NASA Headquarters Oral
History Project
Edited Oral History Transcript
Wesley
T. Huntress, Jr.
Interviewed by Rebecca Wright
Washington, DC – 9 January 2003
Wright: Today
is January 9th, 2003. This oral history with Dr. Wes Huntress is being
conducted in Washington D.C. for the NASA Headquarters History Office
Administrators Oral History Project. Interviewer is Rebecca Wright.
This session will focus on Dr. Huntress’ leadership role while
with the Nation’s Space Agency.
Thank you again for taking time for this project. We’d like
to start with your early days at the JPL [NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, California], after you completed your Ph.D. at Stanford
[University, Stanford, California]. You began there as a National
Research Council resident associate. Tell us about this program and
about your duties there, and then how your duties evolved at JPL.
Huntress:
When I first went to JPL, the idea was always to take a job there,
and the best way to do that, apparently at the time, was to take a
fellowship first, so that both I and the folks who wanted to hire
me would have a year to decide if that was the right decision for
both of us, and it certainly was. It was a program run by the National
Research Council for postdocs to work at a NASA Center. So I applied
and got one of those, and went to JPL.
Wright: What
were your first duties there?
Huntress:
I was hired as a scientist. So I was hired in the Science Division,
and what they wanted me to do was to help develop at JPL this new
instrumental technique called ion cyclotron resonance and apply it
to the study of the chemistry of planetary atmospheres, comets and
interstellar clouds, because it was a brand-new technique, and so
that’s what I did. So, my first five years there was really
developing this technique and making it work so that we could look
at the chemistry in these astrophysical environments.
My goal while I was at JPL was to develop the science of what I called
astrochemistry, which was chemistry in [the] interstellar medium comets,
and interstellar clouds, with a keen interest towards what organic
precursors were produced that would ultimately end up providing the
chemical basis for forming life on a planet. That’s what I wanted
to do there.
Also what I wanted to do there was get involved with projects. If
you go to JPL, for me it was hard not to get involved with projects.
In fact, that’s what attracted me there. When I first interviewed,
they showed me Surveyor 7 on the surface of the Moon, and I got to
watch them dig a trench on the Moon, and I said, “Forget academia.
This is more fun.” So that’s why I went there.
I was there for twenty years, and I think my research group did quite
well in becoming world-renowned in this particular area of astrochemistry
and one of the big developers of the science of astrochemistry.
Wright: How
did your work at JPL prepare you for your next phase with NASA?
Huntress:
It was definitely in the projects. My last several years there, for
example, I was pre-project study scientist, the U.S. [United States]
pre-project study scientist, for the proposed Cassini mission [Cassini-Huygens
Mission to Saturn and Titan]. The highest aspiration for a scientist
at JPL was to become a project scientist for a mission. Why else would
you be there? So that was what I aspired to, after having grounded
myself in science and made my reputation there.
This was a particularly fun project because it was international,
so it involved a lot of European scientists and getting Europe and
the U.S. involved in this joint proposed mission. Plus, it was going
to Saturn, one of the most intriguing planets in the solar system.
It was going to go to Titan, which is the only moon with an atmosphere,
and an incredibly interesting one with a lot of organic stuff floating
around in the atmosphere. So it was really an exciting project.
Working on that project, the interfaces involved with JPL projects,
with NASA Headquarters, with the Europeans, that all prepared me,
I think, quite well for going to NASA. I had no intentions of ever
going to NASA Headquarters. That wasn’t in my plan. It just
happened. In fact, I was on a career path that I was very happy with
at JPL. My last year there, in fact, I was a visiting [professor]
at Caltech [California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California],
so I was teaching a course, brand-new course, in astrochemistry at
Caltech. I’d been asked to develop this graduate course for
Caltech. So I was a happy camper. I was on my way. This bolt [came]
from [out of] the blue, and I had to make a career decision.
Wright: How
were you told of your selection?
Huntress:
One of the things I had been doing at JPL was, in fact, helping out
programmatically in the Earth Sciences. I was in an Earth and Space
Sciences Division, and while I really was a planetary scientist, you
know, understanding what goes on on the Earth is important if you’re
going to understand how it fits into the rest of the planetary system,
and so I’d been helping out since the mid-seventies programmatically
in the Earth Sciences area, and so I worked out of a program office
as well. I planned a lot of functions, but as a scientist, also as
a section manager. I managed my own research group, and then I also
had some programmatic functions that I did, one of which was I was
recruited by the JPL management to help out in setting up an Earth
Sciences program at JPL and interfacing with NASA Headquarters in
JPL’s management of its Earth Science program.
We ran a conference in Logan, Utah, back in 1975 or ’76, and
I became acquainted with a fellow by the name of [Dr.] Shelby Tilford,
who was a new division manager at NASA Headquarters for Earth Science.
In fact, I became the study scientist for the Upper Atmospheric Research
Project. JPL and [NASA] Goddard [Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland]
were competing for this project, doing joint studies in a very odd
way. We were both competing for this project, but we were both working
on the study for NASA Headquarters. I was the JPL study scientist.
This is in the late seventies.
[Dr.] Bruce Murray, who was director of JPL at the time, decided not
to do it, and let Goddard have the project, which at the time irritated
me quite a bit. But the folks in the Earth Science Division at NASA
Headquarters, I developed a real good relationship with them, especially
with Shelby Tilford, and he kept asking me. Every year I’d get
a phone call from him asking me to come back to Headquarters. I said,
“No, Shelby, I’m not interested. I really want to go off
and do planetary work. I’m enjoying being involved with planetary
missions. Earth is one planet. I like having the other eight. Thank
you very much.” This kept going on and on and on and on for
roughly five or six years.
Finally, I was back here in 1987 for some function that I can’t
remember, and went out to have a beer with my good old friend Shelby
Tilford, you know, find out how he’s doing with his Earth Science
stuff, and he says, “I’m going to make you an offer you
can’t refuse.”
I say, “Certainly I can refuse it. I’ve been refusing
you for years.”
He says, “No, you can’t refuse this one.” He says,
“I want you to be my deputy. I want you to be a Deputy Division
Manager at NASA Headquarters.”
So that opened my eyeballs, and I thought about it for a while, and
I said, “What would happen to my career path if I gave up all
this stuff at JPL that I’m very happy with and went to NASA
Headquarters? What would be my career path?”
I decided if I did that, the way I’d really want to do it was
use this experience with Shelby Tilford, who was a very good division
manager, to learn how to be such a person, and then what I wanted
to do is go manage the Planetary Division, because if I did that,
I would be able to do all the things in planetary exploration that
I thought needed to be done. And that is what led me to consider it
seriously. Then, finally, I decided to do it.
Everybody at Caltech and JPL thought I was absolutely nuts. They tried
to convince me not to do it. But I decided that this was an interesting
opportunity, that career opportunities don’t come by very often.
When they do, sometimes taking the risk is worth it. In this case,
it turned out to be worth it. So I just gave up everything at JPL
and gave up this gorgeous home we had in South Orange County on this
beautiful lake, my wife’s dream home. She never hesitated in
spite of the fact she was living in her dream home. Pulled up her
stakes. She’s an L.A. [Los Angeles, California] person. And
came back east, never lived back east.
It worked out well. I spent two years with Shelby Tilford. I learned
how to be a good division manager, and when the Director of Planetary
Division retired—that was [Dr. Geoffrey] Geoff Briggs—the
current AA [Associate Administrator] at the time offered me the job.
That was 1990, summer of 1990. Long story.
Wright: Great
story. Your duties changed, and you became now director of this new
division, or not new division, but new for you.
Huntress:
New for me. Right.
Wright: How
did you set up your goals?
Huntress:
I knew before I even went what I wanted to do there. When I left JPL,
I’d already formulated in my mind where I thought the Planetary
Division needed to go, what directions it needed to go. I had participated
as a scientist in strategic planning in the Planetary Division before,
so, having participated in the planetary exploration projects at JPL,
I was very familiar with all the projects and what the planning and
thinking was at JPL and at Headquarters and within the science community,
because I was a member of the planetary science community as well.
So those three experiences all mixed together in my mind, and I had
a clear idea of where I thought Planetary Division needed to go. So
I hit the ground running when I took it over.
I had three principal goals. First was, in fact, to complete the reconnaissance
of the solar system. We hadn’t been to Pluto. Galileo was being
constructed to go to Jupiter, and we had sold the Cassini mission.
My last day before I went to NASA Headquarters, I was at Headquarters
selling the Cassini mission to the current AA for a new start and
spent the weekend and showed up at Headquarters the following Monday.
And, in fact, I was successful, because [Dr. Lennard A.] Len Fisk,
who was AA at the time, did submit it for a new start in 1990.
So what I wanted to do was to complete the exploration of the solar
system. We had been to every planet except Pluto, and so I wanted
a Pluto mission, and I wanted a solar probe mission so we would visit
the extremes of the solar system, the Sun and Pluto. Wanted to do
that.
The second thing I wanted to do was to initiate programs to try to
develop the technology for detecting planets around other stars. And
the third thing that I wanted to do was to develop a program for low-cost
planetary missions. The problem was, in the decade of the eighties,
there was not a single launch of a planetary mission, not one. Eleven
years. And all the money was being put into two big projects, Galileo
[Mission to Jupiter] and Magellan [Mission to Venus].
So the problem is that there would be years when no data was coming
back at all from the solar system. Then there’d be this big
pulse of activity for a few days, and nothing. And that was unhealthy.
So what I wanted to do was to find a way such that there would be
data coming back from the solar system continuously, as continuously
as possible. And the only way to do that was to have a larger number
of smaller, less expensive missions, so that you could launch more
frequently and have spacecraft operating at planets as continuously
as possible. That was a brand-new way of thinking about doing solar
system exploration, and it took a while for it to become accepted.
Wright: How
did the scientific community respond to this program?
Huntress:
They liked the idea, but they were concerned about low-cost planetary
missions. (a), they weren’t sure they could be done, and, (b),
the community had become very used to piling everything they could
on one mission. That increases the scientific scope and scientific
depth of a mission and can make it a very comprehensive study, but
also makes it incredibly expensive, because all of the requirements
that puts on a spacecraft. I mean, a spacecraft has got to be big
and very capable.
So the community had gotten used to this way of doing business where
they treated each mission as if it was the last bus out of the station,
which it often was, for a long time. So they all wanted to pile on.
So to break that mode of doing business and say, “No, no, we’re
going to break it up into smaller missions, and we have to be disciplined
and very focused on each mission and a smaller number of instruments
for each,” that was not something they were used to, and they
weren’t sure it was going to work, because if they didn’t
get theirs, when were they? You know, that kind of a thing. So it
took a bit of convincing.
And also, this was not popular at JPL, which was the only place where
missions were being done at the time, because they saw this as a threat.
In many ways, I presume. One was, well, what if you didn’t get
all these missions? They wouldn’t have any. They liked the idea
of doing one big mission at a time, and then the next big mission
at a time, and the next big—they were set up. That’s how
they were organized, and that’s how they liked to do business,
and the idea of doing a larger number of smaller missions in parallel
just didn’t resonate with them. So it was difficult to get them
in that mode.
Plus, it was a big organization, and the way that they fed their people
was to have them all working on these big missions, and they had no
concept how to break them up and work them on smaller missions. It
was just a threat.
I had trouble with JPL, because when I asked them for concepts for
lower-cost missions, they kept coming back with the same price. I
remember asking for a lunar orbiter mission. What would it cost to
do a lunar orbiter mission? The science community had defined what
the next step in lunar exploration was. The Moon’s close. It’s
got to be relatively cheap. What would it take to do this lunar orbiter
mission? The answer came back: 450 million bucks. Wrong. Too expensive.
What if you broke it up into a number of smaller spacecraft and distributed
your risk amongst these spacecraft and distributed the instruments
among those spacecraft? What would each of those spacecraft cost?
They said, “Well, we can break it up into three spacecraft,
and each of them will cost 150 million bucks.” Let’s see.
The sum of that’s 450 million bucks. Wrong answer.
So that was right about the time when Mike [Griffin came to NASA and]
when the Agency was getting interested in putting a lunar program
together and was doing SEI [Space Exploration Initiative], what was
called SEI. I had been working with DoD on the Clementine Mission
at the time. DoD was very interested in lower-cost missions. So we
were working with them. DoD wanted to send a spacecraft to the Moon
and to an asteroid to test their technologies. These were mainly instrument
technologies, but also smaller spacecraft technologies launched on
the Titan 2. And this would ultimately end up to be successful. So
the idea was to extrapolate from that for NASA science missions, and
how to do them less expensively.
So we got involved with JPL. This is how we got involved with this
lunar stuff, how to get JPL to do it less expensively, and we just
couldn’t get them to do that. So this fellow Mike [Griffin]
was running the SEI Program at NASA Headquarters, and he, much to
my chagrin, was given the lunar robotic program. It was taken away
from the Planetary Division. But SEI never came to fruition. It was
unpopular with Congress. It was unpopular with the Administration.
So that eventually disappeared. But in the process of doing that,
Mike got bids from folks outside JPL on how to do this, and so I took
a cue from that when I decided how I was going to go about the process
of making a program of less expensive missions.
I had inherited a study that had been done by my predecessor Geoff
Briggs. My AA, when he brought me on, said he wanted me to look into
lower-cost planetary missions. So I revamped and revitalized this
study, and what I did was, I had a science study group and I also
had an engineering study group, and I brought in the Applied Physics
Lab [APL] and a couple of people from NRL [Naval Research Laboratory],
institutions which had done low-cost missions. Not planetary, but
low-cost missions. APL, in particular, had done low-cost missions.
I put this group together and turned them loose, and said, “Figure
out for me how one can do lower-cost missions.”
I had people on that group who did big missions, and people who do
little missions, so they could argue it out as to how it was going
to be done. We finally came up with a plan for how to go about doing
it. I even got a science group. They were a mechanism by which to
get the science community on board. The engineering group was a mechanism
by which to get the implementing organizations on board, and I gave
both APL and JPL studies to do, competitive studies. “JPL, give
me a proposal for a lunar mission. APL, you give me a proposal.”
No, it was asteroid missions, missions to an asteroid. “APL,
you give me one.”
That’s probably the least expensive, least challenging mission
I could think of for planetary, because getting to asteroids is real
easy, near-Earth asteroids, energetically very easy. Now I wanted
a hard one. Landing on Mars, that’s hard. “JPL, you give
me a study for that. APL, you give me a study for that.”
When I got the results, boy, it was clear who knew how to build low-cost
missions: APL. I mean, there was just no doubt. But I didn’t
quite trust them to do the hard one. So I gave APL the Near [Earth
Asteroid] mission, and I gave JPL the Mars Lander mission. It ended
up being called Pathfinder.
The reason it worked at JPL was because they hired a maverick to do
the study, somebody who was a bit of an iconoclast. He was a project
manager, but he was a bit of an iconoclast at the lab. He put together
a group of young kids who didn’t know it couldn’t be done,
and he did the mentoring. He gave them the responsibility, and it
was treated like a skunkworks, which was not something JPL was used
to, and they made it work. It was a delight to see happen. But it
ended up being an anomaly at JPL. The older folks there, the more
conservative project managers, the ones who had done the Voyagers
and the Galileos, they never liked this. They thought it would fail,
never liked the project, didn’t like this way of doing business.
Ultimately, unfortunately, after those Mars failures in the late nineties,
JPL reverted back to their old ways of doing business, which was unfortunate.
So the only way to really keep this thing going is through competition,
and APL is the competition. What came out of it after all of this
was my plan to stabilize planetary exploration instead of this binge-and-purge
way of doing business as opposed to a constant diet, was to establish
program lines. The way they did it before was sell this big mission,
and then when you’re ready, sell another big mission.
So what I wanted to do was establish program lines, like Explorers.
Astrophysicists had [an] Explorer [line] where you didn’t have
to get a new start every time. There was a line in the budget for
[the] Explorer [Program], and NASA made the decision as to what new
starts they wanted to put into it, and Congress didn’t have
to make that decision, thank goodness. All Congress had to do was
to be happy that the line was being successful. So I wanted to establish
that line. So the way I wanted to go about doing these low-cost missions
was to establish a line of them so that we could be assured that they
would be continually coming down the line and not be interrupted by
Congressional idiosyncrasies.
So when [Daniel S.] Dan Goldin showed up, I was all ready with this
Discovery Program. In fact, it had already been submitted in the budget
for that year by Len Fisk. Len Fisk liked it. He was my AA at the
time, and we submitted it, and then Dan Goldin showed up. Dan didn’t
get along with Len; fired him. I got a call in Munich [Germany], at
a planetary sciences meeting. “I’m firing Len. You’re
the guy,” which really scared me. I mean, I had no ambitions
to be an AA. I was very happy as a division [director]. I liked what
I was doing in Planetary.
So when I came back, one of the things he wanted me to do was to cancel
Cassini and institute a program of low-cost missions. If you know
Dan, you don’t tell Dan no. That’s what Len did. You don’t
last that long.
So my first real duties as AA were, (a), prevent him from canceling
Cassini, and, (b), getting him excited about this Discovery line of
missions. When he made me AA, I was actually able to hand him something
he wanted already, the Discovery Program. He wanted some low-cost
planetary missions. “Dan, here they are. All have been well
studied. It’s actually already up on the [Capitol] Hill being
proposed.” And so he adopted it.
The Cassini story is something else. So that was the beginnings of
“better, faster, cheaper.” That was his invention, those
words, but it was the Discovery Program that made it real, and that
congressional season we got the Discovery Program. We got both the
Near [Earth Asteroid Rendezvous] Program, and the Mars Pathfinder
mission out of it.
That was a long ramble. Sorry.
Wright: No,
it was great information. It was one of the points I wanted to bring
up with you, is the fact that you were already prepared for a new
methodology at NASA before that methodology was announced, and with
great timing.
Huntress:
That’s right. I mean, I was fortunate enough, because Dan was
a good visionary, but he was also very difficult to get along with,
and I think I managed to establish myself well with him right away
because I had what he wanted when he wanted it. That made him happy.
Wright: Would
you like to talk about how you saved Cassini at this point?
Huntress:
Dan came into the Agency with a preconceived notion, and it was based
on a proposal he had made to Shelby Tilford several years before,
for a system of Earth-orbiting satellites, called the Earth Observing
System. Shelby had a program for a comprehensive satellite program
to observe and understand the Earth. These were big, comprehensive,
very expensive satellites, launched on Titans, Titan 3s, very massive,
very comprehensive, large payloads for a really comprehensive attack
on the planet. It grew out of his UARS [Upper Atmosphere Research
Satellite] success.
Goldin had come in from TRW [Inc.] and made a proposal for a series
of lower-cost satellites, and it didn’t go over with Shelby
at all; because this was not the way Shelby wanted to have it done,
so [it] got pretty well dismissed. That really ticked Dan off. So
when he came into the Agency, he had this built-in notion about getting
rid of what he called the Battlestar Gallacticas, and it came out
of this EOS [Earth Observing System] problem he’d had. So he
wanted to get rid of the planetary ones, too. He couldn’t get
rid of Galileo. I mean, that was already on the way, but Cassini was
in development. He could get rid of that thing: “They’re
spending too much money at JPL on this $5 billion project. Trash that
thing, and let’s use the money for lower-cost missions.”
I didn’t think that was a good idea, because a huge investment
had already been made. Most of the money had been spent. In fact,
it was a great mission. There are other forces that determine what
gets done by NASA. There’s the Administrator; there’s
the President’s Office of Science and Technology Policy [OSTP]
associated with the President’s Office of Management and Budget
[OMB]; and the U.S. Congress. So the only way to save Cassini was
to get those forces involved, which is what I did. There was risk
in that, but it worked. Eventually, OSTP and OMB said, “Look,
we’ve made this investment. It’s a good one, and we believe
in the science,” and the Congress delivered the same message
by putting it in the budget. So Dan stepped back from that, because
it wasn’t going to be very productive or politically useful
to pursue. So that’s how we did it.
Wright: It
was quite a risky move on your part.
Huntress:
Oh yes, but that’s what an AA has to do. The program has to
come first, and even at risk of losing your job. That has to be first,
and that’s the way I operated. So I went through several risky
incidents, but simply based on that.
There were two other principles. One was that these missions had to
do the best possible science. That was determined by the science community.
And, they had to be something that the public would be interested
in. They had to have this element of public interest, because they’re
paying the bill. So I wanted all these missions to have public excitement
in them, and sometimes that was at odds with what the scientists wanted
to do. So a lot of my dialogue with the science community was on this
issue. “The program has to be exciting to the people who are
writing the checks. It’s not just your program; it’s also
the public’s program.” That was another principle that
I tried to work.
Wright: Sounds
like you were introducing them to several new aspects of a new culture.
Huntress:
Yes, exactly. The science community came around pretty much to that
culture, I think, after a while, because they saw the value in it.
The value was, (a), they got more missions; (b), they got to choose
their own missions. The way in which missions got chosen before was,
the Agency would have this sort of strategic process that took a long
time, and it resulted in these big missions that the science community
could apply to for their instruments, but ultimately, the missions
were chosen by the Agency and a call was issued by the Agency. “Give
me some instruments, okay?” The fact that the science community
had a role in narrowing the field in what kind of missions got chosen,
that was fine. But there was a lot of good ideas that got dropped
out in that process.
Missions were essentially chosen by JPL and by NASA Headquarters.
[Discovery] gave them the opportunity to choose their own missions
outside of any strategic long-term strategic context. “I’ve
got a good idea. I can propose it.” So one of the great things
that came out of Discovery was the innovation. The kinds of exciting,
innovative concepts that came out of that program were just amazing,
and that’s what the science community liked. The science community
likes competition. That’s how they live, and they saw what competition
did to increase innovation in the program. So that’s why you
see now, even JPL has to compete for missions, even the larger ones
now.
So the science community came around to it fairly quickly. JPL still,
I think, although they compete well, their whole history shows that
they are excellent in competing, is still pretty uncomfortable with
it.
Wright: Regarding
the Discovery Program, how were you able to choose those programs?
What criteria did you use to take the innovative concepts and turn
them into reality?
Huntress:
What we did was institute a two-level process. The first thing we
did was we had to establish the program and show that, yes, you can
do low-cost missions. So the first two missions were directed by me.
I chose them. I chose a hard one and an easy one and directed who
would do them, gave them to APL and JPL, just to prove they could
be done. It was obvious these were going to be successes.
Then we competed. We had already decided how that was going to be
done, and the first thing we did was do a science selection. [Issue
an announcement for the flight opportunity and] ask the science community
for mission concepts. “Mr. PI [principal investigator], you
go out and you get whoever you want to get to help you, your science
team, your industry team, and a NASA Center and put together a proposal
for how to do this mission idea that you’d like. Then we’ll
review them and choose which ones we think are best on the basis of
the science in the mission. Then we’ll give you some money to
develop a concept, and we’ll have a down selection.”
So the idea was to choose maybe half a dozen on the basis of science,
give them some real money, 350,000 or half a million, I can’t
remember how much, so they could develop the concept further, so we
could do a really good, comprehensive technical review of the concept
to see if a set of peers in engineering and the technology areas believe
they can actually pull it off, and not just technically, but managerially.
Did the PI choose the right people? Does he have a project manager
who can really make this work for him? Scientists are terrible at
doing that stuff. He’s got to have the right kind of people.
So he had the right team, and that process seemed to have worked,
because all the missions have been successful except one. So that
whole process was invented by the original Discovery team folks who
put together the proposal before we sold it to Congress.
Wright: Let’s
spend a few minutes talking about those accomplishments and, if you’d
like, even the disappointment of the Discovery Program. Of course,
the Mars Pathfinder is one that did touch the American public as well
as the global public.
Huntress:
Yes, that’s right. I think that taught us—that put the
real stamp of approval on what I really thought we needed to do, which
is to do things that are exciting to the public. One of the things
we did back then, which was different, was we insisted that the data,
including the images, not just go to the scientists, but that they
also go in parallel on the Web. The Web was a new thing at the time.
So with some reluctance, the science team agreed that they would do
that, and the JPL publicity folks agreed that they would do that,
reluctantly, also, because these were going to be raw, unprocessed
images. That experiment worked enormously well. I mean, when those
images came out on the Web, the whole world was watching. I think
it showed, (a), the popularity of robotic exploration, and it showed
that the public really was keen on what we were doing. I think the
Discovery Program has been an enormous success. It’s the thing
I’m most proud of. The idea of establishing mission lines is
something else I’m proud of, because it’s continuing.
Another Discovery-like line [has] been approved, which is New Frontiers
[Program], about twice as expensive. But that’s become the way
of doing business.
And, (b), instituting competition, because competition proved out
to be the only way to get innovation and to keep costs down. It’s
the only thing that’s ever worked.
Discovery has been an enormous success, and I have no disappointments
in it at all, except for this one loss that we’ve had, but that’s
the business we’re in. It’s a risky business, and that’s
going to happen.
Wright: As
part of your vision, you were involved with the strategic plan that
cast a twenty-five-year view of the Space Science Program. Based on
what I’ve read, you and hundreds of others spent two years of
effort trying to put that plan together. Tell me how you were able
to accomplish that and what were your goals and expectations of that
plan as you were developing it.
Huntress:
One of the things that was clearly important was strategic planning.
I think the Office of Space Science [OSS] invented that, and had been
doing it in the eighties. Len Fisk was one of the folks who really
did a lot of strategic planning. I learned about its value from him.
And it was clear that the people to whom we were marketing the program,
whether it be the Administration, whether it be the Congress, or be
the public, they weren’t going to give us any money unless we
could tell them what we were going to do. “Where is it going
to lead? Where is all this going to? Suppose we give you this project,
this billion-dollar project today. Where is that going to go? What
have I got myself in for here? So where is this leading?”
So that’s why strategic planning became important. It was also
important to get the science community behind what the Agency planned
to do, because the science community was the community that was going
to sell it to Congress. The science community is very politically
active, and they have credibility with the Congress. So they’re
the ones who are going to be able to sell this program to the Congress,
because they’ll lobby for it. But they had to understand where
it’s going, too, so they can see where it’s going.
So the idea was to get the science community involved with the NASA
community to do long-term strategic planning. So the idea was that
NASA would do the long-term thinking about what we could do in the
future based on what technologies we had, what kinds of missions we
could do, bring the science community on board to figure out what
the science program, what the science priorities are, match those
things up to create a long-term plan, and then use the academy as
the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval. “Yes, you guys did good.”
“No, you didn’t do good, and here’s what you need
to do.” That kind of stuff.
So that was the general process. So each three years, we would produce
a new strategic plan that focused on the next five years that remained,
but had a view out [to] about a decade, and we did that every three
years. These were very useful in marketing the Space Science Program,
whether it was planetary or whether it was astrophysics or space physics,
because the Administration could see where we were going. Congress
could see where we were going.
The only deficiencies in these strategic plans were that they didn’t
have strict prioritizations in them. This is the plan that the community
thinks is the most important to do, but we didn’t say, “You’ve
got to do this program first and that program second.” That
was the only deficiency in them, the only criticism we really got
about them.
Wright: One
of the challenges of the strategic plan is that you just weren’t
doing it for the Office of Space Sciences. Part of the strategic plan
was also involving the other enterprises at NASA. How were you able
to accomplish with the other groups—
Huntress:
That’s what Dan Goldin did, in fact, was insist on strategic
plans from the other enterprises, and then have that become part of
a massive strategic plan. That was Dan Goldin’s innovation.
For the most part, the plans were developed top-down, kind of a top-down
process. But the AAs were intimately involved in that, so they could
tailor the top-down process so that their enterprise plans would fit
into it fairly well. The highest-level objectives were clearly defined
by this executive committee, which the AAs were a leading part. So
that way it would all be coherent.
But the enterprise plans themselves were pretty independent. What
I did was use this as a means to try to get the Human Space Flight
Program and the Office of Space Sciences programs more closely tied
together. My goal, selfishly, was to get more science into the Human
Space Flight Program and to try to get the Human Space Flight Program
to be based more on science than it was, because it was really based
more on engineering requirements and programmatic kinds of ideas,
and I wanted to try to get some more science into that.
One of the deals we tried to work was that when we did our first Mars
missions beyond Pathfinder, that we would try to carry experiments
on those missions that had Human Space Flight goals. It kind of worked.
Where it fell apart was that the Human Space Flight Program, because
of having trouble with [the International Space] Station, never ponied
up the money for the instruments. So it turned out that the Office
of Space Science had to pay for those instruments, and that created
a lot of problems. It was regarded by the folks in Space Science as
being baited and switched. So that created a bad feeling in the Office
of Space Science, but it didn’t prevent the good things from
happening. That was how it was when I left, so I don’t know.
Hopefully, they’re still doing it. There is an instrument on
[2001 Mars] Odyssey, which has Human Space Flight goals, which is
the radiation monitor. So hopefully it’s still continuing.
I really do believe it’s important for both those enterprises
to work together on a systematic and science-based plan for exploring
the planets, with both robots and humans. It’s in the best interest
for both of them. And humans, I don’t think, will ever get anywhere
beyond where they are now without having a good scientifically well-based
rationale for where they’re going, and full participation between
robots and humans, both, in a sensible, systematic way.
Wright: How
about your work with the Mission to Planet Earth Enterprise as well?
Huntress:
Yes, that’s what I did with Shelby Tilford. The two years I
was with Shelby was, in fact, developing the Mission to Planet Earth
plan, and I came to it with my experience in the Upper Atmospheric
Research Satellite. That was my training ground for NASA’s strategic
planning, because I was strategic planning for Mission to Planet Earth.
That was my training ground for strategic planning, for project development
in NASA, and working with the Centers, and I believe in it. I think
it was an important thing to do. It changed its flavor a bit, and
the way in which it was being accomplished, after Shelby left, because
the Agency couldn’t afford those big, expensive missions that
had come out of it. But nonetheless, it’s been restructured
like everything else. Cassini had to be restructured, AXAF [Advanced
X-ray Astrophysics Facility] had to be restructured, and [they have]
done well.
Wright: With
your previous association with Mission to Planet Earth, at least when
you were doing your strategic planning for the OSS, it must have been
somewhat easier for you to weave in Mission to Planet Earth activities
as well because you were already familiar with that.
Huntress:
Yes. Sure.
Wright: In
the strategic plan, there were metrics. How were you able to come
up with the metrics, and then how well did you meet those metrics?
Huntress:
Metrics in science are hard, because you cannot predict discoveries.
What science is about is acquiring knowledge and making discoveries,
and you can’t plan those. You can’t tell somebody from
OMB, “Eighteen months from now, I’m going to discover
a planet around another star.” You just can’t do that.
And that’s what they want.
I have to say that my relationship with OMB was terrific. The fellow
who ran the program was Steven [J.] Isakowitz . He and I developed
a very good relationship. I don’t think I would’ve been
able to have made the accomplishments I did, if it hadn’t been
for the fact that Steve Isakowitz and OMB felt that what I was doing
was the right thing.
But development of metrics such as that were very hard and so we had
to do proxies. So, to try to satisfy the system, [we developed] two
proxies to evaluate current performance. One was a metric which was,
“How many of the 100 most important scientific discoveries of
the past year were done by the Office of Space Science?” And
there was a magazine, Science News, which is a British-based publication,
which did that every year. So we counted, and we went back into the
past. How many of those were ours? And we could plot them up and see
how well we were doing.
The other was an integrated one, which was, we picked a very popular
textbook on the science beyond the Earth, planetary science and astrophysics
and everything. And how many pages in that textbook were the result
of NASA discoveries? Of course, it takes a while for the different
editions of this book to come out, a couple of years, so it integrated
over the years of the program. So we would look at each edition and
count the number of pages relative to the whole volume, which were
describing discoveries and science done by NASA, and we plotted that.
And you could see the increasing number.
You could see, for example, when Voyager flew past Saturn, you could
see this big jump in the number of discoveries. You could see individual
events. When Hubble [Space Telescope] came along, you could see the
big jump in a number of discoveries that came from NASA. And then
how they got integrated into the book. We kept getting an increasing
fraction of the book until when I left, I think we had more than half
the book.
So those were the metrics that we used to demonstrate past performance.
The hardest part was being able to tell OMB what we are going to discover
with this mission in two or three years. That was hard. We could not
do that. So we could only state what goals we had that when a mission
was done, did we meet those goals or did we not? That was the only
way we could do that, and that’s always going to be a problem
in science.
Wright: While
you were there, you were also establishing a task group for science
data management so that it could be reviewed and managed.
Huntress:
I don’t know much about that.
Wright: Okay.
So much of your work involved so many people, scientifically, engineering-wise.
Can you talk to us about the different types of networks of partnerships
between NASA and the community?
Huntress:
Yes, absolutely, because none of this would get done without those
people. People are what make it happen, not institutions, and so it
was really important to have a good staff. I had to have a really
good, close-knit staff, since we were downsizing the whole time I
was there as AA. I went from 144 to 68 people, and that was hard.
And to maintain a good crew of people—and I had a great crew
of people. I couldn’t ask for a better—and maybe I’m
bragging here a little bit, but if you were a person at Headquarters,
the place you wanted to work was Code S [Office of Space Science].
We were doing fun stuff.
You had to have the science community on board. You had to have OMB
on board. You had to have the public on board, Congress. So you had
to network with all of these communities. Even in the science community,
there were four competing communities. There was the planetary guys,
the astrophysicists, and the space physicists, and then later the
biologists. So you had these competing communities that you had to
more or less try to satisfy. That was the biggest challenge, I think,
of the job, was to keep those communities on board with what you were
doing, because funding is so fragile that any dissension generally
ruins the whole thing. So that was the big challenge.
I had an advisory group, and the way I treated my advisory group—a
bunch of the scientists representing all these communities—was
I really took their advice. I tried to make them feel like that they
were instrumental in helping me to make the decisions that I had to
make. They weren’t just a sounding board. They weren’t
just a means of communicating what I’m doing to the science
community. I put my tough problems in front of them and asked them
to help me with them. I felt like they were part of the process, and
I didn’t fear that. Lots of AAs would’ve feared that.
“That’s taking my control away.” But I didn’t
fear it at all, because that’s the way I’m going to get
buy in. That’s the way that I’m going to get Congress
to approve things.
Then you had the National Academy [of Science]. You had them to keep
them involved. I used them positively. This was the group that was
going to say, “The science you’re proposing to do is topnotch.”
That’s the positive thing. So that was a challenge, but it was
fun. You come across a lot of people, and you engage a lot of people,
and you talk to a lot of people, and that’s how you get the
best program, by just listening to those folks, because it all integrates.
It all gets integrated ultimately into your future planning.
Wright: How
about the international community? How were you able to involve them
and keep them participating as well?
Huntress:
I got my potty training in that with Cassini, because that was an
international joint project. By that I mean NASA and ESA [European
Space Agency] were both in the critical path, and that wasn’t
something NASA or JPL were really used to. Neither wanted to be at
the mercy of some other international partner. [If] that partner failed
the mission failed.
So I got my potty training and all of that, and I felt, and still
feel, that there are some things that just you have to have. You’re
not going to get anywhere if you don’t do that. We’re
not going to send humans to the Moon or Mars or anywhere if it’s
not going to be international. Ain’t going to happen. And we’re
not going to be able to send comprehensive, expensive missions, even
robotic, anywhere, unless they’re international and people bring
their best to bear on them, because it’s too expensive.
Hubble was international, too. I’m not sure people know that.
But ESA was a junior partner in that one. It was not quite like Cassini.
ESA was a junior partner. They were supplying the solar panels. That’s
pretty important. So I really valued it. I tried to promote it. I
tried to promote cooperation with the Russians when they became Russia,
because they have a lot of experience and a lot to bring to the table,
and I worked hard on doing that. I tried to promote joint missions,
one I called “Fire and Ice.” “Why don’t y’all
come aboard and we’ll do the solar program. We’ll do the
Pluto mission together,” or, “We’ll do some Mars
missions together.” And it never worked because the Russians
never had the money. They just couldn’t bring what they could
otherwise have brought to the table. They had no money, and I wasn’t
going to send them any. I didn’t have that kind of money, and
I needed to send it to our U.S. folks. I wasn’t going to send
them money. So that never really worked, unfortunately.
But the Europeans, I thought we had a good relationship. I had a good
counterpart in ESA, Roger Bonnet, and I worked with them very well,
and we got along very well, and Cassini was our star project. We both
considered that as our highest priority, make that work. And so far,
so good on that. Both Roger and I are gone. I have the impression
that relationships have kind of deteriorated a bit, in fact, that
international cooperation is not as robust as it was. I think that’s
unfortunate. But I think to do really very ambitious projects, we’re
going to need partners, real partners, and not on the model of the
Space Station, which is where the U.S. tries to be the principal partner.
All the rest of them are junior partners, and just bring your stuff.
My impression is that isn’t working very well. So you have to
treat them as equals and deal with them that way.
Wright: You
mentioned the Hubble Space Telescope Program, and that was part of
your Origins Program that you instituted. Could you talk to us about
that, about the Hubble, because there was a situation that you had
to deal with, with the Hubble.
Huntress:
Yes, that’s right. In fact, I inherited the first repair mission.
Len Fisk did most of the work before he left, but the mission itself
occurred under my watch. The first two things that happened to me
my first year were the Hubble repair mission, which was successful,
and the Mars Observer failure in August of [19]’93. Those were
my first year, so I cut my teeth on both of those.
Origins grew in an interesting way. In the process of trying to construct
a long-term strategic plan for the Office of Space Science, we tried
to develop themes for going into the future, and trying to marry the
various scientific elements of the Office of Space Science together
in some thematic ways that would make sense. Origins, we had been
discussing internally as a way to do that, because it brought in the
astronomy, the astrophysics, the origin of the galaxies, origins of
stars. And then it brought in the planetary program, origins of planets
around stars, origin of life. That seemed to be a theme that could
be wrapping things up, and we were thinking about that in our strategic
planning process when all hell broke loose with ALH 84001 [Allan Hills
meteorite].
That created such an interest in the Administration. Whether right
or wrong, it created such an interest in the Administration about
pursuing the search for life elsewhere in the solar system and beyond,
that OMB asked me right after that happened, “Wes, can you give
us a plan that would address the idea of looking for life elsewhere
in the universe?”
I had it. “Yes, here it is, right there.”
You know, it was an integrated program of looking for life on Mars
with a set of missions that were already called Mars Surveyor, and
it had the idea of going to Europa, because by that time the idea
of a subsurface ocean had come out of the Galileo mission. It had
in it the idea of looking for planets around other stars, because
we had been going through a whole bunch of studies. Ever since 1990,
that was one of my ambitions, remember, when I took [over] the planetary
division. We had a bunch of studies on what kind of technologies,
astronomical technologies were going to be [needed for] that. I had
made an investment in the Keck telescope to try to develop optical
interferometry as a means to do that in space, and test it on the
ground in the Keck telescope.
So we had [an] idea of the space missions, space interferometers,
that could detect planets and other stars. We’d been working
on the idea of bringing biology back into the program as well. So
I just wrapped all this up in a package and shipped it to OMB, and
they loved it. We were in the midst of a budget process that August—must
have been [19]’96. I can’t quite remember. And OMB really
liked it. There were internal battles, as there always are, in the
budget process of how much money was going to get devoted to a new
program like this. OMB wanted to give me a lot of money, and the Agency
was not happy with that, because they wanted the money for Space Station.
So there was a battle, a very nasty battle that year, and the result
of it was that we got an Origins Program proposed, but not quite as
robust as OMB was willing to give us.
But we got the program going, and again it was just a matter of having
most of what was needed at the right time, and we were thinking ahead.
So when the opportunity came along—kaboom!—we’re
ready. I think that’s what characterized my tenure there, was
thinking ahead, always thinking in the future, and having the future
in mind and where we were going. So when the opportunities came along,
we were ready.
I guess that was the same year we did the Vice President’s study.
The National Academy, which always does these studies for NASA, usually
takes a long time, months or years to put together a scientific report
for NASA. This time they did it in six weeks, because the Vice President
wanted a symposium on this. Boy, they really put it together quickly.
We did this on December 11th, I think it was, 1996 or ’95 or
something like that. I can’t remember the dates. I never did
well in history.
Anyway, and he was supposed to be there for an hour. He was there
for more than two, listening to this group talk about this Origins
Program. That’s what really sold it.
Wright: During
this time that you were developing and thinking ahead, what was driving
the NASA Agency was Dan Goldin’s “faster, better, cheaper”
initiative. Was that a major factor when you began thinking ahead?
Did you have to plot that in, or was that something that you naturally
did?
Huntress:
No, it was already there. I mean, in 1991, I had put together a strategic
plan for Len Fisk, and the strategic items in that plan, one of them
was to have more data coming back from the solar system on a continual
basis, using less expensive, more rapidly developed and flown missions.
So when Dan came in with that notion of lower-cost missions, we were
just ready for it. I mean, it was there, tailor-made. “Here
it is, Dan.”
I can’t think of the question you asked.
Wright: Many
times when a directive comes down from the Administrator, that becomes
the key factor in developing.
Huntress:
I think the directive actually, and the “better, faster, cheaper”
came after Discovery, because in the Administrator’s mind, he
had this idea of lower-cost missions, but then he’s handed this
program of lower-cost planetary missions, and I made him aware of
the Explorer Program, and I revamped the Explorer Program at the time
towards the Discovery model. It was not run in the Discovery way.
And so we revamped the Explorer missions and the astrophysics missions,
so they were run exactly the way we’d run Discovery. So in the
Administrator’s mind, “Okay. We’ve got this. How
do I describe it?” This is better, and it’s faster than
missions coming out, and it’s cheaper.
So that was his invention, the term. And they were certainly faster
because they were developed and flown on a shorter period of time.
They were certainly cheaper. The argument was always “better.”
Are they really better? I think they were better for the program,
because we had more data coming back all the time. They weren’t
as comprehensive scientifically. Some would say that’s not better.
I would argue with that, because they had very specific objectives.
So I think the argument will always be “better.” In fact,
we pushed it too far. And that was with the enthusiasm of Lockheed
Martin [Corporation], who gave us a very good bid for those two Mars
missions. But in fact, in practice we found the limits at that time
to how far we could push that philosophy. We found the limits by experiment,
which is unfortunate. The reason it’s unfortunate is that because
it caused that internal battle inside of JPL, which was working these
Discovery-class faster, better, cheaper missions, versus the older
style who hated that. So what happended was, the older guys won, and
the institution reverted back to what it used to be, instead of adopting
this new way of doing business. And so its costs skyrocketed after
that. I mean, its missions are incredibly expensive now. I think that’s
unfortunate.
I forget where I was going.
Wright: One
of the things that Dan Goldin had mentioned about how you did your
work is that you were able to assemble great teams at these field
centers and at Headquarters.
Huntress:
Yes.
Wright: When
you were looking to assemble your teams, what were the criteria that
you were looking for in these individual members?
Huntress:
Success. I looked for people who had had a trail of success. JPL is
an incredible institution. I mean, it’s a brilliant place, and
they’re able to do things that you wouldn’t think possible.
I discovered the same thing at APL, in a different way, just a totally
different way of doing business, but they were also very good. So
it’s a matter of finding institutions that were good and finding
individuals that were good, folks who had a passion for what they
were doing, folks who had a record of accomplishment in what they
were doing, and folks who wanted responsibility and had the passion
to carry it out. That’s what you look for. Those are the folks
who stayed behind when we did the downsizing, and those are the folks
out there at the implementing institutions, Goddard, APL, JPL—remained
behind. We wanted to enjoy what we were doing and find folks who just
enjoy what they’re doing and have that passion and ability,
just find those.
Wright: In
1998, you departed from NASA, saying that after serving in that position
for more than five years, it was “simply time to move on.”
What led you to that decision? How did you know it was the right time
to move on?
Huntress:
I’ll tell you a story. I knew when I left JPL and went to Headquarters,
that that was a high-pressure environment. Not that what I was doing
at JPL wasn’t high pressure, but it was high pressure in a much
different way, because you had the Congress to deal with, you had
the Administration to deal with. It was highly politically charged.
When Dan Goldin came on board, it became clear immediately that he
was going to be a challenge to work for. I had had some experience
with people like Dan. I mean, Dan is a certain personality, and I’d
had experience with somebody like him before, which has stood me in
good stead, because I didn’t make the initial mistakes a lot
of the other people at NASA Headquarters made with him. I knew not
to make them. And I got along well with Dan. I developed my own means
to deal with him. Dan’s a very intimidating person, and the
way in which he works with his direct reports is to intimidate them,
put the fear of God in them. Well, I never let him know I was scared,
ever. Never let him know I was off balance. So that kept him off balance.
So that’s the way you deal with him. I love Dan, and he is a
great visionary, but he’s difficult to deal with.
So I knew that this was going to be hard. You have a hard Administrator
to deal with. You’ve got an Administration that doesn’t
give a damn about space exploration, and you’ve got a tough
Congress, especially the new Republican Congress that just wanted
to slash and burn. That was a tough situation.
The OSS budget was declining like crazy, and I considered it my job
to reverse that. At the beginning of Dan’s tenure, OSS and the
robotic space program was at the bottom of his priority list. He gave
us a list of priorities. Space Science was at the bottom. I said,
“Man, we’re in big trouble. So this is going to be hard.”
So each year I would get a physical. I decided I would make it six
months. Every six months, I’m going to get a physical. Get my
blood pressure checked. I’m going to get an EKG [electrocardiogram].
I’m going to do all those things, blood test, because this could
be physically tough. And I’m going to ask my family to watch
me mentally. I asked my wife, my kid, I said, “Son, you watch
Daddy. If he starts to act weird, just let him know.” Because
I knew I would never pick up on it.
But I thrived in this environment. I really enjoyed this stuff and
really liked doing it, but I knew that it’s something that you
just can’t do forever, that there’s just physical and
mental limits to doing a job like this.
So finally, I remember it was August of [19]’97. August is the
worst month in the year. That’s when you’re battling within
the Agency to put together the budget for the following year, for
the President’s proposal, and it’s horrible because Space
Science always was cut by hundreds of millions of bucks, and I had
to fight my way back because we were low priority in the Agency. Space
Station was always taking all the money, and we had to fight to retain
our money.
It was August ’97, and I was doing fine physically. Man, my
heart was fine. My EKGs, the doctor says, “Hey, you’re
doing great. No problems.” My blood pressure was always very
good. Never had any problem with my blood pressure, my heart, or anything
like that. Physically, I was doing fine. But I guess mentally I wasn’t.
I came home during a budget battle one night, and I sat at the dinner
table, and I was eating my dinner, and my son pokes me. He says, “Dad,
who are you talking to?”
I said, “I’m talking to you.”
“No, you’re not.” He says, “And you know what
you’re doing?” He said, “You’re leaning over
your plate. You’re looking down at your plate of spaghetti,
and you’re talking to your plate.”
What I was doing was, I was figuring out what I was going to say at
the budget battle the next day. Okay. That’s it. That’s
when I knew. I’m done. Time to go. And my wife said, “You
know, you’ve been really kind of in your own world the last
six months or so.” Okay. It’s time.
So I went out and tried to get other folks interested in taking my
job, and I found somebody who was willing to do it. As soon as I did
that, then I went to Dan, because I wanted to make sure that there
was somebody who was willing to follow me, [in whom] I had a lot of
confidence and felt good about.
So it was a January day. I went to see Dan. I said, “Dan, it’s
time for me to leave.”
He says, “Why?” [loudly] He looked up, and he has this
inimitable way of doing things.
I said, “Because it’s time.”
And he said, “Oh,” and he never asked me another question.
I think he knew. He must have known, because it was time. It was time.
I had to get out of the situation.
But I felt good about it because I had turned the funding situation
around. We had the Origins Program. The funding was on the rise. We’d
established the Astrobiology Program. We had the Discovery line of
missions. We had the Mars Surveyor line of missions. At the time we
had an Outer Planets line, which had a concept study in it for Europa.
We had a New Technology line going, and the program just looked terrific.
So I felt good about what I had managed to accomplish. And six years
was a long time as an AA. In fact, it was a record at the time. That’s
all. It was time.
Wright: I’m
going to stop the tape for a minute, and we’ll come back and
talk about how you made your transition to your current job.
Huntress:
Sure. Okay.
Wright: Before
we move into your transition phase to your current duties, I was going
to ask if you would expound some on your Mars missions, primarily
the Pathfinder. Any other of those aspects that you would like to
talk to us about in detail?
Huntress:
What’s amazing is what came out of the Mars Observer failure
in [19]’93. That didn’t become the end of the Mars program;
it actually became the beginning, because what came out of it was
the Mars Surveyor Program, which is a program of a number of missions.
So when we lost a single large Mars mission, what we got out of that
was an indeterminate program of smaller missions launched at every
opportunity. And that was the result of Dan and I trying to figure
out what we were going to do after the loss of Mars Observer. Discovery
was already on its way. That bird was already on its way.
So the discussion with Dan and I was, how are we going to recover
from this? How can we distribute risk in addressing Mars in such a
way that we don’t lose all of our marbles all at once, like
we did with Mars Observer? Of course, the model for that was the Discovery
Program. The idea was, if we’re really going to be serious about
Mars being a planet most among equals in the program, and address
the public’s excitement about Mars, the best way to do that
is with a continuing program of Mars exploration, a line of missions,
not a single mission. Distribute our risk, fly at every opportunity,
a smaller mission at every opportunity, recover the lost Mars Observer
science by taking those instruments and spreading them out over a
number of orbiters flown over a number of opportunities, and so if
we lost one, we still had another one going. In fact, we came down
to launching two per opportunity; the extent that we could. One orbiter,
one lander. And that was the beginning of Mars Surveyor Program.
The Administration liked it, the Congress liked it, and that’s
how we got the first set of Mars missions, beginning with Mars Global
Surveyor, [and] that orbiter is still operating. It just happened
at the same time that we were going to launch the first of the Discovery
missions, Mars Pathfinder. So that would start the series, and every
twenty-six months thereafter, every time Mars came around, we would
launch two more missions to Mars. And that’s how the program
got started.
Mars Pathfinder was kind of my baby. If I had to pick a mission I
was most associated with, other than the Cassini mission, it would
have to be Pathfinder, because the concept for doing that was worked
out by myself, and the idea of putting the [Mars Exploration] Rover
on it was one of my ideas. And convincing the Office of Technology
to pay for that Rover was something I had to do.
I really associated strongly with the team at JPL that put that mission
together. This was my test for how small missions were going to work,
and the test was [to] leave them alone. Give them the money, give
them the responsibility, give them the money when they needed it,
as they had proposed to receive it, and believe in their plan, give
them the responsibility, and stay out of their hair. Don’t impose
review after review after review. That costs money. It diverts them
from what they need to do. They can determine what they need to do
and what kind of external reviews they needed to have, not me. And
boy, did that work. That really worked. It was a success.
So I really identify with that mission. Of course, now we have a robust
Mars program, and it’s going to do lots of exciting things,
and one of these days they’ll find some bugs living under the
ground there, some water below the permafrost somewhere, I think,
anyway. It’s going to be publicly exciting.
Wright: On
a personal note, tell us about where you were and what you were doing
July 4th, [1997], when you saw your project come alive.
Huntress:
I was in [Theodore] von Kármán Auditorium [JPL, Pasadena,
California], and Dan was there also, but he wanted me front and center.
He said, “Wes, you go to the front of that auditorium, and you’ll
be right there under the lights. This is your baby. So be front and
center.”
So I was on the front row with all the reporters and the klieg lights
on me and all that kind of stuff as we were watching it all happen.
Of course, you get these little reports. “We’ve entered
the atmosphere.” Another report, “The parachutes opened.”
Another report, “The rockets have fired.” Another report,
“We see the first bounce.” All this kind of stuff. It
was a thrill, absolute thrill.
Finally somebody said, “Full stop,” and I just screamed.
I jumped up and screamed. There’s a picture of me somewhere.
In fact, my old friends from the East Coast sent me a copy of the
Boston Globe. There I was in this embarrassing picture just standing
up screaming when this thing landed successfully.
Then I ran up to the building where the team was, and it was pretty
emotional. A lot of tears. Of course, this young crew that the JPL
had assembled, I remember one of them turning to me and saying, “Thanks
for giving us the responsibility to do this.” Broke me up. So
all those folks are off doing good things, and it makes me feel good
about it.
Wright: You
mentioned about a Mars rock.
Huntress:
Oh, the Mars rock. Yes. I guess it was maybe six or eight months before
that story broke. One of my staff members came up to me in my office
and said, “Wes, we’ve got this article submitted to Science
magazine, and it says they found evidence for life on Mars, on one
of the Mars meteorites.”
I said, “Yeah, okay. We’ll see.”
He said, “What should we do about this?”
I said, “Has it been accepted for publication?”
He said, “No. It’s in review.”
“Don’t bother me. That probably won’t survive review.
Come back when it survives review.”
Then six months went by. Forgot about it. The guy comes back up, and
he says, “Remember the article I told you about? It’s
scheduled for release on August 7th.”
I said, “You mean it passed review?”
He says, “Yeah, it’s passed review. It’s scheduled
for the August 7th magazine, and this is going to hit the fan. This
is big news: Evidence for life on Mars from this Mars meteorite.”
So I was flabbergasted. I’d written it off. “So can you
get me a copy of it?” Science is very, very secretive about
stuff. I said, “Give me a copy.” I got a copy of it, and
I ran up to see Dan. Dan went nuts. I mean, we were both excited.
It was clearly circumstantial evidence, but the paper made a good
case. So we knew this was going to be big news, and it was probably
something the Administration couldn’t ignore either.
So Dan says, “We’ve got to go over and see Leon Panetta
[White House Chief of Staff, 1994-1996]. I’ve got to go see
him, because this is something that’s going to go right to the
White House.”
So we went over to see Leon Panetta, and we went into his office,
Dan explained what this is all about, and Leon was really intrigued.
He said, “This is exciting stuff.” He says, “We’ve
got to let the President know.”
Dan brought something else up. He says, “You know, this is scheduled
for release on the same day that the Republicans will be announcing
their candidate at their convention, and it could push that off the
front page. If you make comments, this Administration could be accused
of trying to undermine the Republican Convention,” and all this
stuff.
Leon said, “Nonsense.” He said, “This is important
news the public needs to know.”
And then the other question was, “The other question is, we
have to keep this quiet because Science magazine has this policy.”
He says, “That’s fine. Science comes first. Follow the
Science policy first,” which surprised me. So then he says,
“Wait outside my office for a few minutes, and we’ll get
back to this.”
I wait outside his office, and he comes back in fifteen minutes. “Follow
me.”
Down the hall into the Oval Office, and there’s the President
[William Jefferson Clinton]. Obviously, he’d just gotten up.
He was wiping his eye. Big man, anybody that knows him, impressive
man. Big. He says, “What’s all this news about Mars?”
We sat down in the Oval Office, and Dan described it to him. I had
brought a picture of a Mars meteorite along in a magazine. He kept
getting more and more interested in all of this. He said, “We’ve
got to do something about this, but I think before we do, I want you
to go see the Vice President, Al [Albert Arnold Gore, Jr.]. He knows
about science.”
He asked me for the magazine. I had a picture of the Mars rock. “Can
I read that?” I’m going to tell him no? So I left it with
him.
I went to see the Vice President. I spent about forty-five minutes
in there, and he grilled us. Grilled us. All kinds of technical science
questions. We answered them. He said, “Boy, this is really fascinating,
Dan. We’ll get together with you on how we’re going to
handle the release,” and we left.
Of course, I think you know the story. The story was leaked through
one of the staff members of the White House and his mistress, telling
stories in bed, and she leaked it to get some money. So we had to
call Science, the magazine, and say, “The story’s out
there; and we’ve got to have a press conference now.”
So we had the press conference, and I think that press conference
is a good example of the way the science process really works. What
we do our best to say [is], “Here’s the case these people
have made for life on Mars, and this is a set of circumstantial evidence,
and it’s not proven, and here is someone to tell you what needs
to be done in order to prove or disprove this. I’m going to
show you both sides.”
We showed them both sides. We showed that this is a process. It’s
like a trial. The jury hasn’t been given all the data yet. Here’s
some evidence. These folks have some evidence. We have to examine
the evidence and try to present it that way. “This is not life
on Mars. This is a case that someone has brought.” I think we
did that press conference very well. In fact, the case hasn’t
been brought. A case for the probability of life on Mars has been
brought, but there is no case for life on Mars yet, after a critical
examination of that evidence over the past five or six years. But
still, that event marked an important point, a turning point in the
history of the program. It enabled the Origins Program. It made more
credible the possibility of life on Mars and elsewhere in the solar
system, and I think brought the public back into the interest sphere
of the whole NASA program. It was a turning point. Evidence for life
on Mars or not, it was a turning point in the fortunes for planetary
exploration and astrophysics, observations of planets around other
stars and such.
Wright: That
event brought you in personal contact with the President and the Vice
President. There had been other times that you had been in contact
with Congress because you had been called to testify or you’ve
been called to rationalize your budget. Could you share with us what
that was like and how well those went?
Huntress:
Oh yes. I think that Congress was very sympathetic with Space Science,
because I testified a lot and presented the program, especially during
budget hearings, a lot. I always was careful to bring along examples
of what we had done, visuals, if we could. I brought a piece of the
Mars rock once. Pieces of hardware like rovers and things like that
to show them what it is that we were doing, demonstrate for them what
their money was buying and why they should invest in us. It was easy
for Space Science. To bring a Hubble picture and show them the fascination
[of what] was going on out there. And they’re all fascinated.
They may not have much knowledge about it, but they’re all fascinated
with it.
So I always got a sympathetic ear in Congress, and I always had a
lot of support in Congress for Space Science. The issues were always
more or less with the human side of the program. So I always enjoyed
being on the witness side of that table. It was fine, because I knew
we had the bullets, so I never had any problem. I enjoyed it.
Wright: How
do you feel that your legacy is viewed by the academic and the scientific
community?
Huntress:
I think positively, because one of the things in my tenure was to
turn the whole enterprise around. We were headed for trouble. I mean,
we were headed in the hole, and I turned the whole funding situation
around, and I think turned around the way in which business was done.
Instead of the occasional large mission, there’s missions flying
all the time, and there’s interesting stuff coming back all
the time. There’s innovation in the program. There’s more
participation by the science community in the program, and there’s
more public participation. There needs to be more of that, because
I only was able to just initiate that, but there needs to be more
public participation. That’s why I’m president of the
Planetary Society, because I want to see more of that public participation
in the program. It’ll only make it stronger.
I think a lot of the science that came out of the program was terrific.
I mean, Hubble was just fabulous. So I think, generally, my term as
AA is viewed positively. I hope it is. I’m proud of it.
Wright: One
of the programs that we haven’t talked much about is the New
Millennium [Program].
Huntress:
Oh yes. Yes, yes. In talking with Dan about the vision for where Space
Science was going to go, and what astrophysics could do, what astrophysical
observatories could do; what sort of a planetary program we could
have, Dan had this idea of sending thousands of spacecraft out there,
just having a beehive of spacecraft out there somehow. But it was
always limited by technology. The Office of Space Science always had
to rely on technology development either in its big programs, like
Cassini, which would spend money to develop the technologies it needed,
because it didn’t have them, and that’s why they’re
expensive, or from the Office of Technology, which was a separate
office and had its own decision-making process, and not always in
the best interest of space sciences as viewed from Space Science.
If we were going to implement better, faster, cheaper; if these smaller
spacecraft were really going to be highly functional and do good science;
we needed new technology.
We were using old technology already, because it was proven and it
was safe and it was comfortable. It was expensive, and it was big.
We were in the PC [personal computer] era, and we were still flying
tape recorders, things like that, which were ten, twenty years old.
So to make these smaller spacecraft do the same job as the bigger
ones for less money, we needed technology. And project managers were
reluctant to fly new technology because it was risky.
So Dan and I figured the way to do this is [to] have a flight program,
which is dedicated to flying and testing technology, so the program
managers would use it in the science missions. We both got on his
plane and we flew out to JPL, and we talked with [Dr. Edward C.] Ed
Stone and some of the folks at JPL. I remember having dinner with
myself and Dan and Ed Stone, and we just invented New Millennium.
Dan and I flew back and put it in the budget. The rationale was straightforward
and quite simple. DS-1 [Deep Space 1] was one of the first of the
New Millennium missions, and it was a great idea. I’m disappointed
it didn’t continue.
What it did was, it brought the technology into the Office of Space
Science, because Dan transferred the technology programs into Space
Science so the customer for the technology was in charge, so that
the customer could be assured that the technology that he needed—the
customer being space science—was being developed and being developed
for the future that customer envisioned for himself, rather than some
other office. And that worked. That was beginning to work. I think,
unfortunately, the technology was transferred back out again. New
Millennium disappeared, and I think that’s a mistake, because
now a customer for that technology’s no longer in charge of
his own future, but I think Dan had it right in the beginning
So that was the origin of the New Millennium’s Program, and
I still think it was a pretty good idea.
Wright: You
did choose to leave in 1998, and you became Director of the Geophysical
Laboratory for the Carnegie Institute of Washington, D.C. Tell us
about your current position and what you hope to accomplish here.
Huntress:
I’m lucky. Knock on wood. I knew hardly anything about the Carnegie
Institution of Washington before I left. When I told Dan I was leaving,
I didn’t have a job. I told him, “I want to leave by the
fall, and I want to spend the next six months looking for a job.”
He said, “Fine.” Dan wasn’t anxious to get rid of
me. I handed up some names for candidates, and he could spend the
time deciding who he wanted to follow me.
One of the jobs that I was looking at was as director of the new Astrobiology
Institute out at Ames [Research Center, Moffett Field, California].
Ultimately, it turned out that was not practical, because, (a), I
had funded it, and as the NASA official responsible for that, I couldn’t
go work in it unless I stayed a civil employee. I didn’t want
to do that; I wanted to leave the civil service.
I got a phone call in the spring from a woman who I only knew by reputation
and by reading some of her Op Eds [Opinion Editorials] in the Washington
Post, [Dr.] Maxine [Frank] Singer. She introduced herself, and she
said that she was President of the Carnegie Institution, and she was
looking for a director for one of their departments, Geophysical Lab,
right in D.C., and she wanted to know if I’d be interested in
talking to her about it.
I said, “Sure. Fine.” Why not? Because it’s right
in D.C.
So I went to visit her at her home, and she described what the Geophysical
Laboratory did. I first told her, “I don’t think I’m
a good scientific match for this. I’m an astrochemist, and this
is really petrology.”
She says, “Well, I think you might be.”
She brought me up here to visit the campus. I thought the campus was
very nice.
She says, “You talk to the scientists here.” So I came
up here for another visit, visited the scientists, and was fascinated
with what they were doing, and it was clear that they were involved
in trying to understand the Earth and its chemistry and geochemistry.
There was a lot of very fundamental new and exciting work going on
in high-pressure chemistry and physics here, and they had a fledgling
group working in biochemistry. I guess you’d call it geobiology,
really, and they had submitted a proposal to the Astrobiology Institute.
The chemistry they were doing was something that I was interested
in way back when I did my thesis at Stanford, which is prebiotic chemistry,
and how do you go from chemistry to biology, and how do you make that
transition.
So I was fascinated, so I applied for the job. They gave me the job,
and I’m delighted. I’m an agent of change. Throughout
my entire history at JPL, at NASA Headquarters, and now here, I’m
an agent of change. What I’m doing with a department that’s
almost 100 years old, is taking it into a new area of geobiology,
which is related to astrobiology, or the same thing. So I have the
ability here to make a change in the future of scientific direction
of this place. It’s a wonderful place. It’s too bad there’s
not more like it. It’s a private institution devoted to fundamental
research and science. There used to be more of them in this country,
and it’s unfortunate they’re gone. Most of them were funded
by corporations who decided the bottom line and the near term was
more important than the long term. Big mistake.
But nonetheless, from the very top, the whole philosophy is that this
institute supports individual scientists to do what science they want
to do. So the most important asset of the institution is the scientist.
So my job is to enable my science staff to do what they want to do,
not what the federal government grant system will give them money
to do. They don’t need it. Their needs are all taken care of.
We only get federal grants for more postdocs or for big pieces of
equipment or something like that, or matching grants.
So our scientists here are encouraged to take high-risk, high-payoff
science, because there’s no real punishment for failure. They
don’t lose their grant, because they don’t need them.
And my job is to enable them to do the best possible science, world-class
science. It’s real simple. So I’m enjoying it. Very happy
to be here.
Wright: You’re
also a board member of SpaceDev [Inc.].
Huntress:
Yes, I’m on the board of SpaceDev.
Wright: Could
you tell us about that responsibility in that company?
Huntress:
What a board normally does is to assist the president in running the
place, but the reason I decided to become a board member with SpaceDev
is because I like what they envision for the future. They want to
be involved in the commercial development of space, but they want
to be involved in a way that was different than other folks that I
come across.
While I was at NASA, I had lots of folks come through the door and
say, “We want to be involved in the commercial development of
space. We want to send the first lunar mission, commercial lunar mission.
All we need from you is to front us 85 percent of the money.”
That’s not commercial; that’s doing government business.
This guy, [James] Jim Benson, came in the door one day, and he said,
“I want to do the first commercial planetary mission,”
and it was a particular mission near an asteroid. He said, “I
don’t want your money.” He says, “I just want your
assistance in finding my way through the NASA system to get support
where I need it. I don’t want you to front me the money.”
Okay. Now you’re talking real commercial, so I liked the idea.
What he wanted to do is to take [the] Discovery [Program] another
step in a sense. He wanted to build spacecraft that were very small,
that would run on a standard operating system, and on low-cost, low-power
parts that would have capabilities consistent with the most advanced
of PCs today, that could be launched on small vehicles, that could
be operated through the Internet. All the data comes back through
the Internet. He had the right vision, and I liked that vision, a
personal spacecraft. You could even sell a personal spacecraft. You
get a PC, you can have a personal spacecraft. That was the vision.
I liked that vision. We’re a long way from it, but getting close.
So that’s why I enjoy being on that Board, because that’s
where they’d like to go.
Wright: Do
you foresee anytime in the future that you will be mixing your current
activities or future activities in working with NASA again?
Huntress:
I continue to do that, actually. Indirectly, sometimes. There was
just a National Research Council activity to develop a decadal study
for the next ten years of planetary exploration. I was on that committee.
That was something commissioned by NASA.
I’m always ready to help out whenever they would like to use
me, and I keep in contact with the folks down at NASA Headquarters
all the time. I was three years on the governing committee of the
Division of Planetary Sciences, so I’ve been in contact with
NASA Headquarters in that capacity all the time and with the Planetary
Society.
So I’m happy to be outside the walls of 300 E Street. I miss
the program, but I can still stay involved. So that’s the best
of all possible worlds, I guess.
Wright: Yes,
it sounds it. Before we close today, is there anything else that you’d
like to add?
Huntress:
No, I don’t think so, but it’s been fun talking about
it all.
Wright: I
thank you. It’s been fun listening to it all.
[End
of interview]