefit the Flight or test pilot activity in any way. No further offers were made to Finland regarding the matter.[9] [10]

Crewed missions

Date Image Prime Backup Country Mission Pin Space station
2 March 1978Vladimír Remek[11] Oldřich PelčákCzechoslovakiaSoyuz 28
Salyut 6
27 June 1978Mirosław HermaszewskiZenon JankowskiPolandSoyuz 30
Salyut 6
26 August 1978Sigmund JähnEberhard KöllnerGDRSoyuz 31
Salyut 6
10 April 1979Georgi IvanovAleksandr AleksandrovBulgariaSoyuz 33
Salyut 6
(Docking failed)
26 May 1980Bertalan FarkasBéla MagyariHungarySoyuz 36
Salyut 6
23 July 1980Phạm TuânBùi Thanh LiêmVietnamSoyuz 37
Salyut 6
18 September 1980Arnaldo Tamayo MéndezJosé López FalcónCubaSoyuz 38
Salyut 6
23 March 1981Jügderdemidiin GürragchaaMaidarjavyn GanzorigMongoliaSoyuz 39
Salyut 6
14 May 1981Dumitru PrunariuDumitru DediuRomaniaSoyuz 40
Salyut 6
24 June 1982Jean-Loup ChrétienPatrick BaudryFranceSoyuz T-6
Salyut 7
2 April 1984Rakesh SharmaRavish MalhotraIndiaSoyuz T-11
Salyut 7
22 July 1987Muhammed Ahmed FarisMunir Habib HabibSyriaSoyuz TM-3
Mir
7 June 1988Aleksandr AleksandrovKrasimir StoyanovBulgariaSoyuz TM-5
Mir
29 August 1988Abdul Ahad Mohmand[12] Mohammad Dauran Ghulam MasumAfghanistanSoyuz TM-6
Mir
26 November 1988Jean-Loup ChrétienMichel TogniniFranceSoyuz TM-7
Mir
2 December 1990Ryoko KikuchiJapanSoyuz TM-11
Mir
18 May 1991Timothy MaceUnited KingdomSoyuz TM-12
Mir
2 October 1991Franz ViehböckClemens LothallerAustriaSoyuz TM-13
Mir

Uncrewed missions

Films

In general, most of the films associated with programs are short TV documentaries from that era. The two exceptions include (largely fictionalised) Interkosmos from 2006, and cooperation document from 2009 (in Polish) titled Lotnicy Kosmonauci ("Aviators-Cosmonauts").[13]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bergess. Colin. Interkosmos - The Eastern Bloc's Early Space Program. Vis. Bert. Springer Praxis. 2015. 978-3-319-24161-6. New York. 11. 10.1007/978-3-319-24163-0. 2015953234.
  2. Web site: Matignon. Louis de Gouyon. 2019-04-05. The Interkosmos space program. 2021-06-08. Space Legal Issues. en-US. 2020-06-22. https://web.archive.org/web/20200622183340/https://www.spacelegalissues.com/space-law-interkosmos/. dead.
  3. News: 1984-04-04. INDIAN JOINS SOVIET PAIR IN 8-DAY SPACE MISSION. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-06-08. 0362-4331.
  4. Web site: Garthwaite. Rosie. 2016-03-01. From astronaut to refugee: how the Syrian spaceman fell to Earth. 2021-06-08. the Guardian. en.
  5. Book: Sheehan, Michael. The international politics of space. 2007. Routledge. 978-0-415-39917-3. London. 59–61.
  6. Book: Burgess. Colin . Hall. Rex . The first Soviet cosmonaut team: their lives, legacy, and historical impact. 2008. Springer. 978-0-387-84823-5. Berlin. 331.
  7. [Wikisource:Mir Hardware Heritage/Part 2 - Almaz, Salyut, and Mir#2.1.6 Shuttle-Salyut .281973-1978.3B 1980s.29]
  8. News: Pinkham. Sophie. 2019-07-16. How the Soviets Won the Space Race for Equality. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-06-08. 0362-4331.
  9. Web site: fi . Jyrki Laukkasesta piti tulla Suomen ensimmäinen kosmonautti – kieltäytyi kutsusta, kun siitä ei olisi ollut mitään hyötyä . 10 July 2019 . Yle.fi . July 26, 2020 .
  10. Web site: fi . Jyrki Laukkanen . Suomen Tietokirjailijat ry . July 26, 2020 .
  11. Book: Roberts, Andrew Lawrence . From Good King Wenceslas to the Good Soldier Švejk: a dictionary of Czech popular culture . . Budapest . 2005 . 141 . 963-7326-26-X .
  12. Book: Bunch . Bryan . Hellemans . Alexander . The history of science and technology: a browser's guide to the great discoveries, inventions, and the people who made them, from the dawn of time to today . Houghton Mifflin Harcourt . New York . 2004 . 679 . registration . 0-618-22123-9 .
  13. Web site: FilmPolski. Filmpolski.pl. 10 August 2017.