If I were a Fourth of July orator, I’d be sure to work into my panegyrics several paragraphs in praise of America’s space program, one of the greatest scientific and technological feats of mankind’s history. Apparently, if NASA Administrator Charles Bolden is to be believed, President Obama holds a different view. From an interview with Al-Jazeera:
[B]efore I became the NASA Administrator [President Obama] charged me with three things: One was that he wanted me to re-inspire children to want to get into science and math, that he wanted me to expand our international relationships, and third, and perhaps foremost, he wanted me to find a way to reach out to the Muslim world and engage much more with predominantly Muslim nations to help them feel good about their historic contribution to science, math, and engineering.”
General Bolden’s honesty is beyond question, so there can’t be any doubt about the truth of this anecdote. It’s certainly not one that anybody with a lick of common sense would invent. Whatever the general’s private views, he offers us an insight into what his boss thinks about space exploration, namely, not much. The redefinition of NASA’s mission – from expanding to frontiers of knowledge to serving as a diplomatic tool and an inspiration for schoolchildren and Moslems – is astonishing.
To be fair to General Bolden, his answer to the interviewer’s next question softens the President’s vision to one of drawing on the best minds of all nations to contribute to space exploration, and he goes on to express his enthusiasm for manned missions to deep space. He even has kind words for the ideas underlying the Constellation program, lamenting that it was underfunded. (He isn’t asked, and doesn’t answer, why the proposed increases to NASA’s budget couldn’t have gone to putting Constellation right again.)
One other tidbit: While doubting that any nation can single-handedly develop a viable deep space program, General Bolden insists that the U.S. is the undisputed leader in this effort and that other spacefaring countries welcome our role. I hope that his optimism hasn’t skewed his judgement.
Unfortunately, the President will ultimately decide what objectives NASA will pursue. He seems more interested in Mecca than Mars.
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