Originally posted by Hangtime
The Russians have no 'edge' in profitability, no exemplary saftey record and no claim on superiority in space.
37 years of Soyuz disposable spaceships, 2 accidents, 4 crew members lost.
Vladimir Komarov - a parachute system failure in 1966 on Soyuz-1, then Dobrovolskiy, Volkov and Patsayev - a landing capsule depressurized on reentry, the crew died from suffocation in stratosphere. Since then crew always wears light pressurized suits ("rescue" model) on active stages.
Last accident happened in 1971.
2 times manned launches had problems on takeoff, both times crew survived (both times mission commander was Vladimir Titov) - an explosion on launch position (emergency rescue system jerked the capsule right out the explosion, a fantastic scene, the SEA of flame!) and a second stage failure (capsule was dragged away from launch vehicle at about 100km altitude and landed in the mountains on ballistic trajectory). Happened in early 80s.
Once a spaceship main engine failure on orbit, IIRC 1977, crew - Rukavishnikov and Ivanov (Bulgarian), mission to Salyut abotred, emergency landing on secondary engine several days later, the guys landed on a lake.
Pretty small list for 37 years and hundreeds of launches. Compared to incredible things like the Spacelab story Soviet space program was extremely reliable.
Soyuz launch vehicle is based on R-7 first generation ICBM first tested in 1956. The technology is perfected during almost 50 years of production.
In the 80s USSR had more launches every two weeks then USA made each year.
Unlike Space Shuttle, Soyuz is constantly improved. The last model had a first flight after ISS project was started.
Russia is so far the only country that can make long-time life support systems. Please, no offences, but Russian cosmonauts who flew Shuttle missions said that Shuttle stinks. That's why they can't stay in orbit for more then 2 weeks.