Jan 14, 2009 02:13 PM | 2
Retired Air Force major general Scott Gration has been asked to head NASA under President-elect Barack Obama, Space News and AFP are reporting. The news agencies each cite an unnamed source in pointing to Gration, an early Obama supporter who stumped for the candidate and gave military cred to the campaign.
Gration, who retired from the Air Force in 2006, voted for George W. Bush in the 2000 election, according to a 2007 Newsweek profile of him. He was reportedly won over by Sen. Obama during a 2006 congressional delegation to Africa; Gration was raised by missionary parents in the Congo. His stature in the campaign became such that he was selected to speak at the Democratic National Convention in Denver in August, where he touted Obama's leadership qualities.
The media has been floating various potential picks for the space agency post. Last week we reported on the rumored consideration being given to former astronaut Charles Bolden, a veteran of four shuttle missions and a retired marine. Gration, who would be a relative newcomer to NASA, holds a B.S. in mechanical engineering from Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J., and a master's in national security studies from Georgetown University, according to his Air Force bio.
Gration portrait courtesy USAF
Tags:
Nasa administrator,
transition team,
Michael Griffin,
Barack Obama
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2 Comments
Add CommentMr. Obama's use of NASA as cheap political pay-off at a crucial time in the the space agency's history really shows his true concern for American pre-eminance in spaceflight - none whatsoever.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisRetaining the strong engineering and leadership expertise of Administrator Griffin is the obvious best-choice for America. Charlie Bolden would have been an acceptable second choice. Gration appears a capable leader, but lacks the space policy and operations experience that is critical to NASA right now.
Compromising America's leadership in space flight, perhaps sacrificing human exploration of our solar system and inspiring a future generation of American children, simply to reward a political friend is not an impressive start at "change" from Mr. Obama.
This will definitely spell the end of the ARES-1. It looks like astronauts will be flying soon on Air Force rockets. However I hope ARES-5 goes forward. Maybe a dual development between the NRO and NASA for a very heavy lift capability rocket will provide a great launcher for very heavy military and civilian payloads.
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