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If all goes well, Japan will become at least the fourth country with a moon mission this year, making lunar exploration more active than it's been in five decades. The renaissance is being led by nations not usually considered leaders of the space race, which is an important development for the entire planet.
In truth, launching a large tin can at the moon in the hopes of sticking the landing is challenging and fun, but it's not a moneymaker. Anyone hoping to spin a dime is better off staying grounded and finding ways to get AI to serve up ads or create cat videos. Thankfully, human endeavor isn't driven solely by profits.
Icky as it sounds, great adventures are more often driven by nationalism and imperial conquest. India won the latest round in August by being the first to land a spacecraft near the moon's south pole. Tellingly, it managed the feat just days after superpower Russia failed at the same task. Since we're keeping score, the South Asian nation now becomes the second country to have a currently operational rover on the moon, behind China.
On Thursday morning, Japan's H2-A rocket launch, already delayed by weather, will carry what could become that country's first lunar lander.
For space nerds, this is the most-exciting time since the 1960s, when the Soviet Union and the U.S. traded rockets and the great Space Race became a proxy for the Cold War. Americans won the race to land humans on the moon and were also victorious in the war. And we mustn't overlook the reality that the nation with superior technology — much of it developed in direct response to the moonshot rivalry — has remained the strongest power ever since.
All up, we have at least five nations — China, Japan, South Korea, Israel and Russia — vying to put an object on the moon's surface, a far tougher feat than merely circling the moon and taking photos. The U.S. plans to send humans back for the first time since 1972 and set up a base there.