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Sat, Oct 17, 2009

Distinguished Former NASA Astronauts Endorse Commercial Human Spaceflight

Wall Street Journal Op-Ed Piece Lays Out A Vision For Future Human Spaceflight

Commercial human spaceflight received a strong endorsement Friday from a group of thirteen former NASA astronauts who published an opinion piece titled "Commercial Spaceflight: All Systems Go" in the Wall Street Journal.

Astronauts Buzz Aldrin, Ken Bowersox, Jake Garn, Robert Gibson, Hank Hartsfield, John Herrington, John Lounge, Rick Searfoss, Norman Thagard, Kathryn Thornton, Jim Voss and Charles Walker stated, "We strongly agree with the Augustine Committee's endorsement of commercial human spaceflight, and we encourage the White House and Congress to embrace this positive vision for our nation's future in space."

The thirteen astronauts have collectively flown a total of 42 space missions and logged a total of 2 years and 48 days in space aboard six different space vehicles including Gemini, Apollo, Space Shuttle, Soyuz, Mir, and the International Space Station. The group included the following excerpts in their op-ed:

  • We believe that the commercial sector is fully capable of safely handling the critical task of low-Earth-orbit human transportation.
  • NASA should put its unique resources into pushing back the final frontier and not in repaving the earth-to-orbit road it cleared a half century ago.
  • We are fully confident that the commercial spaceflight sector can provide a level of safety equal to that offered by the venerable Russian Soyuz system, which has flown safely for the last 38 years, and exceeding that of the Space Shuttle.
  • We enthusiastically endorse this robust vision for the future of human spaceflight, a vision in which NASA is free to concentrate on the challenges of exploration beyond low Earth orbit while private commerce enables increased activity in Earth orbit.

Following the publication of the astronaut op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, the Commercial Spaceflight Federation welcomed today's show of support by the community of former NASA astronauts. Bretton Alexander, President of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation, stated, "As the nation's policymakers consider the future path of our space program, the commercial spaceflight sector is honored to receive today's strong endorsement by these distinguished former NASA astronauts. We agree with these astronauts that a robust commercially procured crew capability will help enable our nation's space program to reach new heights."

FMI: www.wsj.com, www.commercialspaceflight.org

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