calls for a "more robust" Mars exploration effort.
Given added funds, it is not unreasonable that NASA could move up a Mars return sample mission from 2011 to perhaps as early as 2009, Drake said. More money could also support a range of smaller, Scout-class spacecraft dispatched to Mars, he said.
Human treks to the Red Planet
Drake said that the White House budget clearly signals "a vote of no confidence" in NASA’s handling of the space station. That is evident, he said, by deciding not to build the International Space Station any more complete than is necessary to accommodate international partners in the project.
"That savings of billions of dollars plays into the entire question of what's next for human spaceflight. Is the human spaceflight program simply a bus service to swap astronauts out on the International Space Station?" Drake said.
Going back to the Moon has a "been there, done that" feel to it, Drake said. On the other hand, an expedition to Mars has a better chance of exciting the American public, he said.
"In my opinion, we have to think about the current robotic Mars program in this larger context of what’s going to happen to the human exploration side. If, indeed, we start moving in the direction of thinking seriously about sending humans to Mars, we are going to want to know a lot about Mars beforehand," Drake said.