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Sent: Wednesday, March 10, 2010 9:20 PM
Subject: Obama facing uprising over new, NO space exploration NASA strategy!


http://asia.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20100311/tbs-obama-space-7318940.html?printer=1


WHAT SPACE RACE?! PREZ OBAMA FACING NEW UPRISING OVER HIS NEW NASA
STRATEGY! / BY CANCELLING AMERICA's RETURN TO SPACE and TO THE MOON, HAS
PREZ OBAMA CEDED THE LEADERSHIP IN SPACE TO RUSSIA and RED CHINA?! -
By Steve Holland, Reuters, Thursday, March 11, 2010

SPACE EXPLORATION FLASH BANG:

- Lawmakers, space veterans rankled

- Job losses feared in Florida, Alabama, Texas

- Obama expected to defend shift at space conference

WASHINGTON, March 11 - U.S. President Barack Obama is trying to tamp
down an uprising in politically vital Florida against a new strategy for
NASA that has rankled space veterans and lawmakers and sparked fears of
job losses.

Obama's decision to kill NASA's Constellation program to launch
astronauts into orbit and return Americans to the moon has prompted
soul-searching on whether the United States is prepared to cede a
pre-eminent space role to Russia and China.

"As with all great human achievements, our commitment to space must be
renewed and encouraged or we will surely be surpassed by other nations
who are presently challenging our leadership in space," Democratic and
Republican members of the U.S. Congress from Florida wrote to Obama last
week.

Obama's move for a greater private sector role in space launches -- as
he seeks to keep ballooning federal deficits in check -- has generated
fears of job losses among thousands of NASA employees who provide an
important economic base in Florida, a state usually crucial in
presidential elections.

Employees at major space complexes in Alabama and Texas are also
worried. It is making for a potentially explosive environment when Obama
travels to the Cape Canaveral area on April 15 to host a space
conference with top officials and leaders in the field.

"What reception will they get? Not good," said Keith Cowing, editor of
nasawatch.com, a Web site that closely monitors the U.S. space agency.
"It's a gutsy move. It's Daniel in the Lion's Den."
Obama, in his Feb. 1 budget proposal, planned to increase NASA's overall
funding to $19 billion in 2011 with an emphasis on science and less
spent on space exploration.

He would CANCEL the Constellation program's Orion spacecraft and Ares
rockets, after $9 billion and five years of tests. Constellation is
aimed at returning astronauts to the moon in the 2020s to clear the way
for a Mars mission.

Instead, Obama would spend $6 billion a year for five years to support
commercial spacecraft development and pursue new technologies to explore
the solar system in what the White House called "a more effective and
affordable way."

The LARGER ISSUE

Various members of the far-flung U.S. space community have been troubled
by the change, such as former NASA administrator Michael Griffin, who
struggled to get more funding for Constellation from the previous
administration of President George W. Bush and believes Obama should
stick with it.

"There's a larger issue here," Griffin said. "Does the United States
want to have a real space program? Do we actually think we can have a
robust, exciting, world-leading space program by hiring private
enterprise to furnish it?"

But John Logsdon, former director of the Space Policy Institute at
George Washington University, said he believed it was time for the
private sector to get more involved in space.

"There's no reason to think that the technical talent in the private
sector, combined with a significant degree of NASA engagement, cannot
come up with a good solution," he said.

The debate to some extent has riven the space community. Buzz Aldrin,
the second man on the moon, supports the change in direction while
Harrison Schmitt, one of the last on the lunar surface, opposes it.
NASA already has contracts with Space Exploration Technologies and
Orbital Sciences Corp <ORB.N> to deliver cargo to the International
Space Station. SpaceX and other firms are developing spaceships that can
carry passengers to orbit and back.

The shuttle system still has four (4) more flights to get crews and
hardware to the International Space Station before the craft are
retired. After that, NASA will be without a heavy-lift capability for a
period of time.

This means Americans would have to pay to ride on Russian rockets to get
into orbit, a stark turn of events after the pivotal battle the United
States and the Soviet Union fought to outdo each other in the space
race.

To maintain a lift capability, Florida Democratic Senator Bill Nelson
wants the administration to add one shuttle flight and develop the Ares
rockets that are part of the Constellation program.

Ultimately, Nelson believes Obama needs to give the United States a goal
for its space program and hopes it will be a mission to Mars.
(Additional reporting by Irene Klotz; Editing by John O'Callaghan)
------------------------------------------
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