SAN ANTONIO, Texas — After years of relatively flat budgets, the Republican-controlled Congress and Trump administration might support increased spending for federal defense, intelligence and civil agency programs focused on geospatial intelligence, said Robert Cardillo, director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency.
“There is an opportunity in this environment for us to propose and defend and compete for additional resources,” Cardillo said June 6 at the annual GEOINT Symposium, hosted by the U.S. Geospatial Intelligence Foundation. “It is within the realm of possibility. No guarantees. It’s not going to be handed to us like in the good old days, but I think the opening is there.”
As NGA director and head of the National System for Geospatial Intelligence, Cardillo said he has gotten the sense from Capitol Hill and from the new administration that funding could rise. “Again, I don’t want to give expectations out of alignment here, but I’m in a different mental place than I was just a year ago.”
- NASA’s Deep Space Network could face telecommunications traffic jam on Mars
- The Moon is the gateway to NASA’s exploration future
- For Rep. Rogers, fighting through a war in space starts with fixing acquisition
- Yahsat’s Mahmood on Brazil, Africa, Facebook and future satellites
- How Trump Could Wage a War on Scientific Expertise
Share with your friends
(0) Comments
This article comments are currently no :(