NASA chief says U.S. is back in moon race with China

Summary

NASA's administrator said the U.S. is on track for moon missions, a lunar base, and future Mars preparation.

Why this matters

The comments outline NASA's timeline for lunar exploration and its longer-term Mars goals. They also reflect the role of U.S.-China competition in shaping space policy.

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said Saturday that the U.S. was on track to return astronauts to the moon and build a long-term presence there as part of the Artemis program.

“We are absolutely on an achievable path now,” Isaacman said.

In an interview on “Saturday in America,” Isaacman credited President Donald Trump with backing the current lunar effort during his first term.

“There is no question… President Trump gave us the Artemis program that’s currently underway right now during his first term… he gave us the resources to actually execute on an achievable plan through the Working Family Tax Cut Act and the mandate not just to go back to the moon with the national space policy, but to go back, to stay, to build the moon base,” he said.

Isaacman said Trump had also told him that NASA should “figure out what we need to do to go to Mars.”

“That’s exactly why you build the moon base to master the skills that we can send American astronauts to plant the Stars and Stripes on Mars someday,” he added.

Isaacman said NASA was “getting underway building the moon base essentially right now” and that the public would be able to follow progress as early as 2027, when the agency planned a near-monthly cadence of robotic missions to the moon’s South Pole.

He said those missions would support a sustained U.S. presence beyond Earth and help prepare for future Mars missions.

“[We’re going to be] test[ing] out mobility, crewed mobility, uncrewed mobility, power, navigation and the In-Situ resource manufacturing, which is going be paramount for future missions to Mars,” he said.

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