Has anybody noticed that NASA has sent men nowhere off-world
to explore, in over 4 decades? NASA is about much more than manned
spaceflight, but that is its
“front-burner” mission, its
reason-for-being, and has been, since it was created in 1958.
NASA was originally formed to put man in orbit, and carry out science and aeronautics, too.
But the “prime show” or “front-burner project” was manned spaceflight. 3 years later, that mission got upgraded to the far more
demanding man-on-the-moon, which really
energized the little agency.
In those days, NASA
was rather small, very heavy on
engineering talent, had a definite
front-burner mission, money was no
object, and no one told them how to do
their jobs. They got to figure that all
out themselves. And, miss-steps notwithstanding, it worked quite well. It was only 8 years from assigning the
moon-as-mission to the agency, until two
men first walked there.
It might have taken perhaps 5 extra years to do this, had budgets been a problem, but that basic approach of assigning the
mission and then “stand back and let them do it” works really well either
way.
In those days, there were dozens of prime contractors to let contracts to, competitively. Cost-plus is quite appropriate when doing things never before done. Fixed-price would have been egregious mismanagement.
All that changed in the middle of the moon landings in 1972 (there
should have been missions through Apollo 22,
not 17), when Apollo got
cancelled early and all manned flight outside Earth orbit forbidden by
presidential order. NASA has never had a front-burner
mission, an agency reason-to-be, ever since. They have only had major projects mandated
upon them mostly by Congress, with some
from the various presidents. Projects
like Space Shuttle, like ISS, like X-30,
like X-33, etc.
Science and aeronautics are still small-time
background, but by dint of the successes
of the probes (which derives mostly from being left alone by Congress), the planetary probe program kind-of falls
in-between, in that spectrum. Some of these projects, like the Mars landers and Hubble, turn out to be quite popular with the
public, too popular to kill, even though Congress often tries.
Two of these mandated projects flew men in space (Shuttle
and ISS), the rest didn’t. There were some tests (like X-43A) that never
led anywhere. But, none of these were actually managed in an
overall sense by the agency. Instead, the project,
its detailed objectives, how it
would be done, and where things would be
built (by that I mean in whose districts) were all mandated by Congress. That’s exactly what Constellation was, and what its resurrected form Orion/SLS
is. There is no one in Congress at all
competent to do any of this work, which
is precisely why their mandated project plans are so egregiously ineffective
and nonsensical.
Meanwhile the agency has grown to enormous size, trying to be “everything to everybody” in
lieu of a front-burner mission / reason-to-be. Once an organization gets too large, it gets very inefficient, worrying more about preserving
departments, people, and budgets than actually doing anything real
anymore. NASA is no exception. There’s more managers and support functions
at NASA these days than there are real engineers. That’s not a good recipe to get anything
major, actually done. Not in industry, not in government.
When you add bureaucratic inertia to mandated-but-nonsensical-projects
to be done, you have what we see now: no man has flown beyond Earth orbit, or explored anything off-world, in person, since 1972.
And with the mandated projects they have to do sopping-up most of the
available money, we’re having a hard
time not spending trillions just to go back to moon, the
same moon that we visited over 4 decades ago!
None of the stuff they are doing now (with the serious money) can take a
crew to Mars alive, much less land
there.
I’m talking about Orion/SLS as a “Mars rocket”, of course.
The PR about that is nothing but lies.
And everybody who knows much at all about these things knows it. Most within the agency are too afraid to “tell
the emperor that he has no clothes”,
though. And as an agency, NASA is afraid to tell Congress that it, too, has no clothes.
Meanwhile, Congress and the various presidents have let the available contractors "consolidate" into a monopoly supplier. With only a monopoly available, the distinction between fixed price and cost plus is functionally irrelevant. With only a monopoly available, the incentive to actually do something never done before is greatly reduced. Recently, upstarts like Spacex have attempted to break these monopolies, but with limited success. This basic situation is not NASA's fault, but their rules are rigged to favor the monopoly.
There are small groups within NASA that are working on the
right kinds of things for men to go beyond Earth orbit again. But these are not funded with any serious
money. Some of these groups are better
managed than others. Some of these
groups have better talent than others. So,
their ideas and plans vary considerably
in practicality and feasibility. That should
not be unexpected, given the
situation. But until these things get
the money and attention to perfect them,
they will take no one anywhere.
That, you can count on.
And in conclusion, that
complicated description is fundamentally why what is funded seriously at NASA often
makes no sense. A lot of you may have
noticed that, or at least know that
something is wrong. Nothing about that
situation will change, until the
operating model for NASA-as-an-agency goes back to that 1958 version. They need a front burner mission as a
reason-to-be, and they need to be left
alone to accomplish it.
Period. That mission has been known for at least 2 centuries: Mars.
Unfortunately,
Congress craves ever-more control,
not less. Ergo, no change is forseeable. So, no Mars.
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