According to news, the successful spacewalk is the beginning of the process of assembling a space station from two Shenzhou orbital modules, the next major goal of China's manned spaceflight program. Additionally, China is pursuing lunar exploration and hopes to attempt to land a man on the moon in the next decade perhaps ahead of NASA's 2020 target date for returning to the moon. China launched its first manned mission, Shenzhou 5, in 2003 making them the third country after Russia and the United States to launch a man into space. That was followed by a two-man mission in 2005.
According to the Chinese, the military-backed program has grown increasingly less secretive and officials have hinted in recent days at a desire for greater cooperation with other nations. China plans to mass produce the next version of the Shenzhou ship to service a future space station and says it may make such missions available to other countries.
Space cooperation between China and other nations has so far been limited and the U.S. has refused Chinese involvement in the international space station for fear it could gain technical secrets applicable to its arms industry. A Chinese space program official said earlier that Russian technicians would assist in Saturday's spacewalk, but it wasn't clear what role they played.
After the launch on Friday, the astronauts had been largely occupied with preparing the suits and adapting to zero gravity. Meals aboard the craft have followed a typical Chinese menu, featuring versions of kung pao chicken, shrimp and dried fruit, the official Xinhua News Agency said. On Friday, the three-module capsule shifted from an oval orbit to a more stable circular orbit 213 miles above Earth, meaning it is circling at a constant distance. The change ensured that Earth's gravitational pull would not vary during the spacewalk attempt and will help Shenzhou make a precise landing on the Inner Mongolian Steppe on Sunday after its re-entry vehicle bursts through Earth's atmosphere, Xinhua said.

