This post first appeared on Today in Alternate History based on an idea from Allen W. McDonnell.
September 24, 1966 - birth of the Space Shuttle
A joint study
conducted by NASA and the U.S. Air Force concluded that a reusable
orbiter was the most cost-effective way of satisfying their future
demands for a new space vehicle. With the moon landing still three years away,
it was major milestone that went largely unrecognized at the time.
The
proven technology of the two-stage Saturn V rocket was the logical
choice of heavy launch vehicle, saving both cost and accelerating
development time. Re-purposing Apollo hardware proved to be more than
expedient. Most significant of all, a new "means to an end" approach
would emerge. This was at a critical juncture when public interest was
fading fast and even the U.S. Air Force was losing enthusiasm in the
space program.
The stunning success of the Space Shuttle
sharpened the focus, turning attention to Skylab, the very first U.S.
space station. Occupied by American crews for up to twenty-four weeks at
a time, Skylab made permanent (or at least long-term) living in space
possible. But this was only made possible by affordable space flights
from a reusable orbiter with easily replaced rocketry.
The next major breakthrough was the space station's centrifuge segment that
enabled astronauts to sleep and exercise, maintaining bone health that
made living in space long term much healthier for the crew. Less than a
decade after the moon-landing, the Space program had gone off-world - it
was a truly remarkable achievement.
A NASA-only program would
likely have focused on non-military applications such as science, but the
continued involvement of the U.S. Air Force near-guaranteed
weaponization. By the time that the Soviet Union had invaded
Afghanistan, Washington was ready to abandon the
Outer Space Treaty of 1967, which
prohibited nuclear, biological, or chemical weapons from being placed in
or used from Earth's orbit. The result was the so-called "rod from the
Gods," a bundle of telephone-pole-size tungsten projectiles that could
hit a city with the explosive power of an intercontinental ballistic
missile.
Project Thor was successfully used in Grenada,
and the Falklands, but most decisively to repel the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwait in 1991. This weaponized space platform became of increasing
importance after September 11th, enabling the United States to quickly
win the war on terror by eliminating Osama Bin Laden and his al-qaeda
terrorists in the caves of Tora Bora. The next phase was a mini-rod that
could intercept another September 11 attack.
Author's Note:
In
reality, the OTL ceramic tiles, completely new engines with external
tank and Solid Rocket Boosters were selected instead to create a
completely new vehicle combining several new techniques and
technologies. In OTL, NASA and international partners required 136
launches with seven different launch vehicles to build the International
Space Station. Using the two-stage Saturn V configuration it could have
all been placed in orbit in 10 to 12 launches.
Provine's Addendum:
With orbital weapons considered a new level expected of national defense, a new chapter of the Space Race began to fill orbit with "floating fortresses." The Outer Space Treaty had been challenged in 1976 with the Bogota Declaration in which eight equatorial nations called for sovereignty over the portions of geostationary orbit that lie continuously over their territories. Although it initially did not gain much traction, US backing through the 1980s effectively broke up Earth's low orbit into a series of "islands" and "international waters" where artificial satellites could travel.
An offshoot of the rapid production of standardized Saturn V rockets was the declining cost for private satellites for weather and communications. Satellite television and later internet access drove companies to invest in their own long-term living facilities for repairs and updates. Space tourism flourished with ever-growing populations in orbit for customer support and care. The Moon became the next obvious destination, which offered not only real estate but mineral wealth such as earth-common gold more prevalent in upper regions due to the lower gravity and minerals unique to the moon. With the Outer Space Treaty effectively in the world's recycling bins, the Moon would also serve as the next step to commercially colonizing the rest of the solar system.
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