 Source: Activist Post
Source: Activist PostAndrew W. Griffin
We
 have been watching the drama involving the ailing Russian Phobos-Grunt 
(a.k.a Fobos-Grunt or “Phobos-soil") spacecraft with great interest, as 
the probe appears to be stranded in Earth orbit, likely to re-enter the 
Earth's atmosphere and burn up, perhaps as soon as next month.
In
  fact, latest reports on the $170 million Phobos-Grunt craft suggest  
that Russian scientists "have given up on any hope of regaining even  
minimal control" over the probe and that it is likely breaking apart, if reports from the U.S. Army Strategic Command, as reported today in The Moscow Times, are accurate. 
Launched
 on Nov. 9 (11/9/11) from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, 
Phobos-Grunt was designed to take a trip to the potato-shaped Martian 
moon of Phobos where it would take samples of its soil and return to 
Earth in 2014. It would have been the first spacecraft On board was 
China’s first Mars probe, Yinghuo-1. It was rocketed into low-Earth 
orbit and two thrusters that would have sent it on its way to Phobos 
failed to operate.
And
 now that it is expected to crash back to Earth, there is concern about 
the highly toxic hydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide onboard. But it is 
simply expected to burn up before hitting Earth. 
So
 what caused the Phobos-Grunt to fail? It’s not really clear. 
Speculation, conspiracy theories and more have been offered up. After 
all, it is Phobos that had former NASA astronaut and Moon landing hero 
Buzz Aldrin publicly talking about the mysteries of Phobos, one of 
Mars's two moons, the other being Deimos.
Said Aldrin on C-SPAN in July 2009: “…(V)isit the moon of Mars. There's a monolith
 there - a very unusual structure on this little potato-shaped object 
(Phobos) that goes around Mars once every seven hours.When people find 
out about that they are going to say, ‘Who put that there? Who put that 
there?’ Well, uh, the universe put it there, or if you choose, God put 
it there.”
|  | 
| Many Astrophysicists claim Phobos is artificial | 
And photos do seem to show an unusual structure on the surface of the curious little moonlet.
Meanwhile,
 the Russians are extremely upset about  this latest failure and are 
looking for someone to blame. Russian  President Dmitry Medvedev, according to the British news site The Week, “has threatened severe punishment for anyone found responsible for the failure of the … Phobos-Grunt.”
Medvedev was quoted in a Nov. 26, 2011 Reuters report
 that the Phobos-Grunt failure and another recent disaster involving a 
cargo ship, taking food and fuel to the International Space Station, are
 embarrassing to Russia’s space program, Roscosmos, and that if it was 
sabotaged somehow or simply put together in a sloppy or careless way, 
they will pay for what they have done.
Medvedev
 said: “I am not suggesting putting them up against the wall like under 
Josef Vissarionovich (Stalin), but seriously punish either financially 
or, if the fault is obvious, it could be a disciplinary or even criminal
 punishment.”
Russian news network, RT, offered a report titled “Did U.S. ‘climate weapon’ knock-out Russian probe?” 
An interesting idea. It quotes General-Lieutenant Nikolay Rodionov who suggests that the HAARP
 station in Alaska – officially reported to “study … the ionosphere and 
its use for communication” – gave off “powerful electromagnetic 
radiation” and may have “affected the control system of the 
interplanetary probe.”
Of course Rodionov may be suggesting this to distract from the real causes, which may have been in its design. But its still an interesting idea. Another site. Joe Bowman’s Science Blog, asks if there is a “Mars curse,” considering the high number of failed probes that have tried making it to Mars
You
 may remember that in the late  1980s, right before the Soviet Union 
fell, the Phobos 1 and 2 probes  were launched for similar reasons. 
Phobos 1, launched July 7,1988,  failed to reach its destination while 
Phobos 2, launched a week later,  eventually did get to Mars in early 
1989 and did take photos of the  Martian moon, including the 
controversial "last photo"
  which included an alleged UFO of enormous size accompanying Phobos.  
Communication with Phobos was soon lost after this March 1989 photo
  was taken, leading the Phobos 2 team to say publicly that it was lost 
 either due to a computer malfunction or an "impact event" by an unknown
  object. Other photos released to the scientific community by the 
Soviets  may further explain their current interest in returning to 
Phobos 23  years later.
At the time, Dr. Marina Popovich,
  a former Soviet test pilot known as Russia's "female Chuck Yeager,"  
smuggled out the photo -- allegedly given to her by famed Soviet 
Cosmonaut  Alexey Leonov and that both Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev 
and  then-President George H.W. Bush discussed the photo at a European  
conference. Popovich, it should be noted "has been outspoken about UFO  
reality."
And then there is the "Phobos-Grunt Conspiracy" video which posits the idea that it could reenter Earth, falling to the ground like a "supersonic toxic bomb." 
The video also reminds us that also on the Russian probe are The Planetary Society's "Life Experiment"
  organisms. This part of the probe's mission were it to succeed, would 
 test "the survivability of microorganisms in the conditions of deep  
space" and is designed to study the "panspermia hypothesis that  
microogranisms have "traveled between planets sheltered deep inside  
space rocks," according to Planetary.org. The aforementioned video also 
 notes that these organisms could become more virulent while in space, 
as  noted in prior Space Shuttle missions involving microorganism  
experiments.
And,
 bringing to mind the Cold War-era, U.S.-Soviet “space race” years, 
while Russia watches Phobos-Grunt’s orbit decay, leading to its 
obliteration, NASA successfully launched its own, new Mars rover, Curiosity, which will, as the Springfield (Mass.) Republican newspaper excitedly reported this week, "try to determine if there might once have been life of some sort on the Red Planet."
Adds the Republican
  editorial: "It has all the elements of a good, old-fashioned drama, 
and  the best of science fiction, too. The outcome is unknown. The  
possibilities infinite, thrilling."
Indeed.
  Perhaps we are entering a new time for space exploration, although  
NASA's current status and administrative bungling does not inspire much 
 hope that space exploration is a top priority, as we have reported  
before in our Red Dirt Report piece "Humanity's destiny lies in "the final frontier."
At this time experts on space travel are suggesting that humans will likely go to Mars in the 2030s and that the mysterious moon of Phobos, as reported at the Daily Galaxy, “is a vastly promising location for future exploration.” Continuing, the article
 notes that Phobos “has long been an anomaly; its orbital 
characteristics suggest it may be hollow. More aggressive speculation 
suggests that Phobos may in fact be a derelict spacecraft of the 
‘generation ark’ variety described by science writers such as Isaac 
Asimov.”
But the Daily Galaxy
 doesn’t stop there. It states that “unexplained surface features such 
as the numerous converging grooves, together with the conspicuous 
monolith-like formations, plus the possibility that Phobos harbors 
uneroded structures deserving of close attention.”
And
 clearly NASA is interested in the “monolith” or  boulder or whatever it
 is because by investigating the object it “could answer questions about
 the moon’s composition and history.” Remember, NASA  representatives, 
whether in official or unofficial capacity (think Buzz  Aldrin), don't 
go out publicly talking about mysterious monoliths on  equally 
mysterious moons unless they really think there's something  there worth
 checking out (think Arthur C. Clarke's 2001: A Space Odyssey and its sequels). After all, if Phobos is hollow and Earth's Moon is also hollow,
  what does that say about those celestial bodies and their placement in
  space near those two planets? At this point one gets the impression 
that  someone - or something - doesn't want us poking around Phobos.
But despite these setbacks, many scientists, particularly back here in the U.S. are hopeful and look forward to visiting Phobos.
Quoting NASA imaging specialist Lars Fleming, the aforementioned Daily Galaxy article concludes: “If we can get to that object (the monolith/boulder), we likely don’t need to go anywhere else.”
Andrew W. Griffin is the editor of the RedDirtReport.com. He can be reached a reddirtreporter@gmail.com.
