Russia Is Ready to Cooperate with Turkmenistan in Cosmonaut Training.
13.04.2026 | 15:35 |On the eve of Cosmonautics Day, a flower-laying ceremony was held at the bust of Yuri Gagarin in the Russian House in Ashgabat. During the ceremony, announcements that could mark a new stage in the country's technological development were made. This includes not only the launch of satellites but also the possibility of training a Turkmen cosmonaut. As Russian Ambassador Ivan Volynkin noted, the potential for bilateral cooperation covers a broad spectrum: from navigation technologies and the joint production of spacecraft to fundamental scientific research, TASS reports.
For Turkmenistan, space is not an abstract dream, but a tangible history. A symbol of this continuity is Oleg Kononenko, a native of Chardzhou (now Turkmenabat), a Hero of Turkmenistan and Russia, a man whose path to the stars began on the banks of the Amu Darya. Today, Kononenko not only heads the Cosmonaut Training Center but also holds the absolute world record for total time spent in orbit, surpassing 1,110 days. His upcoming sixth flight is scheduled for the fall of 2026.
However, Turkmenistan's current space agenda is primarily pragmatic. The development of its own satellite constellation and navigation systems directly impacts the digital transformation of the economy, the accuracy of agricultural forecasting, and the efficiency of natural resource management. Russia's willingness to share expertise in this field provides young Turkmen scientists and engineers with access to cutting-edge laboratories and technologies.
The diplomat's proposal to train a Turkmen cosmonaut provides a powerful humanitarian and inspiring impetus for this cooperation. It is a signal to a new generation of explorers: the boundaries of possibilities are expanding, and the path to space, pioneered by Yuri Gagarin 65 years ago, remains a viable route for international partnership.