Armstrong attacks Obama’s NASA plan
Neil A Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, on Wednesday sharply criticised President Obama’s plan to cancel the space agency’s program to send astronauts back to the moon.
“If the leadership we have acquired through our investment is allowed simply to fade away, other nations will surely step in where we have faltered,” Armstrong said in testimony before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. “I do not believe that would be in our best interests.”
Armstrong; Eugene A Cernan, the commander of Apollo 17; and James A Lovell Jr, the commander of Apollo 13, wrote a letter last month that called the proposed changes to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration “devastating.” Cernan told senators that the three men had carefully chosen the words in the letter: “slide to mediocrity” and “third-rate stature.”
source page www.indianexpress.com
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