You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Politix
Where Else Will We Put the Death Ray?
2004-03-04
Generals defend military’s role in space at hearings on Bush’s space plan
The military plays an important role in U.S. space exploration and should continue to partner with NASA, Air Force generals said Thursday. The generals spoke on the second day of hearings before a commission studying President Bush’s proposal for manned flights to the moon and Mars. The generals defended the military’s role in space exploration when commissioner Carleton Fiorina asked why the military is involved. "Although we would like space to be a peaceful medium,
(with all the correspondent fluffy bunnys, rainbows, and Chocolate Ice Cream
the fact of the matter is history says that it may not always be that way," said Gen. Gregory Martin, commander of the Air Force Materiel Command. "We should be prepared for that."
To which Fiorina responded: "Can I pet the Bunnys?"
Martin said the military conducts space-related research projects and military equipment in space helps prevent conflicts on Earth. For example, military satellites detect buildups of armies on the ground, he said. Lt. Gen. Dan Leaf of the Air Force Space Command said that excluding the military from space efforts would decrease the chances of heading off conflicts on Earth and make a U.S. response to an attack on America less precise and more destructive. "That’s in nobody’s interest -- not ours, not our adversaries," Leaf said. "We don’t want to wage war in space. There is a peaceful place for the military to participate in space."
However, it’s quite unfair that we have such a huge lead on our adversaries. So we plan on tying our shoelaces together. Now that’s sporting.
On Wednesday, aerospace educators said manned flights to the moon and Mars would ignite a passion for space and science studies among young people. The Dayton hearing at the U.S. Air Force Museum is the second of five being held around the country as the President’s Commission on Moon, Mars and Beyond prepares a report to be presented to Bush in June. Former astronaut John Glenn was to speak later Thursday.
Posted by:Daniel King

#3  Does Commissioner Fiorina believe that the GPS in his SUV was originally developed so he could find the nearest Starbucks for a Latte fix?
Posted by: Frank G   2004-3-4 5:55:17 PM  

#2  Former astronaut John Glenn was to speak later Thursday

Bet he's gonna come out in favor of making "the little sparkly guys" a protected species.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-3-4 4:00:49 PM  

#1  hope the Militarys plan for the Space Based Laser constellation of 24 high power, rapid shot laser attack/defense satalites in orbit around the earth, havn't heard anything about it for about 2 years now so maybe it was cancelled or put on the back burner, maybe it went into the black world?
Posted by: Jon Shep U.K   2004-3-4 2:29:17 PM  

00:00