[sci.space] Press Briefing by NASA Administrator Truly on July 20 -- Full Text

EWTILENI@pucc.Princeton.EDU (Eric William Tilenius) (08/02/89)

                             THE WHITE HOUSE

                      Office of the Press Secretary

    For Immediate Release                         July 20, 1989

               PRESS BRIEFING BY ADMIRAL RICHARD H. TRULY

                   The Briefing Room, 11:25 A.M. EDT

    MR. FITZWATER:  Ladies and gentlemen, we have with us
    this morning to brief you, the Administrator of the
    National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Admiral
    Richard Truly.  Admiral Truly will have a brief opening
    statement and then take your questions.

    ADMIRAL TRULY:  Thank you and good morning.

    Q:  Got a sign-up list?  (Laughter.)

    TRULY:  July 20, 1989 is a very important day because
    it's 20 years after this nation first landed men on the
    Moon, and the President and the Vice President were kind
    enough to help NASA and the crew of Apollo 11 celebrate
    that on the steps of the Air and Space Museum, just a few
    moments ago.  It -- 1989, I think finds NASA and our
    space program in a healthy state.  We are flying again.
    As a matter of fact, we're going to be flying another
    shuttle flight here within the next few weeks.  Flight
    readiness review is early next week and then we'll set
    a launch date, which will be early in August.

            We're fighting hard on -- up on Congress for
    Space Station Freedom.  And as I have looked across the
    Agency, I think that I find NASA and the American civil
    space program to be poised and ready to move out into the
    future.  And I believe that President Bush very clearly
    this morning, and again, asserted that he believes that
    America should have an aggressive space program, and that
    we should both look back here to our own Planet Earth,
    where there are many environmental problems and many, I
    believe, that cannot be solved without a data collections
    program that we've called a "Mission to Planet Earth" to
    understand what's going on here on our Earth.

           But he also directed that we also look ahead to
    the future.  He said that he had asked the Vice
    President, as head of the National Space Council, to work
    with NASA to present a specific plan as soon as we could;
    to follow his broad direction, which was to have a long
    and steady goal of human exploration, as we did earlier.
    One that would be a long commitment, that would lead, in
    his words I believe, to the potential return to the Moon
    with a science outpost, possibly -- or go there to stay
    in the first decade of the next century, and then
    eventually later, a human exploration of Mars.

    Q:  Do you have a date on that?

    TRULY:  No, we don't.

    Q:  Any way of knowing?

    TRULY:  No, we don't, because we -- I just, frankly,
    learned this morning what his direction was.  He laid it
    out in three steps.  For the 1990's, he very clearly said
    that Space Station Freedom is our first priority, which
    it is today.  And incidentally, the space station stands
    on the route to any exploration direction.  And then the
    second step was a lunar -- a scientific outpost -- its
    purpose not to go, just touch the Moon, and return, but
    to do science there.

    Q:  Do you say that's the first decade of the next
    century?

    TRULY:  That's what the President said, yes.  The first
    decade of the next century.

    Q:  Admiral Truly, don't you and the administration
    already have a blueprint in place, deriving from the
    report of the National Commission on Space in 1985?  Why
    does the National Space Council and this administration
    need to go back and revisit this, when you already have
    this blueprint for the Moon and Mars and beyond?

    TRULY:  Well, as a matter of fact, that's really not so.
    We do have a number of studies in our hip pocket that
    have been done by independent commissions.  And each of
    them are generally in the same -- have been in the same
    direction, as you say.  And that is to lay out an
    exploration goal that would include the Moon and would
    include Mars, particularly in the next century.  The
    space policy that was first  -- in which it was first
    stated, was early in 1988, however, where it said that
    it was a national policy to expand our presence into the
    solar system.  But until this morning, we really have not
    had a president who laid out in broad terms his view and
    his series of goals so that the Space Council and NASA
    can flesh them out.

    Q:  Admiral Truly, can you tell us how the sort of hard
    realities of what are resources are, given the fight
    you're having now over Space Station Freedom, how can you
    give any credibility to this kind of a goal, when you are
    up on the Hill now just trying to sustain the relatively
    modest levels?  You know, the Apollo Project produced a
    doubling in the size of NASA after Kennedy announced it
    in the budget.  I don't see any indications that the
    President has that in mind for his presidency, do you?

    TRULY:  Well, first of all, there's never a time that
    we're not fighting for our budgets.  We did it last year
    and the year before, and we'll be doing it next year.
    It is an irony that we are -- at the time that we find
    this sort of leadership and vision for America's future -
    - that at the same time this very day up on the Hill, we
    are, in fact, fighting very hard for the very life of
    Space Station Freedom, and other things in the civil
    space program.  But the Apollo program peaked at over
    four percent of the federal budget.  That was about what
    it cost at the peak to go to Apollo.  But there was --
     as magnificent a goal as that was, there was something
    about Apollo that allowed us to walk away from it and,
    in fact, then the funding for the civil space program
    plunged to less than one percent.

            The program outlined today, we will -- it will
    be more than it is today, naturally, but, frankly, the -
    - as the President said in his speech, each time we have
    explored, each time we have invested in our future, we
    have always lived to thank that day.  And he laid out not
    a program to be done in this Congress this summer, even
    though that's the -- the major start was Space Station
    Freedom -- and not a two-year goal and not a 10-year
    goal, but a sustained vision of the future.  And I
    applaud him.

    Q:  Admiral Truly, when President Kennedy called on the
    nation to go to the moon, he warned that it would not be
    easy and it would not be cheap.  And he said that it
    would require a commitment to considerable additional
    funds and if there was no such commitment, the decision
    should be made then and there.  President Bush made no
    comments about the specific nature of funding that would
    be required, though there are some estimates that it
    could cost $100 billion to establish a base on the Moon.
    What are the ballpark figures, and why wasn't there a
    call for continued national sacrifice from the President
    today?

    TRULY:  Well, I -- as I listened to the speech, I thought
    it was clear that he made a call, a very direct call to
    the Congress about Space Station Freedom.  I believe that
    he clearly said that our nation, which has the strongest
    economy in the world, is capable of a sacrifice to
    explore and continue to explore along the lines that he
    talked about.  Surely, it is clear that we should not -
    - and it was said, I think, very eloquently -- I think
    by Mike Collins this morning -- surely, it is clear that
    we shouldn't base the future exploration on poverty on
    our own country.  Surely, we should turn to our own
    Earth.  And we have major -- we do have major problems.

           But we also are a country of free will.  We have
    a very large economy.  And over a long period of time,
    we may choose -- we have the free will to choose the
    directions that we go.  And I don't know what the budgets
    will turn out to be, but I can assure you that they are
    very affordable, I believe, in the total context and over
    a long period of time, and secondly, they will be
    considerably less than the Apollo peak.

    Q:  Well, is the $100 billion figure an accurate figure?
    What do your own hip-pocket studies show?

    TRULY:  Well, I've read in the media an estimate that a
    program such as this, a crash program -- which,
    incidentally, he did not call for -- would cost about
    $100 billion over a period of 10 years or so to return
    to the Moon.  We don't have any detailed NASA figures.
    We have, obviously, in the last several weeks, have
    looked in gross terms what it would cost, but there was
    no specific timetable and I have not presented the
    President with a specific and detailed list of budgetary
    requirements.

    Q:  Admiral Truly, more and more, the space program is
    being characterized as a matter of great scientific
    interest and, in that context, somewhat of a luxury.
    What about the national security implications of
    expanding the space program, and in that context, where
    do we stand vis a vis the Soviet space program?

    TRULY:  Well, that's two or three questions in one.  I
    think -- in reverse order, I think where we stand with
    the Soviets is we have a very different program than
    theirs -- and, incidentally, I'm a great admirer of the
    Soviet's program in that they have had a great dedication
    and tenacity to follow through in a consistent program.
    However, I believe that no space program on Earth today
    has the kind of technology and capability that our does.

           Obviously, there are national security priorities
    in space also, but that generally is not -- the civil
    space program -- that's not the NASA business and it's
    certainly not the goals of what Bush outlined today.

    Q:  Do you think that this is important enough that we
    should raise taxes to pay for it?

    TRULY:  Well, that's an issue that should be left to the
    President and to the entire -- and to a view of the
    entire national economic scene.  And I can assure you
    that I'm not an expert in it.  I can -- let me tell you,
    though -- one of the reasons that I feel so strongly
    about it and that I've given my life to working on it is
    that we -- that no one's asked about today -- that makes
    it very worthwhile is that is stands and has the leverage
    for the very things the President stands for --
    education, competitiveness, the things it can do for
    America -- a boost to technology.  We have study after
    study that shows that the dollars that we spend on the
    space program, which are spent not in space but on Earth,
    pay us back seven or eight dollars to one over a period
    of a decade or so.  And you can say I'm wrong by a factor
    of two; it's still quite an investment in the future.

           And so a program like this excites me because it
    will position our country as we enter the next 1,000
    years in a very -- a much better competitive posture.

    Q:  Well, would you like to see the President go to the
    American people and say, we can't afford it with the
    budget we have and I'd like to ask you to pay more in
    taxes so we can afford it?

    TRULY:  I can't imagine for me to be happier for the
    President to go to the American people and say what he
    said the morning.

    Q:  He basically said we don't have the money for it, so
    I'm not going to ask for it now.

    TRULY:  No, I believe he told the Vice President and the
    Space Council to lay out a specific plan along these
    broad goals, and we'll do that.

    Q:  Has he given and deadline to Vice President Quayle
    for making a report?  And you mentioned the other day
    that if the President today gave a commitment to some
    future program like the Moon or Mars, that NASA as it's
    structured today wouldn't be able to do it.  What will
    it take to rebuild NASA to carry out a program like this?

    TRULY:  First of all, to my knowledge, he has not set a
    specific date.  Frankly, it's a very hard analysis that
    needs to be done in order to lay it out.  And you're
    right, I did say that the other day.  Today's NASA, even
    though we have the underpinnings and the strength to
    build, to be able to do such a program, we can't do it
    today.  We have faced a string of years in which our
    budgets have been tight.  We have a full plate today with
    flying our space shuttle missions and building Space
    Station Freedom.  And to take on a project like this,
    I've made -- or tried to make clear that we will need
    some help.  We'll need additional engineers and
    scientists and techs to do the program.  We have some
    facilities problems that will need to be corrected.

           However, on the other hand, let me not leave you
    with the wrong impression..  In the last several weeks
    when I have looked at NASA, even though we do have these
    problems, I have found, frankly, that NASA has been doing
    the right things.  For example, if any president laid out
    a view of the future like President Bush did this morning
    and we didn't have a vehicle like the space shuttle, we
    would have to invent one.  If we didn't have a station
    like Space Station Freedom, we would have to invent one.
    If we didn't have the kind of facilities and launch pads
    based on Apollo that we have, we would have to do that.
    And we have those things, so I think we're poised and in
    good shape.

    Q:  Admiral Truly, one of the things in all this talk
    about how Kennedy inspired the nation in 1961 -- that was
    only three years after Sputnik and not long after Gagarin
    -- and there was a great deal of fear about the Soviets
    gaining a superiority in space.  Now with the new
    political relationship with the Soviets, do you think
    this is hurting your cause?  Do you think a good Soviet
    communist scare might get you more money?  (Laughter.)

    TRULY:  No, it might help us in the short term, but I
    think it would be awful.  I love what I see going on in
    the world today when we -- compared to 1961.  And
    frankly, I believe, at least for this short period of
    time, and I hope it's a long time, the nations of the
    Earth, and particularly the Soviet Union and the United
    States, are living more equitably together.  I'm
    interested to see what reaction internationally from this
    will be.  I hope it's positive; I think it will be and
    I'll bet it will be from them as well.

    Q:  Why did you say that we could walk away from Apollo
    at some point and that we did walk away?  Was it because
    we became so blase?

    TRULY:  Well, I've thought a lot about that.  My theory
    is -- the Richard H. Truly theory -- is that it was
    caused by two things.  One is the goal that President
    Kennedy set, which was a magnificent goal, but the goal
    was to send man to the Moon in the decade and bring him
    safely -- and return him safely to the Earth.  And when
    Neil and Buzz and Mike returned safely to the Earth, even
    though there were a number of missions to follow them,
    there was -- I think there was a collective "whew, we did
    it" and we were so proud, and the goal had been achieved.

           The second thing was the Vietnam War -- 1969, if
    you remember -- and I know you have studied more than me
    -- the Apollo landing on the Moon was one of the few
    great things that happened in 1969.  And the things that
    were going on with the war and a number of areas,
    combined with the achievement of Apollo, allowed us, for
    whatever reason, to turn away.

           I don't think that's what the future in the civil
    space program ought to be.  I think we ought to have a
    long-range goal, not one that on a certain year at a
    certain date we're done with it.  I think there's so much
    value to our American life from the space program that
    having a goal that is sustainable is one worth waiting
    for.  And, by golly, we have waited 20 years for the
    opportunity to really set such a goal and I'm glad we -
    -

    MR. FITZWATER:  Let's take a couple of final questions.

    Q:  Admiral, the way I figure it, you want to get back
    to the Moon in about 20 years or so.  And if you've got
    to do that, you're going to need a plan and you're going
    to need some specifics rather sooner than that.  I just
    wondered what the timetable is to come up with a specific
    plan, its cost, the way its to be financed, as well as -
    - and a timetable.  At what point in the Bush presidency
    would you like to see this?

    TRULY:  Oh, I think that -- as a matter of fact, somebody
    just yesterday said they were worried about what they
    President was going to say on Thursday, and I said, don't
    worry about what the President's going to say on
    Thursday, you'd better worry about what you're going to
    be doing on Friday.

           We have lots of work to do.  I think it's going
    to take a number of months for us in NASA just to lay out
    how this affects what we're going and what our plans are.

           The President -- I think his words, for getting
    back to him, were as soon as possible.  As I said
    earlier, I'm not aware of a specific deadline, but we
    have our work cut out for us.  But I do look forward to
    it.  But we've got a lot to do.

    Q:  Could you tell us as simply as possible what man will
    be able to do on Mars in the second decade of the 21st
    century -- robotics -- something we can do?

    TRULY:  We certainly would precede a manned mission to
    Mars with robotic precursors.  As a matter of fact, we
    have -- one of those first precursors is already on the
    books, and it's going to be launched in 1992 -- called
    Mars Observer.  We'll probably need to send higher
    fidelity imaging systems and very possibly a robotic
    sample return mission -- in other words, bring back a
    little piece of Martian soil to -- but Mars has intrigued
    the people of this world for hundreds and hundreds and
    hundreds of years.  The first excitement about going to
    Mars will simply be one of exploration.  And that is to
    send men and women there to go to the planet and gain
    knowledge from it.

           I think probably in the longer run that we will
    have such a program on Mars as the President mentioned
    today about the Moon.  The Moon is much easier for us to
    do and that is, a science outpost, not unlike our
    outposts that are in Antarctica, which, as you know, are
    international outposts, and in a way, several
    international outposts add up to make an international
    base.

    Q:  You say man is a symbol of the exploration, then,
    rather than a necessity for science.

    TRULY:  This is a -- no, I didn't say man didn't do
    science, but I did say that the driving urge, I think,
    over the centuries to the Red Planet, the Planet Mars,
    has been one of exploration.  And it will lead later, as
    in all explorations, to a later program of using the
    planet for science and knowledge.

    Q:  When you were briefing the Congress with Vice
    President Quayle, you outlined an option to the Moon by
    around 2001 or 2002, and Mars by 2016.  The President
    today talked about just a space station in the 90's and
    the Moon in the first decade.  I mean, it seems like even
    now, he's sort of taking a more leisurely path.  Was
    there a change?

    TRULY:  Well, the first decade of the next century starts
    in the year 2000.  The last year of the first decade is
    the year 2010.  The President is quite aware that the
    information and studies we've been looking at over the
    last several weeks has been done in a very short amount
    of time.  I think it would be, frankly, foolish and I
    would never have recommended that he, based on our
    knowledge of what it takes, to say on a specific date.

           However, our early studies show that, if you ask
    the question, when could we be back on the Moon, it would
    be in the dawn of the next century.

    Q:  Admiral Truly, can we afford to go it alone?  Won't
    it take joint mission, including the Soviets, to
    accomplish these goals?

    TRULY:  Yes, I think we can afford to go it alone,
    although I think that's probably in the long run now
    what's going to happen.

           The world has changed since the 1960s in space.
    It used to be only the Soviet Union and the United States
    that could fly in space; that's the way it was when
    President Kennedy made his speech.  The world has
    changed.  The Europeans, the Japanese, the Canadians, the
    Chinese, the Soviet Union -- all of these countries here
    in this brief 20 years now have the capability to fly in
    space.

           Space Station Freedom is an international project.
    It's premature in this particular direction to know where
    we're heading, but I would think it would have an
    international flavor.

    Q:  Sir, did you attend the Naval Academy?

    TRULY:  No, Ma'am, I didn't.

    Q:  Can you tell about your educational background?

    TRULY:  Yes.  I went to Georgia Tech on a Navy ROTC
    scholarship, and since that day until the first day of
    this month, I've been on active duty in the Navy.

    Q:  Are there any Martians?  (Laughter.)

    TRULY:  No.

    Q:  And will they brief?  (Laughter.)

    TRULY:  One more, please.

    Q:  Admiral, your predecessor always said if Congress is
    going to cut the money for Space Station Freedom, it
    might as well be killed altogether.  Are you willing to -
    - if the money is cut for Space Station Freedom, are you
    willing to cut back on the concept of a space station to
    a smaller space station, perhaps?

    TRULY:  Well, we've asked for, I think this year's
    requirement for the space station that we need in the
    President's budget is a little over $2 billion -- $2.05
    billion.  If we got one dollar less, I guess I would -
    - you know, there's -- certainly, I think we can build
    that one.

           We're being threatened very directly with a cut
    as large as $400 million.  There have been amendments
    bouncing back and forth up on the Hill that would kill
    the space station.  So there is a point where we can't
    build the space station that we have talked about before,
    but I don't want to scale it back.  We know the space
    station we want to build.  It's named "Freedom".  We're
    entering a preliminary design review.  That's the space
    station the country ought to build.  Certainly, there is
    a level in cuts that -- we wouldn't cancel it, but I
    would have to direct my people to look at changes -- and
    I've already done that.

           But I've tried over and over again to make it
    clear that I'm only doing it because I think it would be
    lousy program management if I didn't take account of the
    realities when I'm being threatened directly with a cut
    of almost half-a-billion dollars early in the program.
    And I think the President's strong support today that
    that is the first thing to do, as we chart a new course,
    was one that I hope helps me and you and NASA and the
    civil space program on the Hill.

    THE PRESS:   Thank you.

    END     11:50 A.M. EDT

- ERIC -
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