The first man on the moon says that the proposed cuts to NASA’s space exploration program are a mistake.
Neil Armstrong, Jim Lovell and Gene Cernan issued a statement calling the cuts “devastating” to the U.S. space program and “destines our nation to become one of second- or even third-rate stature.”
Armstrong was the fist man on the moon, Lovell commanded the Apollo 13 mission and Cernan is the last human to have walked on the surface of the moon.
In statements e-mailed to the Associated Press and NBC, Armstrong and other astronauts took exception with Obama’s plan to cancel NASA’s return-to-the-moon program, dubbed Project Constellation.
Armstrong, in an e-mail to the AP, said he had “substantial reservations.” More than two dozen Apollo-era veterans, including Lovell and Cernan, signed another letter Monday calling the plan a “misguided proposal that forces NASA out of human space operations for the foreseeable future.”
The statements came days before Obama is to visit Kennedy Space Center on Thursday to explain his vision for NASA.
Not all former astronauts have come out against the plan. Armstrong’s crewmate Buzz Aldrin, the second man to stand on the moon, has endorsed Obama’s plan, which includes investing $6 billion to develop commercial space-taxi services for astronauts traveling to and from the International Space Station. Aldrin said the proposal will “allow us to again be pushing the boundaries to achieve new and challenging things beyond Earth.”
The plan would also extend the space station operations through 2020. It would cancel Project Constellation and the Ares rockets, which NASA has been developing for six years at a cost of more than $9 billion. Obama would retain the Constellation project’s Orion capsule. The capsule, which was to go to the moon, will instead be sent unoccupied to the International Space Station to stand by as an emergency vehicle to return astronauts home.
Administration officials told the AP that NASA will speed up development of a rocket that would have the power to blast crew and cargo far from Earth, although no destination has been chosen. The rocket would be ready to launch several years earlier than under the moon plan. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to not detract from the presidential announcement.
The former astronauts said, “It appears that we will have wasted our current $10-plus-billion investment in Constellation. … Without the skill and experience that actual spacecraft operation provides, the USA is far too likely to be on a long downward slide to mediocrity.”
ejdalise says
I thought we were already third rate . . . at least based on our television programs.
Lejon from Chandler says
So, Space Cowboys (who had to also be rocket scientists back in the day) think the president’s plan is sub-optimal. OK. I can accept that.