In 1960,
President John F. Kennedy challenged US scientists to land an American on the Moon and bring him back safely to Earth, before the decade was out.
NASA rose to the occasion and achieved this staggering task with the landing of
Apollo 11 on the Moon in 1969. In 1961, NASA realized that the Indian Ocean region was a black hole of data relating to the wind structure of the upper atmosphere which was badly needed for NASA's satellite/Apollo programs. NASA offered all countries on the littoral of the Indian Ocean help to establish rocket ranges in order to obtain such data on condition of fully sharing it with NASA.
President Ayub Khan accompanied by his Chief Scientific Advisor Prof.
Abdus Salam were on a state visit in the U.S. at the time. Pakistan seized the offer and Prof.
Abdus Salam invited Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission's (PAEC) senior engineer
Tariq Mustafa to join him in meeting with NASA officials in September 1961 to finalize the arrangement and Pakistan was the first country to take up the offer. The Rehbar sounding rocket program was built around the U.S. Nike-Cajun/Apache rockets carrying sodium vapor and experiments to measure the wind velocities and wind shears in the upper atmosphere. The 5-member team responsible for this pioneering program was led by Tariq Mustafa and also included
Salim Mehmud and Sikander Zaman, both of whom later became Chairmen of SUPARCO. Rehbar-1 was launched on 7 June 1962. In a period of nine months; the Pakistani team was established, their training completed in US facilities, the rocket range equipment and instrumentation procured, the scientific payloads selected, construction of the rocket range at Sonmiani completed and the first rocket successfully launched. This was a unique achievement that even surprised NASA's specialists. Pakistan was the first amongst all developing (including Brazil, China and India) and Islamic countries to carry out a scientific rocketry program. The Rehbar-I successful launch carried a payload of 80
pounds of
sodium and it streaked up about 130 km into the
atmosphere. The Rehbar-I was a two-stage rocket with all solid-propellant motors. The first launch of the Rehbar-I took place in
Sonmiani on 7 June 1962. == Achievements ==