Just between you and me. The NASA/SpaceX/Sean Duffy story yesterday is the
kind of story I ha-a-a-te with a blinding passion. It's too much
of an annoying people story that doesn't tell you the tiniest bit about some
new technology, new engine, new telescope or camera or any cool-ass piece of
technology. It's just my least favorite aspect of any space story is
petty personnel crap.
Here we are 24 hours later and it has only gotten worse. But now it's
bigger news. More complicated. More involved. Believe me, if I had more
details on some mission or new piece of hardware, I'd rather post that. So
I'll try to be brief.
It turns out that the Sean Duffy news presentation yesterday was upsetting.
Eric Berger over at Ars Technica, who presented the base story I linked to,
went for the attention-grabbing headline that "Elon Musk just declared war on..." Sean Duffy but the story title was a little wordier, and ended with the
weasel word "apparently."
What has happened now? Why, it was only SpaceX founder Elon Musk, who is
NASA’s most important contractor,
referring to
the interim head of the space agency, Sean Duffy, as “Sean Dummy” and
suggesting Duffy was trying to kill NASA. Musk later
added, “The person responsible for America’s space program can’t have a 2
digit IQ.”
This is all pretty bonkers, so I want to try to contextualize what I believe
is going on behind the scenes. This should help us make sense of what is
happening in public.
Perhaps Eric is on to something, and I bow in his direction for (1) having
many years in this field (he's actually a certified meteorologist) and (2)
largely because of that, he has put together a group of experts he can trust
for good opinions and good guesses on things like "they said their new rocket
is going to fly in X months, but when do you think it actually
will?"
What Eric thinks this is all about is that Duffy wants to be NASA
Administrator and it looks like Jared Isaacman is going to get nominated
again.
Since then, a lot has happened, but it boils down to this. Duffy was,
nominally, supposed to be running the space agency while searching for a
permanent replacement. The biggest move he has made is naming Amit
Kshatriya, a long-time employee, as NASA’s associate administrator.
Kshatriya now has a lot of power within the agency and comes with the
mindset of a former flight director. He is not enamored with using SpaceX’s
Starship as a lunar lander.
After Isaacman's nomination was pulled, people close to Trump continued to
vouch for the billionaire/former astronaut. Trump listened to his trusted
circle and got closer to Isaacman, meeting with him multiple times since, and
all were positive experiences.
The problem is that Duffy found he liked running NASA. NASA gets more
favorable news coverage than the Department of Transportation gets in the
news. To add to that, he brought his chief of staff from the DOT, Pete
Meachum, and he also enjoyed having power over NASA.
Berger points out that what Duffy did yesterday in criticizing one of their
most important contractors "just isn't done." Is it true that Starship is late
with the Human Landing System? Of course it is. It's also
amazingly ignorant to blast SpaceX for being late when virtually everything
associated with Artemis has been late and over budget, not just Boeing's Space
Launch System, but the mobile launch towers, even the new space suits needed for the lunar landing, which also
almost certainly will not be ready by the projected 2027 Artemis III launch.
If everything is late, why pick on just one?
There seem to be two clear reasons why Duffy did this. One, he wanted to
show President Trump he was committed to reaching the Moon again before
China gets there. And secondly, with his public remarks, Duffy sought to
demonstrate to the rest of the space community that he was willing to stand
up to SpaceX.
Maybe that should read "willing to pick on SpaceX." Eric also reports, almost
certainly from well-placed sources in the other companies, that Duffy and
Meachum had spent the weekend calling around to SpaceX’s competitors, like
Duffy's mention of Blue Origin in Monday's report, asking for their support in
his quest to remain at NASA.
By this morning (Tuesday, Oct. 21) it seemed like Elon had enough.
The acting administrator had gone on TV and publicly shamed Musk’s company,
which has self-invested billions of dollars into Starship. (By contrast,
Lockheed has invested little or nothing in the Orion spacecraft, and Boeing
also has little skin in the game with the Space Launch System rocket.
Similarly, a ‘government option’ lunar lander would likely need to be
cost-plus in order to attract Lockheed as a bidder.) Then Duffy praised Blue
Origin, which, for all of its promise, has yet to make meaningful
achievements in orbit. All the while, it is only thanks to SpaceX and its
Dragon spacecraft that NASA does not have to go hat-in-hand to Russia for
astronaut transportation.
Will the crass and Trump-like moniker of "Sean Dummy" work? We don't know
enough about the important interpersonal dynamics to guess. Like most
experiments, we have to watch for the results.
SpaceX rendering of the Human Landing System, that I first posted here in
August of 2021. It appears to be a crop from
a larger scale image posted earlier in the year.
Credit SpaceX
Another point to factor into the big picture is that the Wall Street Journal
reported last night that Duffy has sought to move NASA into the Department of
Transportation, as Eric Berger reported earlier in the afternoon yesterday.
That would mean that even if Isaacman were appointed to be NASA administrator
that he would report to Duffy. I would think it's more likely Duffy would
appoint someone other than Isaacman; someone who is a more dependable
suck-up.
Don't forget that NASA has been subject not just to the Schumer Shutdown but
also to layoffs of 20% of its employees and the budget cuts going around this
year. Morale is said to not be high and this situation isn't helping.
Final words to Eric Berger
So this is where we are. A fierce, behind-the-scenes battle rages on among
camps supporting Duffy and Isaacman to decide the leadership of NASA. The
longer this process drags on, the messier it seems to get. In the meantime,
NASA is twisting in the wind, trying to run in molasses while wearing lead
shoes as China marches onward and upward.