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RETURN TO SPACE

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush, envisioning ``new journeys to the worlds beyond our own,'' unveiled a plan Wednesday to send astronauts to the moon, Mars and beyond on missions sure to cost hundreds of billions of dollars and stretch the bounds of technology. He called for a manned lunar landing as early as 2015.

Bush's election-year initiative represents the boldest space goals since John F. Kennedy laid the groundwork for the Apollo program that landed Americans on the moon in 1969.

Intended to inject new life into a space program shattered by last year's loss of the Columbia shuttle and its crew of seven, Bush's proposal faces tough questions in Congress. Many Democrats say the administration should take care of problems at home before setting its sights on costly space initiatives, particularly in the face of budget deficits of about $500 billion.

Some scientists say it would be more efficient and less expensive to use robotic spacecraft instead of manned missions. Bush's father proposed a Mars mission in 1989, but it collapsed when cost estimates hit $400 billion to $500 billion.

In a speech at NASA's headquarters, Bush laid out a timetable for robotic missions to the moon no later than 2008, the first manned flight of a new spacecraft by 2014 and a manned lunar mission as early as 2015 and no later than 2020.

The president did not set a deadline for reaching Mars, and NASA Director Sean O'Keefe, briefing reporters later, said the timing of the mission would depend on the results of studies on the effects of space travel on humans.

Bush said the moon, with a gravity pull one-sixth that of Earth, could be the launching pad for ``human missions to Mars and to worlds beyond.'' He said his goal was to ``extend a human presence across our solar system.''

Bush's speech put him in the political spotlight in the runup to Monday's Iowa caucus battle among Democrats who want his job. It was the president's second headline-grabbing announcement in recent days, after his immigration proposal last week.

In vivid terms, Bush portrayed the nation's space program - with its three shuttles grounded by the Columbia accident - as at a standstill. ``In the past 30 years, no human being has set foot on another world or ventured farther up into space than 386 miles, roughly the distance from Washington, D.C., to Boston, Mass.,'' Bush said.

In terms of the cost, Bush gave an estimate only for the initial down payment on his space plan. He said it would cost $12 billion over the next five years, but only $1 billion in new funds. The remainder would come from money reallocated under NASA's five-year budget. Thus, it would be for Bush's successors to figure out how to finance the costliest part of the plan.

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., who flew on a space shuttle in 1986, questioned whether $1 billion in extra funding would be enough. ``You can't go to the moon by 2014 with that,'' Nelson said.

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Bush's plan faces strong scrutiny. ``As we go forward with any initiative we have to examine our priorities,'' she said. ``We have serious challenges here on Earth.''

In his speech, Bush got a high-tech introduction from a beamed video image of astronaut Michael Foale, aboard the International Space Station 240 miles above the Earth.

``I know that I'm just one chapter in an ongoing story of discovery,'' said Foale, making his sixth trip into space. In the NASA audience sat Eugene A. Cernan, commander of the last Apollo mission to the moon in December 1972, the last man to leave his footprint on the lunar surface.

Bush brushed aside arguments that robotic exploration should replace human missions.

``The human thirst for knowledge ultimately cannot be satisfied by even the most vivid pictures or the most detailed measurements,'' Bush said. ``We need to see and examine and touch for ourselves.''

An AP-Ipsos poll out Monday found the public evenly split on Bush's plan to build a long-term base on the moon and eventually send astronauts to Mars. That's similar to the way Americans felt more than 35 years ago about the first efforts to land men on the moon.

The poll found that just over half said it would be better to spend the money on programs like education and health care rather than on space research.

``Mankind is drawn to the heavens for the same reason we were once drawn to unknown lands and across the open sea,'' Bush said ``We choose to explore space because doing so improves our lives and lifts our national spirit. So let us continue the journey.''

Under Bush's plan, the shuttle fleet would be retired by the end of the decade.

NASA would develop and build a new ``crew exploration vehicle'' to ferry people first to the space station after the shuttles were retired, and then to the moon.

Defending his priorities, Bush said the space program has brought tangible benefits with advances in weather forecasting, communications, computers, search and rescue technology, robotics and electronics.

To carry out his program, Bush formed a new panel, the Commission on the Implementation of U.S. Space Exploration Policy, to advise NASA. Pete Aldridge, a former Air Force secretary, was named to lead the effort.

Jan 14 2004 6:02PM

"We do not know where this journey will end.  Yet we know this: Human Beings are headed into the Cosmos."
President George W. Bush, January 14, 2004


America's Future?
Stability On The Moon!
As was done with Antarctica, the Moon must remain demilitarized!
With China's stated plans to place a military base on the Moon, America and the Free World MUST move forward to establish that the moon is for scientific and exploratory purposes only!

President Bush announces his vision for the future of space exploration.

Once we walked on another world!
It's time to return to space!
We now know how fragile our world really is!  We are the only species in the history of the Earth that now has within in its grasp, the ability to prevent its own extinction from space, by using space!  By returning to space, we will develop not just technologies to enable humans to survive, but also to thrive with limited resources in restrictive ecosystems.  These same technologies will enable us to understand and improve our environment and lives on Earth!

Artists conception of lunar base. Note: This graphic is not based on any concrete plans


How NASA Helps You
Chances are, NASA-inspired innovations have had a big impact on your everyday life.
+ Read More      + NASA's Hits: View PDF


45 Years of NASA Exploration
NASA Celebrates 45 Years of Exploration
An interactive feature highlighting 45 moments in NASA's history.
+ View this interactive feature


Lunar Linx



Then...  On To Mars!

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