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Plummeting Chinese Rocket Crashes Into Indian Ocean

As a Chinese rocket plummets to Earth after launching a space station module, the US military is taking a bold "wait and see what happens" plan of attack.

Over the last week, the world has been captivated by a Chinese rocket plummeting back to Earth in an uncontrolled descent (a 2021 “mood,” if ever there was one).


Tonight, China’s Long March 5B rocket — — finally crashed down Saturday evening over the Indian Ocean, .


This is not the first time we’ve seen something like this, let alone something like this from China. Last May, another Long March 5B fell to Earth as well — and while most of it burned up on reentry and the majority of it landed in the ocean, parts of it did, in fact, .


Long story short, tonight’s reentry caps an embarrassing spectacle for China’s rapidly-expanding space program, which pulled global attention away from a successful launch — though it’s too soon to say whether it’ll shame Beijing into avoiding similar incidents going forward.


The latest rocket was sent into space as part of a mission to build the country’s ambitious Tiangong Space Station, carrying what will eventually be living quarters for astronauts on board the orbital outpost.


Earlier this week, it was established that any damage related to the crash-landing of the Long March 5B was technically . And U.S. officials made it clear that they were not, in fact, going to attempt to .


China isn’t the only country that’s occasionally had trouble controlling its orbital flotsam. Way back in 1979, NASA’s first space station, Skylab, plummeted back to Earth in a similar uncontrolled fashion, spewing parts across parts of Australia — and, like China’s latest debacle, prompted a in advance of its descent as the public speculated about where it would land.



Read more: [The Washington Post]



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