
T. Keith Glennan, First NASA Administrator
NASA is a large and amazing organization, always embroiled in its own dramas – funding, priorities, battles between behemoth contractors with increasing noise from smaller startups, the ongoing bungee-cord balance between science, safety, cost, manned flight considerations, defense vs commercial vs exploration, US dominance vs all the other countries, and on and on. The latest issues to bump heads are the future of Ares, and the appointment of a new NASA administrator.
By now, you would have thought that a new administrator would be in place. Instead, there is no more activity than a few names being floated around. Interestingly, there are several from the military world. This plays into the other issue, that there are those who think that we should abandon Ares and go with military launch vehicles instead.
I’m not going to get into that line of reasoning here (Jeff Krukin has some thoughts), but I will say that it plays into the old assumption that political and other appointees will be parochial and come in with agendas. A military NASA administrator would be assumed to automatically support the use of military vehicles, for example. I’m not sure if that’s true or if a military appointee would necessarily be a bad thing (General Lew Allen had a good run as director of JPL in the 80’s, for example, and Pete Worden is happily ensconced at Ames) but it will certainly bring in a different perspective. Some people might argue that it’s not fruitful to have dual-track vehicle programs at all.
Anyway, for your interest here are links to a few people whose names are currently floating around as possible nominees for NASA administrator:
- Lester Lyles (general, current favorite)
- Scott Gration (also a general)
- Charles Kennel (Earth Scientist)
- Charles Bolden (general, former astronaut)
- Pete Worden (general, current director of NASA Ames)
Spaceports has a longer but older (Dec ‘08) list here.


































