Can the US be trusted with the moon? A law scholar raises concerns after Artemis II's success.

The successful Artemis II trip around the Moon was a historic achievement — the first crewed lunar fly-by in more than 50 years, and the greatest distance yet travelled by humans from our "pale blue dot".

The mission was marked by engineering, scientific and technical feats, by the astronauts and team at NASA and beyond, who got the crew there and back safely.

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Artemis II deserves celebration. But the celebration should not crowd out political scrutiny.

program to start establishing a permanent moon base by 2030.

This is about more than exploration. As US President Donald Trump has said, it is about asserting "American space superiority", establishing a "sustained American presence" and developing a lunar economy. The US colonial thinking of a "manifest destiny to the stars" returns.

The bigger picture is that the US sees itself in a "space race" with what NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has called its "geopolitical adversary", China.

The Chang'e 5 return capsule at its landing site in Inner Mongolia, China, on Dec. 17, 2020. China became the first state to return rock samples from the far side of the moon through its Chang'e-6 mission in 2024. (Image credit: CASC)

One point of conflict is access to finite, valuable resources at the lunar south pole, where water ice could sustain life and provide rocket fuel for missions to Mars. More speculative, profit-driven visions also play a part, from mining helium-3 to extracting resources from asteroids and bringing them to Earth.

Artemis Accords are part of that effort. They are non-binding principles, but consequential.

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Grounded in the Outer Space Treaty of 1967, they offer a "blueprint" for how resource activities, and other unsettled topics, may be governed.

Many observers see the Artemis Accords as more transparent and open than China's counterpart, the International Lunar Research Station. However, critics argue the Artemis Accords undermine multilateral, consensus-based processes.

Sixty-one countries have signed the Artemis Accords. Only nine new signatories have joined since Trump's return as US president, versus 19 in the year prior. It remains to be seen if the trend continues.

only in contrast to China. This binary view can help the US escape scrutiny, especially in allied nations.

Consider America's recent actions here on Earth. As Artemis II drew our gaze skyward, the US–Israel war on Iran was intensifying.

In an expletive-filled post on Truth Social, Trump hinted at a nuclear attack with a threat that "a whole civilization will die tonight" unless Tehran reopened the Strait of Hormuz.

The US also threatened to target civilian infrastructure, after one strike hit a school, reportedly killing more than 150 people.

US President Donald Trump has not been guided by international law on Earth. (Image credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls)

All of this occurred amid the ongoing crisis and civilian casualties in Gaza, where Trump's "Board of Peace" has faced criticism for seeking to function as an "alternative UN".

Trump has also revived territorial ambitions toward Greenland, saying: "We need it". He floated annexing Canada as the fifty-first US state. He spoke of the "honor of taking Cuba". He declared he would "run" Venezuela.

All of these places have natural resources that would give the US strategic advantages, including in critical minerals and oil.

This conduct has raised concerns from international lawyers and international organizations. Even US allies have spoken up, whom Trump criticized for not joining the Iran war.

Antony Anghie, have long argued that the US uses international law selectively and in line with its own interests. This is not new with Trump, even if the pattern has now become more visible and more intense. What may be changing is that more of the world is taking notice, including states that once benefited from that status quo.

At the World Economic Forum in Davos this year, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney described the "rules-based order" as "partially false", in which "international law applied with varying rigor depending on the identity of the accused or the victim". He was not speaking about space — but his point applies here too.

This puts question marks over US leadership in space — and whether it will abide by agreed rules when control over lunar resources is no longer just a hypothetical question. Even America's own Artemis Accords principles may prove optional if they stop being convenient to US interests.

That question is worth considering, given Trump has already justified withdrawing from many international instruments and organisations for this reason. Even NATO may be next.

No superpower should be immune from scrutiny — on Earth or beyond.

This edited article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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