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Changing the Rules Mid-Race - How Artemis Lets Washington Redefine "Winning" at the Moon - Part 4

Written by  Monday, 09 March 2026 04:07
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Mar 09, 2026
In classic Washington style, the United States has found a way to keep 'winning' the new Moon race even as its flagship program slips, bloats and mutates. With the latest Artemis overhaul, NASA isn't just re-planning a mission sequence - it's helping Trump's America quietly rewrite the rules of the game so that almost any outcome can be spun as victory.
by Clarence Oxford
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Mar 09, 2026
In classic Washington style, the United States has found a way to keep "winning" the new Moon race even as its flagship program slips, bloats and mutates. With the latest Artemis overhaul, NASA isn't just re-planning a mission sequence - it's helping Trump's America quietly rewrite the rules of the game so that almost any outcome can be spun as victory.

From "first back" to "who writes the rules"

In the Apollo era, the rules were brutally simple: whoever landed first, won. Today, Artemis lets the U.S. play a more flexible game.

On the surface, the objective sounds familiar: put American astronauts on the lunar south pole "by 2028" and then build a sustainable presence. Underneath, though, the goalposts have already moved. Washington now defines success less as a single Apollo-style photo-op and more as something looser: leading a coalition of partners, setting norms for resource use, and locking allies into the U.S. legal and technological orbit via the Artemis Accords.

That reframing means the scoreboard isn't just "who plants the next flag," but "who writes the operating manual for the Moon." Even if Artemis slips, the U.S. can still claim it is "winning" because it has more signatories, more standards, and more visible commercial partners than China's tighter, state-led effort.

A2 as political insurance

Artemis II, the crewed lunar flyby now expected in early April 2026, is central to this narrative shield.

If that mission flies successfully, Trump can say, truthfully enough, that America has returned people to deep space around the Moon for the first time in more than fifty years. From a domestic political standpoint, that alone checks a lot of boxes: SLS works with crew, Orion works beyond low Earth orbit, and the U.S. has visibly "beaten" China back into cislunar space.

Even if the later landing missions bog down, Artemis II becomes a reusable talking point:

- Proof of concept that the U.S. can still send astronauts into lunar space

- A handy line in speeches about "restoring American greatness in space."

- A fig leaf for any future decision to slow-roll or quietly scale back the more ambitious parts of the lunar plan.

The flyby doesn't win the race in any objective sense - China is targeting an actual landing by 2030 - but it gives Washington enough footage and bragging rights to claim it has "reclaimed leadership" regardless of what happens next.

Landing dates as narrative clay

The 2028 landing date is not just a schedule; it's narrative clay.

By shuffling Artemis III into a 2027 low-Earth orbit lander test and moving the first landing to Artemis IV, NASA has actually increased the number of opportunities for slippage. If anything goes wrong with SLS, Orion or the landers, 2028 quietly morphs into 2029 or even 2030.

But because the date is always framed as "by 2028," not "on this specific day in 2028," the political system buys itself a wide window:

- If Artemis IV lands in 2028, Trump can claim he beat China back to the surface and hit his own goal

- If the landing drifts into mid-2029, it suddenly aligns with the 60th anniversary of Apollo 11, creating a ready-made "we returned exactly sixty years later" stump-speech narrative

- If China slips or staggers, Washington can say the U.S. "set the pace" regardless of whether the first Artemis landing happened before or after Beijing's.

In other words, the mission dates are being kept intentionally elastic so that the story can be retrofitted to whatever reality emerges - a familiar pattern in U.S. grand projects.

Norms, not flags: the Artemis Accords as scoreboard

The Artemis Accords are the clearest example of where the rules have already changed.

Instead of racing to plant a flag and declare victory, the U.S. is racing to sign up as many partners as possible to a set of principles on transparency, interoperability and space resources. Each new country that joins is counted as a win, regardless of how many astronauts actually walk on the Moon in the 2020s.

This has several convenient effects:

- It turns a hardware-constrained program into a diplomatic success story

- It lets Washington say it "leads the coalition of countries that will explore the Moon peacefully," even if China executes the more impressive technical feats on its own

- It makes any criticism of Artemis spending easier to deflect: cuts can be painted as undermining not just NASA, but a broader coalition and a rules-based order in space.

By elevating norms and partnerships over simple landing counts, the U.S. gives itself multiple ways to declare victory in the Moon race, even if its own schedule performance is mediocre.

When the hardware breaks, the narrative survives

The risk, of course, is that at some point the hardware will break: another multi-year delay, a high-profile failure, or a budget crisis that forces real choices.

Trump's FY2026 budget proposal already sketches out one such scenario: deep cuts to NASA's top-line, early retirement of SLS and Orion, and cancellation of the Gateway outpost in favor of a leaner, more commercial posture. Congress may blunt the worst of that, but the template is clear.

If that kind of squeeze hits, Washington now has a playbook ready:

- Point to Artemis II and say "we returned people to lunar space."

- Point to the Accords and say "we wrote the rules."

- Point to commercial partners and say "we catalyzed a thriving lunar economy," even if most of it remains on PowerPoint.

The physical program can be stretched, slowed or even partially gutted while the narrative of leadership remains intact. For Trump, that's almost ideal: maximum rhetorical leverage, minimal need to pay the full bill for a genuine, sustained lunar presence.

In that sense, the Artemis overhaul is less about fixing a broken race and more about ensuring that, no matter how messy the outcome, the United States can still claim it "won" - not because it got there first or built the most, but because somewhere along the way, it quietly changed the rules of what "winning" means.

Related Links
Humans In Space at Artemis
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more


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