|
Space Views
| Over the years, I have occasionally
felt compelled to "take pen in hand" and express my opinion on a
variety of topics ranging from the current situation at
NASA, to the aerospace industry, to global strategies. Most of
the articles have found their way into print in magazines or
newspapers. Below are some of my more recent op-ed pieces,
written from my particular point of view. I hope you enjoy
reading them as much as I enjoyed writing them.
I also write "Viewpoint", a bi-monthly
column for Launch Magazine. You can read my columns by
clicking on the link below. |

|
Get the Space
Shuttle Back In the Air!
By WALTER CUNNINGHAM
Published in the Houston Chronicle, May 16, 2003
Okay,
so we've had another manned space disaster, the third in 40
years, and the faint-hearted are once more out to save us from
the risks. They are concerned age and corrosion have taken
their toll or the shuttle is too fragile or the wear and tear of
going in and out of space is greater than anticipated.
Congressman Joe Barton goes so far as to say, "We ought to scrap
the program, or limit it to transporting only cargo, not
humans."
Columbia won't be the last space disaster! Unfortunately, we
can spot some common factors in the three tragedies.
Complacency was a factor in at least two of them and Management
decisions played a significant role in all three. Following the
Apollo 1 and Challenger accidents, virtually everyone got on the
bandwagon to make the vehicles accident proof. In the aftermath
of Columbia, we have an opportunity to break that pattern. We
can become more accepting of the risk in manned spaceflight and
more realistic about our expectations. We can still avoid the
mistakes of spending billions of dollars and years of time for
dubious or cosmetic "improvements" or adopting operational
restrictions that add little or nothing to safety but have a
severe impact on operational flexibility.
Read the entire
article |
|
It's time to get realistic
about the Columbia "rescue"
By WALTER CUNNINGHAM,
Published in the Houston Chronicle, June 8, 2003
Since a proposed scenario was first leaked and then released
that "NASA could have staged a rescue mission had managers
recognized that fatal damage had been done," it has become
the source of great speculation. All official releases from NASA
and the investigating board have emphasized
the necessity for management to have been aware of "mortal danger" and to have learned of the lethal wound "almost
immediately." Both of these qualifications were physical
impossibilities for the incident in question.
Former astronauts and
others have entered the debate, so I will add my two cents
worth. It's time to talk some sense before the media gets too
carried away with Buck Rogers rescue scenarios emanating from
both inside and outside of NASA that may be technically possible
but absolutely impractical in the real world.
Read the entire
article
|
|
On the Road to Recovery?
By WALTER CUNNINGHAM,
Published in Florida Today, 26 August 2003
The verdict is in! The recovery is underway,
but will it get the job done?
The investigation of the
Columbia disaster was conducted in the full glare of
public scrutiny, the difficult environment in which NASA has
always operated.
It is apparent NASA management has
anticipated the recommendations contained in the Columbia
Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) report. After all, even
in their wounded state, NASA knows more about what went
wrong and what needs fixing on the shuttle than any
committee of instant experts.
NASA administrator,
Sean
O'Keefe, announced his intention to go beyond any
recommendations of the CAIB when he said,
"Recommendations on deficiencies will be not
only met but exceeded."
He added, "If it applies to the shuttle, it
ought to apply to every program at NASA."
That's nonsense! It misses the point
completely. In the manned spaceflight business, we have
always had to live with trade-offs. All programs do not
carry equal risk nor do they offer the same benefits. The
acceptable risk for a given program or operation should be
commensurate with the potential benefits to be gained.
The goal should be a management system that
puts safety first but not safety at any price.
Read the entire
article |
|
Grand Vision for NASA, or Unfunded Mandate?
Without a cost estimate for the
president's new vision, the administration and Congress
cannot truly embrace the investment.
by Walter
Cunningham
Published in the Houston Chronicle, February 2004
It was
wonderful to see President Bush identify himself with NASA
and announce a new charter and grand vision for NASA. For
any grand plan of exploration to succeed it must be
championed at the highest levels. The president's plan can
provide the focus that NASA has been missing for a long
time. The plan, however, did not sound like it had much
input from engineers and operational types.
I want to see an American standing on Mars or one of its
moons in the worst way, but it won't happen in my lifetime.
If it takes a return to the Moon to eventually get a mission
to Mars funded, I enthusiastically support it.
Read the entire
article |
|
The Wrong Stuff Is Tipping the Scales At NASA
By Walter Cunningham
Published in the Houston Chronicle
In a Sunday Op-Ed article (Advancing Both
Science and Safety), NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe
defended (once more) the decision he announced in January to
cancel the last Hubble repair mission. Mr. O'Keefe claimed
it was too risky, citing compliance with the safety
recommendations of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board
(CAIB). But nothing in the CAIB Report precludes flying a
mission not associated with the ISS, the only destination on
Mr. O'Keefe's shuttle itinerary.
O'Keefe announced he would do everything the
CAIB recommended even before their report was
finished. But recommendations are just that,
recommendations, not something to which management must
blindly adhere. Leadership demands that intelligence, common
sense and operational factors be applied in considering
which recommendations to follow, when, and by how much?
Read the entire
article |
|
Is a Robotic Servicing
Mission
the Answer for Hubble?
By Walter Cunningham
Published in the Houston Chronicle June 2004
Two days after President George W. Bush
announced his "Moon, Mars and beyond" initiative, NASA
disclosed it was canceling the last Space Shuttle mission to
repair and upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope. Since then,
the public outcry over the cancellation has drowned out
support for the new initiative.
In response, NASA's managers have proposed a
robotic mission to extend Hubble's life and, in the process,
demonstrate new technologies that can advance its broader
space exploration agenda. In reality, they are risking
science, exploration, taxpayer dollars, and possibly even
human lives to avoid flying the Space Shuttle one more
time.
Read the entire
article |

|