โ Mike Griffin gave his last speech as NASA administrator to his staff before departing on a ski vacation Jan. 16, leaving Associate Administrator Chris Scolese to run the agency until U.S. President-elect BarackObama settles on a successor.
โs departure and the resignation of his deputy, Shana Dale, left Scolese as the top ranking official at NASA. Outgoing President George W. Bush issued an executive order Jan. 16 making the 22-year NASA veteranโs position as acting administrator official.
โs parting words were marked by personal thanks to managers and staff he had led during nearly four years as NASA chief. He said he was heartened that staff members continued to work with him even as it became increasingly clear during the past two months that Obama would not ask him to stay on the job despite โs desire to do so.
โIโm well aware that as a political appointee itโs very, very easy for the career staff to adopt what I call the belief in the hereafter โ Iโll be here after heโs gone. And when that happens the agency canโt get anything done because youโre at odds. And that by and large didnโt happen in my four years here and Iโm grateful to you,โ said.
Like thousands of other Bush appointees, submitted his resignation effective Jan. 20, when Bush officially leaves office.
While Obama had not named a successor before Griffinโs last official day on the job, sources said the leading candidate was retired U.S. Air Force Maj. Gen. Jonathan Scott Gration, a decorated fighter pilot and close adviser to Obama during the campaign. Gration helped write the seven-page space policy paper the Obama campaign released in August supporting Bushโs goal of sending humans to the Moon by 2020 and calling for narrowing the time gap between the planned 2010 retirement of the space shuttle and the first flight of its successor system, now scheduled for 2015, sources said. The paper stood out as the most comprehensive NASA policy statement released by a major presidential candidate in recent history.
Gration held senior policy positions in the military prior to his 2006 retirement from the Air Force but lacks space-related experience aside from a one-year stint in 1982 as a White House Fellow working for NASAโs deputy administrator at the time, Hans Mark.
Sources had said an announcement of Grationโs nomination could come as soon as Jan. 14. However, a potential roadblock emerged on Capitol Hill that day when U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) warned against placing someone without NASA experience in the job. Nelson, who chairs a key NASA oversight panel, had previously endorsed retired U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Charlie Bolden, a former astronaut who co-piloted Nelsonโs 1986 space shuttle mission, for the post.
Bolden said Jan. 16 he had not been contacted by anyone representing Obama to discuss the administrator post.
โIโm honored just to have my name out there,โ Bolden said. โI have resisted the temptation to respond to questions about what I would or wouldnโt do because that would be presumptuous.โ
Nelson, asked to comment on the prospect of Gration leading the space agency, referred to the tenure of former NASA Administrator Sean OโKeefe, who had no direct space experience before moving to NASA from the White House Office of Management and Budget in late 2001.
โI think President Bush made a mistake when he appointed someone without NASA experience in Sean OโKeefe to head the agency. I hope President Obamaโs pick will have that kind of [NASA] background,โ Nelson said Jan. 14 through his spokesman, Dan McLaughlin.
Nelson added in a Jan. 16 statement that he hoped Obama would select someone with experience similar to , an engineer with three decades of experience in space and other high-technology jobs.
โMike Griffin is a good man and was a good administrator,โ Nelson said. โI am hopeful that the administrationโs selection to replace him has similar experience and knowledge of the space program as Mike does.โ
John Logsdon, a space policy expert with the Smithsonian Institutionโs Air and here, said Grationโs lack of space experience should not disqualify him for the job. โThere are lots of NASA administrators who have come from other areas without a background in space,โ he said. โYou want a guy who is a leader and can manage a large organization.โ
Those former administrators include the second and third NASA chiefs, James Webb and Tom Paine, respectively. Webb was a lawyer who served in the Marine Corps during World War II and held several positions in , including undersecretary of the State Department and White House budget director, before becoming NASA chief. Paine, an engineer by training, replaced Webb after a career as a laboratory researcher and manager who had served as a U.S. Navy submarine officer in World War II.
Gration, who retired from the Air Force in 2006, flew 274 missions over during and after the first Gulf War, according to the Air Forceโs Web site. He told attendees of the Democratic National Convention in August that he met then-Sen. Obama in 2005 while serving as director of strategy, plans and policy at U.S. European Command.
โThatโs when I met a leader unlike any I had met before,โ he said as he led a retired generalsโ tribute at the convention. โHe asked tough questions, and he didnโt settle for easy answers. It was this same way of thinking that led him to get it right when he opposed the [current] war in , when he warned of its consequences. Thatโs the judgment of a leader.โ
Gration accompanied Obama on a five- nation, 15-day tour of in 2006. He went on to campaign for Obama alongside former Navy Secretary Richard Danzig and retired Gen. Merrill McPeak, former Air Force chief of staff, as part of Obamaโs national security policy working group. He also served on Obamaโs transition team for the U.S. Defense Department.
The son of missionary parents, Gration spent part of his childhood in the and speaks Swahili fluently, according to a Newsweek article published in August 2007. He joined the Air Force in 1974 through the Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps at in , where he earned a bachelorโs degree in mechanical engineering. He earned a masterโs degree in national security studies from in 1988.
Excerpts from Mike Griffinโs Swan Song
โNASA will look great whether weโre asked to return to the Moon and establish permanent presence there and go to Mars, as I think we ought to be asked to do, or whether weโre asked to carry out some other task. We as an agency will look great if we put our efforts behind carrying out that task, whatever the task is that weโre asked to do with all of the spirit and the technical acumen that I know we as an agency can bring to that task.โ
โIn top management jobs, the single most valuable skill really is always an ability to connect with people โฆ if I have a regret, itโs that I couldnโt connect with more of you.โ
โSo as we come to a time of transition, what I want to ask of everybody who supported me, and those who didnโt, is try to find common ground with the new leadership, whatever that is, whoever that is and whatever it is weโre asked to do as an agency.โ
โIf you canโt support the agenda, then the proper thing to do is to leave. There are many different things that you could do with a $17.5 billion NASA space program. You can do a lot of different things and theyโd probably all be good. But what we canโt do is squabble and fight and in the famous phrase circle the wagons and shoot inward. We canโt do that and produce any result.โ
โIโm, despite what you read on the blogs, not actually an idiot.โ
