One doesn't
often equate policy wonks with pioneers, especially in the space business, but Eilene Galloway is a notable exception. Ms. Galloway was in
fact among the original space policy wonks: Not only was she instrumental in
crafting the legislation that established NASA; she participated in the process
that laid the very foundation of international space law, the United Nations
Outer Space Treaty. And she did all this in an era when women were far more
likely to be housewives than recognized leaders in emerging fields mixing high
technology with international affairs.
Ms.
Galloway, who died of cancer May 2 at the age of 102, also will be remembered
for her unyielding commitment to the principle that space belongs to everyone
and is a place for international cooperation, not conflict. This is in spite
of, or perhaps due to, the fact that it was the prospect of conflict — nuclear
war, to be precise — that thrust her into the space field: She was a defense
analyst for what is now the Congressional Research Service when she was asked
by then-Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson to help examine the strategic
implications of the Soviet Union's launch of the world's first artificial
satellites.
At a time
when space was another catalyst of fear in an already frightened world, Ms.
Galloway forged a different vision for space, one in which peace, international
cooperation and progress prevailed. Today, with nations more dependent than
ever on satellites for commerce, public safety and defense, and with the world appearing
ever more dangerous, the potential for space to become a medium of conflict has
grown. In this environment, civilian and military leaders in all current and
future spacefaring nations would be both responsible
and wise to embrace the vision that Ms. Galloway never grew too old or too
tired to share.