Mitt Romney Reveals Space Exploration Plans (But Few Details)
By Mike Wall | SPACE.com
Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney has unveiled his plans for the future of NASA and American space exploration, unleashing a blistering attack on President Barack Obama in the process.
In a policy paper released Saturday (Sept. 22), Romney and running mate Paul Ryan pledge to secure the nation's global leadership position in space, which, they say, has eroded significantly during the president's first term.
"Over the past four years, the Obama Administration,
through poor policy and outright negligence, has badly weakened one of
the hallmarks of American leadership and ingenuity — our nation’s space program," the paper reads.
"Rebuilding NASA, restoring U.S. leadership, and creating new
opportunities for space commerce will be hard work, but Mitt Romney will
strive to rebuild an institution worthy of our aspirations and capable
once again of leading the world toward new frontiers," the authors add. [Gallery: President Obama and NASA]
The paper says Obama's 2010 cancellation of the moon-oriented
Constellation program robbed NASA's human spaceflight program of much of
its focus and direction. Romney and Ryan promise to restore that focus —
but they're unlikely to increase NASA's funding, which stands at $17.7 billion in the White House's proposed 2013 federal budget.
"A strong and successful NASA does not require more funding, it needs
clearer priorities," the paper reads.
"Romney will ensure that NASA has
practical and sustainable missions. There will be a balance of pragmatic
and top-priority science with inspirational and groundbreaking exploration programs."
No further details about these prospective science and exploration
missions are provided. Indeed, the eight-page document is sparing with
details throughout, saying that specifics will be drawn up later, after
consulation with representatives from NASA, the Air Force, academia and
the business community.
Instead, the Republican nominee promises broad commitments to work with
international partners, strengthen America's national security space
programs — including "the development of capabilities that will deter
adversaries seeking to damage or destroy the space capabilities of the
U.S. and its allies" — and revitalize the nation's aerospace industry.
Romney and Ryan also say they'll encourage the continued emergence of the American private spaceflight industry, which they feel NASA should rely on for crew and cargo flights to low-Earth orbit to the extent possible.
This last vision is similar to the one the space agency is already
embarked upon. NASA is currently grooming private American spaceships to
fill the shoes of the space shuttle fleet, which was retired last year.
One company, California-based SpaceX, is set to launch its first
contracted cargo run to the orbiting lab for NASA on Oct. 7. And the
agency hopes at least two different commercial vehicles will be ready to
fly crews to and from the International Space Station by 2017.
Meanwhile, NASA is developing a huge rocket called the Space Launch System
and a capsule known as Orion to carry astronauts to a near-Earth
asteroid by 2025 and the vicinity of Mars by the mid-2030s — goals laid
out by Obama in 2010.
But until the commercial astronaut taxis are ready to go, the nation
will be dependent on Russian Soyuz spacecraft to launch its crews to
low-Earth orbit. And the Romney-Ryan campaign lays a great deal of blame
for this situation on the current administration.
"We have presided over a dismantling of the space program over the last
four years," Ryan, a Republican senator from Wisconsin, said during a
speech in Florida on Saturday.
Obama "has put the space program on a path where we are conceding our
global position as the unequivocal leader in space," Ryan added. "Today,
if we want to send an astronaut to the space station, we have to pay
the Russians to take them there. China may someday be looking down on us
from the moon. That is unacceptable."
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