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  • JUDY WOODRUFF: This summer will mark the 50th anniversary of Neil Armstrong's first setting

  • foot on the moon, a moment for the ages.

  • But ever since the space shuttles were retired, there's been a renewed debate over what NASA's

  • mission should be.

  • As it turns out, what's old is new again.

  • There's a big push to return to the moon.

  • Miles O'Brien looks at those questions and the man who tasked -- is tasked with overseeing

  • it for our weekly segment about the Leading Edge of science, technology and health.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: One year into his tenure as NASA administrator, Jim Bridenstine is a man

  • on a new mission for the space agency.

  • MAN: Please join me in welcoming Jim Bridenstine.

  • (APPLAUSE)

  • MILES O'BRIEN: It made him a star at the 35th Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, the annual

  • convening of the cosmic cognoscenti.

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE, NASA Administrator: So many in this room are familiar that we have been

  • given now a new charge, that we are going to place humans on the surface of the moon

  • in five years.

  • For a number of years at NASA, they weren't really allowed to talk about going to the

  • moon.

  • And now they not only can talk about going to the moon.

  • The idea that we're going to be there in five years has everybody extremely excited.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: U.S. astronauts on the moon by 2024, Vice President Mike Pence dropped

  • that gauntlet at the end of March.

  • MIKE PENCE, Vice President of the United States: Now, make no mistake about it.

  • We're in a space race today, just as we were in the 1960s, and the stakes are even higher.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: A space race with whom?

  • A private mission designed by Elon Musk and SpaceX or also China, which landed on the

  • far side of the moon in January, and vows to build a permanent encampment there in a

  • decade.

  • It's a time frame that invokes another race, another era.

  • JOHN F. KENNEDY, President of the United States: We choose to go to the moon in this decade

  • and do the other things, not because they are easy, because they are hard.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: NASA delivered on President Kennedy's audacious challenge 50 years ago

  • this July.

  • That moon race was fueled by rivalry with the Soviets, the desire to honor the wishes

  • of a martyred leader, and a blank check from taxpayers.

  • A lot of things just lined up perfectly to make that happen.

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: That's right.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Do you see the similar ingredients right now?

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: So, it's a different era.

  • That kind of competition doesn't exist right now.

  • But what does exist now that's unique that didn't happen back then is all of the partnerships

  • with international players.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: During the symposium, the former Navy fighter pilot, who wasn't even alive

  • during Apollo, met with those international partners.

  • He had some convincing to do.

  • U.S. space policy has shifted with the political wind.

  • In 2004, President George W. Bush retired the shuttle program and set his sights on

  • the moon, a program called Constellation.

  • But when Barack Obama became president, he made it clear the moon didn't interest him.

  • So, in 2010, he canceled Constellation after an independent committee determined the NASA

  • budget fell far short of the ambition.

  • The agency was left with a vague underfunded notion to go to Mars.

  • But in December of 2017, President Trump signed Space Policy Directive 1, which put NASA back

  • on course to the moon.

  • NASA policy has been as dizzying as the stomach-churning gimbal rig test endured by the first astronauts.

  • When you talk to your counterparts, as you did earlier today, and you tell them, we're

  • going to be there in five years, we need your help, are they kind of hanging on to their

  • wallet a little bit?

  • Are they a little skeptical?

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: We are anxiously anticipating the resources that come from these other countries.

  • But you're right, not every country will participate at the same level, and we're OK with that.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: All the big spacefaring nations were here, except China, conspicuous in its

  • absence.

  • What are your thoughts on whether China should somehow be brought into this partnership?

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: So, that goes above the pay grade of the NASA administrator.

  • What I will tell you is that we follow the law, and the law says that NASA is not going

  • to do any bilateral kind of cooperation with China.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: So what will this international sprint look like?

  • To be determined, quickly.

  • MIKE PENCE: The president has directed NASA and Administrator Jim Bridenstine to accomplish

  • this goal by any means necessary.

  • You must consider every available option and platform to meet our goals, including industry,

  • government, and the entire American space enterprise.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Pence gave that address at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville

  • Alabama, where they designed the Saturn V rocket that carried Apollo astronauts to the

  • moon.

  • The even bigger rocket they and Boeing are building now, the Space Launch System, or

  • SLS, is troubled.

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: It's behind schedule.

  • Yes, it's over cost.

  • Yes, it's been a challenge.

  • Every rocket program in history has had those challenges, but we're almost there.

  • And the problems that it has had historically -- it's been under development now for 10

  • years -- we're getting those problems fixed.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Elon Musk's SpaceX is in early development of a huge rocket for missions

  • to the moon and Mars, but it is unlikely a commercial alternative to SLS would be ready

  • in time.

  • Besides, politics dictates this rocket be at the center of this program.

  • The powerful delegation from Alabama will have it no other way.

  • When he came to NASA, Bridenstine was in his third term as a Republican congressman from

  • Oklahoma.

  • He understands technology through a political prism.

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: There's two kinds of risk.

  • There's the technical risk and then there's the political risk.

  • As a member of Congress, I can tell you, I have seen it.

  • The technical risk is irrelevant if the politics aren't right.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Bridenstine has already gotten a taste of the skepticism he is facing among

  • his former colleagues.

  • REP.

  • EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON (D-TX): The simple truth is, is that we are not in a space race to

  • get to the moon.

  • We won that race a half-century ago.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Democrat Eddie Bernice Johnson chairs the House Science Committee.

  • REP.

  • EDDIE BERNICE JOHNSON: Rhetoric that is not backed by a concrete plan and believable cost

  • estimates is just hot air.

  • And hot air might be helpful in ballooning, but it won't get us to the moon or Mars.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Even if SLS works, NASA needs a lot more hardware, like the Orion crew capsule

  • built by Lockheed Martin and its service module built by the European Space Agency.

  • But the agency also aims to build a small outpost orbiting the moon called the Lunar

  • Orbital Platform-Gateway.

  • And, of course, it needs a lander.

  • Bridenstine is hoping for help from international partners or maybe commercial players.

  • Why five years?

  • A lot of people look at it and say, this synchs up with the political calendar perhaps a little

  • bit suspiciously.

  • Is there a political motivation to all this?

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: I don't think so at all.

  • If there is, nobody has talked to me about it.

  • So, I will tell you what I think it is.

  • The idea that these long timelines allow the agency to be cast to and fro by political

  • whims, that's what we're trying to avoid.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: The plan is more than a sprint, followed by flags, footprints and photos.

  • NASA hopes it will be the beginning of a permanent outpost near the lunar south pole, a base

  • for science and a proving ground for a mission to Mars.

  • The concern has always been that, on paper, that's a great idea.

  • It's a springboard to Mars.

  • It also could be a cul-de-sac or a dead end.

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: Right.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Because there's only so much money and interest.

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: That's right.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: And it could lose momentum.

  • JIM BRIDENSTINE: Yes.

  • So you're right.

  • If we get bogged down on the moon and we put all of our resources there, then we're not

  • going to get to Mars.

  • So we don't want that to happen.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: Speed, sustainability and safety all at once will not be cheap.

  • There is an expression in the space world made popular in the 1983 movie "The Right

  • Stuff":

  • ACTOR: No bucks, no Buck Rogers.

  • MILES O'BRIEN: And in those glory days, NASA had a whole lot of bucks, more than twice

  • the budget it gets now.

  • So the administration is poised to ask Congress to up the ante on space.

  • It will require bipartisan support.

  • Sure, NASA can send a man to the moon, but politics is not as easy as rocket science.

  • For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Miles O'Brien in Colorado Springs.

JUDY WOODRUFF: This summer will mark the 50th anniversary of Neil Armstrong's first setting

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