"We believe that Venus is a Russian planet."

Dibs!

Russian space agency chief Dmitry Rogozin called Venus a "Russian planet" on Tuesday at an industry exhibition taking place in Moscow.

The unusual comment followed the recent high-profile discovery of significant sources of phosphine gas in the planet's atmosphere, a possible sign of life.

"Our country was the first and only one to successfully land on Venus," Rogozin said, as quoted by The Moscow Times, referring to the country's successful explorations of Venus in the 60s, 70s and 80s.

Roscosmos piled on, writing that the "enormous gap between the Soviet Union and its competitors in the investigation of Venus contributed to the fact that the United States called Venus a Soviet planet," in a statement quoted by Euronews.

Due Credit

The Soviet Union launched a number of Venera spacecraft to the hostile planet, which completed a number of firsts including the first orbit and crash-landing. Venera 7 eventually became the first lander to make a successful landing on Venus, in 1970, sending data back to Earth for 23 minutes before it succumbed to the planet's hellish conditions.

NASA, in contrast, has never focused on Venetian exploration — though it did send an orbiter and a probe to the planet in 1978.

Planet Russia

Roscosmos has announced plans to launch an independent expedition to Venus. Such a mission would follow an already planned collaborative mission with the US called Venera-D.

But Rogozin pushed back against the recent findings that suggest that life could exist in the planet's atmosphere.

"The [Russian] spacecraft gathered information about the planet — it is like hell over there," Rogozin said.

READ MORE: Venus Is a ‘Russian Planet,’ Roscosmos Chief Says [The Moscow Times]

More on Venus: Scientist Behind Venus Life Claim Describes It as “Crazy”


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