AsiaSat-3 Rescue: The Real Story Part 2

Foreword—Steve Dorfman

A potential consequence of unedited blogs is posting of conflicting views and that is what we have with inputs from Rex Ridenoure, Jerry Salvatore and Mark Skidmore.

I’ve known Jerry Salvatore for many years and he was one of our most outstanding engineers, with many important contributions in spacecraft control and orbital dynamics. Whenever Jerry approached me with advice, as he did many times during my career at Hughes, I found it invaluable and reliable and I grew to trust his opinions and judgment. One notable example was the Asiasat 3 lunar flyby mission that Jerry brought to my attention and I subsequently approved and funded and of course it had a successful outcome. Jerry had a long and successful career at Hughes, before retiring as a Chief Technologist, the highest level for engineering specialists.

Mark Skidmore was a vice president at Hughes Global Services. At the time of the HGS-1 mission he was director of HGS’ nascent fleet of “challenged” satellites. He served as the HGS program manager for the recovery mission.

Rex Ridenoure worked briefly at Hughes Communications and at a much less significant level before he left.

It is well known that “success has a thousand fathers but failure is an orphan”. In the case of HGS 1, truly a team effort, the intellectual “father” figure was most definitely Jerry Salvatore I have no doubt that the version of the HGS lunar flyby mission expressed by Jerry and Mark Skidmore is correct. I might add that the Asiasat 3 rescue is one example of the type of innovation and technical excellence that made Hughes Space and Communication such a great place to work in the later part of the 20th century.

The Program Manager’s View–Mark Skidmore

Rex Ridenoure’s recent article, “Beyond GEO,” well summarizes the historical significance of the first-of-its-kind mission that Hughes conducted in 1998 to salvage the AsiaSat 3 satellite. Ridenoure’s claims that he and a small company, Innovative Orbital Designs (“IOD”), were the inspiration for Hughes’ novel approach and that Hughes subsequently attempted to “squelch” their roles are entirely false, however.

AsiaSat 3, a Hughes HS 601 HP satellite, was launched on Christmas day 1997. The fourth stage of the Russian Proton booster malfunctioned, operating for only two seconds out of a planned 110 second burn. This left AsiaSat 3 stranded in a useless, highly inclined orbit. Upon returning from the holiday shutdown in January 1998, I was assigned the task of examining options to salvage AsiaSat 3. At that time I was a director at Hughes Global Services (“HGS”.) I would later become HGS’ program manager for the recovery mission.

Throughout January and into early February I met regularly with Jerry Salvatore, Hughes Space and Communications Chief Technologist, who was exploring ways to maneuver the AsiaSat 3 satellite into an economically viable orbit, including inclined synchronous and non-synchronous orbits. At no time during any of our many meetings did Salvatore ever mention Ridenoure or IOD, or indicate that they or anyone else had suggested to him to use the moon’s gravity to reposition AsiaSat 3.

The latter did not come up until a chance meeting between Salvatore and Ronald Swanson, president of HGS, in a Hughes parking lot. Swanson mentioned the moon, and in a stroke of genius, Salvatore realized that a lunar flyby could be used to reposition the satellite, known as HGS-1 after HGS acquired it from the insurance underwriters, into a commercially attractive orbit. Salvatore’s concept was like the “free return” trajectory employed by Apollo 13. Salvatore was subsequently awarded two U.S. patents for his innovation. Those patents have never been challenged.

Hughes engineer Cesar Ocampo is mentioned frequently in Ridenoure’s paper and has published his own personal views on the mission. The insinuation that Hughes conspired to suppress Ridenoure and IOD’s self-proclaimed contributions by prohibiting Ocampo (and others) from communicating with the media is simply not true. Hughes’ policy was that only designated employees were authorized to represent the company to the media. This policy existed long before the HGS-1 mission. As the program manager, I was designated as a media contact. Mark Schwene, vice president of business development at HGS, and Hughes’ senior executives were also authorized to speak with the media. It was a very small cadre. Not even Salvatore, the veteran mission manager, was authorized to engage the media during the course of the mission. As a lower level engineer focusing on a narrowly defined, highly technical aspect of the mission, Ocampo was simply not in a position to represent Hughes to the media. Ocampo disagreed and made his views known on many occasions.

Ridenoure freely admits that it was not possible for Hughes to either command or receive telemetry from HGS-1 at the ranges (distances from Earth) necessitated by IOD’s approach. When Ridenoure and IOD learned of this fatal flaw in their concept, their tactics changed from attempting to convince Hughes to employ their intricate orbital techniques to claiming that they had inspired Salvatore to use the moon’s gravity for a rescue mission. Nothing could be further from the truth. Salvatore had already conceived his elegantly simple approach by the time he, or I, were made aware of IOD’s concepts.

Ridenoure and IOD mounted a remarkably effective campaign to convince the media that they were the genesis of Salvatore’s mission design. Their “little company gets squashed by big company” story angle played well. They pursued their campaign across multiple fronts, sometimes enlisting others to covertly press their case. In what can be only described as an ambush, the wife of an IOD associate peppered Salvatore and me with questions regarding the inspiration for the mission at a technical lecture we were giving at JPL. At no time did she disclose her relationship with the IOD group; we learned of this later. Hughes’ proper refusal to engage in a public tit-for-tat exchange with Ridenoure and IOD likely aided them in their public relations crusade.

Ridenoure and IOD’s continued insistence that they were the catalyst for Hughes’ recovery mission was viewed by many within Hughes as a precursor to litigation. This proved to be true. IOD filed suit against Hughes. Although an extremely significant point, Ridenoure relegates the litigation to a frivolous footnote in his paper. The court found that IOD’s claims were without merit and dismissed the suit by summary judgment. The court did not allow the case to proceed to trail. Furthermore, the court ordered that IOD pay Hughes for certain of Hughes’ costs of defense.

From Salvatore and Swanson’s “ah-ha” moment in the parking lot through to the final retro burn positioning HGS-1 in geosynchronous orbit, the HGS-1 recovery mission was an amazing team effort. For many of us it was a once-in-a-career opportunity. Hughes, PanAmSat, various specialist consultants, P.T. Satelindo, the U.S. Space Command (now U.S. Strategic Command), the U.S. Air Force Space Command, MIT Lincoln Laboratories, Analytical Graphics, and others contributed to the success of the mission. Their efforts were publicly recognized by Hughes. Hughes willingly gave credit when credit was due. IOD and its affiliates did nothing but complain, badger, and unsuccessfully litigate. No amount of creative writing on their part will change the fact that they in no way influenced the HGS-1 recovery mission design or were involved in any way with its execution. The Hughes team, on the other hand, conceived, planned and flawlessly executed this first commercial lunar mission. Such was the hallmark of Hughes.

Copyright © 2013 by Mark Skidmore. All rights reserved.

 

AsiaSat Rescue: The Real Story, Part 1

 

Foreword—Steve Dorfman

A potential consequence of unedited blogs is posting of conflicting views and that is what we have with inputs from Rex Ridenoure, Jerry Salvatore and Mark Skidmore.

I’ve known Jerry Salvatore for many years and he was one of our most outstanding engineers, with many important contributions in spacecraft control and orbital dynamics. Whenever Jerry approached me with advice, as he did many times during my career at Hughes, I found it invaluable and reliable and I grew to trust his opinions and judgment. One notable example was the Asiasat 3 lunar flyby mission that Jerry brought to my attention and I subsequently approved and funded and of course it had a successful outcome. Jerry had a long and successful career at Hughes, before retiring as a Chief Technologist, the highest level for engineering specialists.

Mark Skidmore was a vice president at Hughes Global Services. At the time of the HGS-1 mission he was director of HGS’ nascent fleet of “challenged” satellites. He served as the HGS program manager for the recovery mission.

Rex Ridenoure worked briefly at Hughes Communications and at a much less significant level before he left.

It is well known that “success has a thousand fathers but failure is an orphan”. In the case of HGS 1, truly a team effort, the intellectual “father” figure was most definitely Jerry Salvatore I have no doubt that the version of the HGS lunar flyby mission expressed by Jerry and Mark Skidmore is correct. I might add that the Asiasat 3 rescue is one example of the type of innovation and technical excellence that made Hughes Space and Communication such a great place to work in the later part of the 20th century.

The Chief Technologists View—Jerry Salvatore

It has come to my attention that on the Hughes Space and Communications Group 1960-2000 website (HughesSCGHeritage.com), an article “Beyond Geo” by Rex Ridenoure was published on June 17. This article was a reprint of the original, published May 13 on the http://www.thespacereview.com website. I have read several of the Hughes website articles in the past and have often considered writing appropriate articles on the most significant of Hughes’ accomplishments during the 38 years that I was Hughes’ chief satellite pilot. What specifically promoted this response is how an ex-employee , Rex Ridenoure, who left Hughes some 28 years ago (1985), 13 years before HGS 1 operations in 1998, can get a factually inaccurate, self-serving article published on the Hughes Heritage website.

Nine members of the original HGS 1 mission team just celebrated the 15th anniversary of the first lunar flyby on May 13, 2013 at a local El Segundo restaurant. One of the lead flight controllers, Bill Brooks, a former disc jockey who played Sinatra’s “Fly Me to the Moon” during HGS 1’s 1st lunar flyby, died of a heart attack the day before this celebration. We saluted an empty chair at the real Hughes celebration, while Rex Ridenoure’s article was being published on the internet at http://www.spacereview.com.

The AsiaSat-3 Rescue Team Celebrating the 15th Anniversary of Their Feat--from left to right Ken Munson, Laura Fields, Mark Skidmore, Fred Linkchorst, Jerry Salvatore, Doug Leber, Elias Polendo, and Steve Enright.

The AsiaSat-3 Rescue Team Celebrating the 15th Anniversary of Their Feat–from left to right Ken Munson, Laura Fields, Mark Skidmore, Fred Linkchorst, Jerry Salvatore, Doug Leber, Elias Polendo, and Steve Enright.

I want to set the record straight regarding HGS 1 and refute the factually incorrect conclusions of Ridenoure’s article. This will be done in two parts: 1) A detailed summary of the indisputable facts during this journey and 2) My opinion on the claims and innuendo in the Ridenoure article.

THE FACTS:

1) After the launch of AsiaSat 3 on Christmas day 1997 and its failure to reach orbit, I started thinking about possible solutions to the problem. I encountered Ron Swanson, president of Hughes Global Services (HGS), in a local parking lot in early January and he suggested, “what about the moon?” I did some preliminary calculations and concluded that the required delta velocity corrections with a lunar flyby and braking maneuvers were doable. I related this conclusion to Swanson and Mark Skidmore who Swanson had previously assigned as HGS’ lead.

2) In my efforts to verify my conclusion with a detailed computer simulation, I met Cesar Ocampo, a junior engineer who had the expertise to run commercial off the shelf orbital analysis software developed by Analytical Graphics, Inc (AGI). When he confirmed my estimated delta velocity numbers in detail, my efforts focused on how to accomplish the complex maneuvers, attitude stabilization, and orbit and attitude determinations during the entire sequence of maneuvers that would be required.

3) Swanson and Skidmore worked with Steve Dorfman, Hughes’ Vice Chairman, to secure salvage rights from the insurance underwriters and enable mission planning and execution to proceed as quickly as possible because of adverse changes in the AsiaSat 3 orbit. Dorfman was ultimately responsible for giving the “GO” to proceed with the mission, as well as suggesting we execute a second flyby to improve the final HGS 1 geosynchronous orbit.

4) No one at Hughes was authorized to discuss the mission with any external individual or company. What apparently happened were grass-roots conversations between Hughes engineers, who were not authorized to conduct those conversations, and Innovative Orbit Design (IOD)/Microcosm personnel (Belbruno, Ridenoure) who were trying to push an approach that could not work. I was not aware of any conversations between Hughes engineers and Ridenaure/Belbruno until late February 1998, after I conceived the approach which was actually flown. When Ocampo told me he was talking to Belbruno, I told him that Belbruno’s “WSB” approach, which required the spacecraft to transit multiple lunar radial distances from earth, was untenable because there was no TT&C capability at these ranges. I advised Cesar not to talk to him again; specifically, not to reveal how we were going to make it happen. (Hughes had previously reminded all involved of their obligation to protect Hughes’ proprietary information). Against policy and my admissions, Ocampo disclosed Hughes’ proprietary information on March 27, telling Belbruno our strategy of a free return trajectory around the moon.

5) I started to enlist some dozen volunteers to execute the developing plan. One of my principal concerns was how to determine where HGS 1 was at any time during this landmark lunar mission. Based on my recommendation, HGS hired world known orbit determination expert, Tom Martin, who could use range, azimuth, elevation, radar, Doppler data and telescopic HGS 1/star observations to define any current spacecraft orbit. Lacking adequate support or experience from the SCG orbital operations department, HGS (on my recommendation) retained two former Hughes employees, exceptional women that had supported SCG during the Westar4/PalapaB2 recovery in 1984 and the Intelsat 6/F3 reboost mission in 1992. They would define the parameters of all required maneuvers as well as define current orbit and attitude status. Caroline Shallon came in from Israel, and Mery Pinhiero came in from Brazil to assist in making this mission possible.

6) Analytical Graphics, an up and coming company with a versatile software product, Satellite Tool Kit (STK), became so enthralled with this mission that they offered free animated video updates of the orbit and real time animations of spacecraft maneuvers. Discussions between HGS and Paul Graziani, CEO of AGI, allowed them full access to all operational activities on a no fee basis in return for their visual reports. Eventually, after public announcement of the mission start, they published the real time orbit of HGS 1 on their website.

7) Attitude stability and control were a significant problem during this mission because of mass property variations during the many required burns. Fred Linkchorst, Laura Fields and Elias Polendo unselfishly stepped in to assist SCG in this most important endeavor. Other individuals like Jeff Robinson (Thermal), James Shirvanian and Jackie Hoang (Propulsion), Bill Brooks and Steve Enright (Flight controllers), Phil Cohen and Dave Norman (Syscom) and Joe Lagana, (deceased, Mass properties) were key contributors to the success of the mission. Many other wonderful and talented people at Hughes would pitch in along the way.

8) After HGS secured salvage rights to AsiaSat 3, the spacecraft was renamed HGS 1 and the first burn to raise its orbit for the first lunar flyby was initiated on April 10, 1998. The complex sequence of13 burns were executed from ground stations in Fillmore, California and Jakarta, Indonesia, in anticipation of a May 13th flyby. The astronomy community in Europe realized in late April that AsiaSat 3 was “rising from the ashes” and as Ridenoure correctly reports, triggered a public news conference by HGS on April 29th. With this public announcement and the silence of SCG during April, Belbruno and Ridenoure were dismayed about why they were not party to what was really going on. This was somewhat understandable, since they still believed it was their idea to use the moon even if their approach was impossible to execute.

9) Once IOD learned the HGS 1 saga was underway, they changed their tactics to publically imply that they gave SCG, specifically Jerry Salvatore, the inspiration for using the moon for the recovery. They initiated a public relations campaign, as discussed in Ridenoure’s article, to get a local newspaper, the “DAILY BREEZE” to acknowledge their alleged contribution to the flyby.

10) I honored my management’s directive not to divulge any information to the public until the mission was completed. I refused to give answers to many questions from reporters I knew at Aviation Week and Space Technology (AW&ST.) Unfortunately, the Belbruno/Ridenoure public relations campaign continued, despite their ignorance as to what was actually taking place. Belbruno and Ridenoure contributed nothing to the HGS 1 rescue.

11) Prior to the start of operations, I wrote a patent application “Free Return Lunar Flyby Transfer Method for Geosynchronous Satellites” that was filed on April 9, 1998 and approved as U.S. patent number 6,116,545 on Sep. 12, 2000. After the first lunar flyby when we decided to go around one more time (at Dorfman’s suggestion), I wrote a second patent application “Free Return Lunar Flyby Transfer Method For Geosynchronous Satellites Having Multiple Perilune Stages” that was filed on May 15, 1998 and approved as U.S. patent number 6,149,103 on Nov., 21, 2000.

12) Ridenoure makes no mention of litigation, except in a footnote, where he jests it “would be like wanting to see how sausage is made, wouldn’t it?” He is trying to dismiss an extremely relevant point. After HGS 1 had successfully achieved a geosynchronous orbit south of Hawaii, the Belbruno/Ridenoure

Public relations campaign adopted a new tactic, namely, IOD sued Hughes for infringing on IOD methodologies. Apparently, IOD claimed that the two patent applications submitted by Salvatore were “subsets” of that now famous “WSB” (Weak Stability Boundary) theory. After many months of discovery and depositions, along with significant legal fees, the case was dismissed by summary judgment-it did not even proceed to trial. The court found in Hughes favor and ordered IOD to pay Hughes for a portion of Hughes expenses. In reference to Ridenoure’s footnote, nobody needed to watch sausage being made; rather, everyone had to accept the fact that a “square peg doesn’t fill a round hole”.

13) During the mission, Ocampo was a junior member of the staff and not privy to activities taking place at higher levels within SCG and HGS. He did not have a technical decision or business decision making role. His comments are from his limited perspective as a trajectory analyst only. It is unfortunate that Ocampo maintained some dialog with IOD, contrary to Hughes specific instructions. Ocampo was deposed by IOD’s attorneys. He had ample opportunity, under oath, to answer any of their questions and offer his opinions. If he had said anything supporting IOD’s case, it would have been exploited.

14) Ridenoure fails to cite the definitive paper on the HGS 1 mission delivered at the 50th International Astronautical Congress in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, in October 1999. I wrote this paper “Mission Design and Orbit Operations for the First Lunar Flyby Rescue Mission” (IAF-99-A.2.01). This paper discusses all technical and operational aspects of this 5 month mission and should be placed on the Hughes Space Heritage website for everyone to read. Salvatore attended this conference and delivered the formal presentation.

15) Ridenoure cites a paper written by Ocampo some 6 years later (2005) entitled “Trajectory Analysis of The Lunar Flyby rescue of AsisSat 3/HGS 1” and says we are all indebted to Cesar Ocampo for thoroughly documenting much of what happened technically and programmatically inside Hughes during this time” and “see page 234 for Ocampo’s frank summary of what was going on behind the scenes.” It would have been impossible for Ocampo to know what was truly occurring at the decision-making level, as he was a junior analyst not privy to such information. Ocampo never sent me this paper nor asked me for comments or permission on its contents.

16)Let’s examine the facts: :

i) When I solicited Ocampo’s expertise in mid-January 1998 to verify my calculations about the lunar flyby approach I developed, I had no idea of who Belbruno was or what any “WSB” solution was. Ocampo verified my estimates without any mention of a “competing solution”.

ii) SCG personnel were not authorized to deal with outsiders, especially in a mission failure situation. Ridenoure admits that Slafer did inform him that his WSB solution was impossible on January 28th, due to TT&C constraints. Why did Ridenoure and Belbruno continue to try to pursue their unofficial contacts without any viable solution?

iii) Ocampo told me for the first time about his conversations with Belbruno in late February, long after I conceived the approach which was chosen. I was constructing a mission and assembling a team to execute it at this time. I told him it was a waste of time and energy to talk to somebody with no viable solution or contribution. More importantly, I reminded him of his obligation to protect Hughes’ proprietary information, which included the “free return” trajectory that I originally conceived.

iv)Ocampo quotes on page 234 of his 2005 paper “On a dimmer note, the lack of ethnics and integrity of certain HSC officials concerning the acknowledgement of external contribution from Belbruno and Ridenoure placed a blemish on the mission. It is emphasized that the original communication from Belbruno and Ridenoure to HSC in January 1998 was a crucial event in the rescue operation; without it, very likely the engineers at HSC responsible for the operations of this satellite during the launch and failure phases would not have devised such a risky and intricate rescue operation.” In view of the first three facts above, there was no “original communication” from Belbruno or Ridenoure and no “crucial event in the rescue operation”. Belbruno and Ridenoure contributed NOTHING to the HGS 1 mission.  Moreover, the assertion that Hughes ingenuity to adopt a risky, intricate rescue operation would require a fictitious catalyst from two unknown, outside pretenders who had no idea how to operate a HS601 spacecraft is totally absurd. The history of Hughes from 1960-2000 defines a plethora of miraculous events from internal innovation. The charge of unethical behavior and lack of integrity of Hughes personnel, in the public media, is a serious one. It needs to be abolished with the truth. No amount of youthful ambition, conspiracy theory, or professional aggrandizement can keep the historical truth from surfacing, as my opinions on the facts above will now be summarized.

MY OPINION ON THE FACTS ABOVE

1)Belbruno and Ridenoure knew that the moon was the key to any possible salvage attempt.

They had no viable solution and were incapable of marrying HGS 1 operations to any kind of lunar “handshake”. They pursued back door conversations with Ridenoure’s cited SCG insider personnel to make sure they would be at the “party” if and when a viable solution was proposed and executed. They were setting up to litigate, which they eventually — and unsuccessfully – did.

2) Ocampo published his paper six years after Amsterdam. In the concluding remarks of this paper, Ocampo states “It is hoped that this article has served two purposes. The first is an official acknowledgment by the author of the contribution of Edward Belbruno and Rex Ridenoure . The second is the presentation of a complete technical description of the rescue operation.” The first purpose was never achieved because he could not define their contribution. The second purpose was achieved because he took my complete technical description of the rescue operation from the Amsterdam paper, without my permission, and got it exclusively under his name.

3) Many of Ridenoure’s comments in the “Beyond Geo” article have been discussed and dissected above in the FACTS section. However, there are two key paragraphs toward the end of the article that support my number 1 opinion above. Ridenoure writes “Thanks to the efforts of our front- line champions inside Hughes, our many supporters in the space community and the connectivity of the Internet, the story about the core, enabling idea of using the Moon to salvage AsiaSat 3 entered into the option trade space at Hughes, was not buried by the personal or corporate motivations that apparently wanted to squelch the fact. The story got out and stuck.”

Here it is: their contribution was “the core, enabling idea of using the Moon to salvage AsiaSat 3”! Steeped in their exclusive “Fuzzy Boundary” theory, they could not possibly imagine somebody else using the moon in an elegantly straightforward way to slingshot the errant satellite back to the earth like Apollo 13. Moreover, how could this idea be possibly triggered by a conversation in a parking lot?

4)The second key paragraph by Ridenoure states ”For the annual Aviation Week & Space Technology magazine Laureate Awards, arguably the closest thing aerospace has to the film industry’s Academy Awards, Salvatore, Ocampo, Belbruno and Ridenoure were nominated for the 1998 Best Achievement in Space award”. Ridenoure’s last statement in the previous paragraph “The story got out and stuck” was clairvoyant. Ridenoure and Belbruno got one of the highest national awards for “the core, enabling idea for using the Moon to salvage AsiaSat 3” –even though Salvatore’s concept was triggered by memory of the Apollo 13 rescue mission in 1970, that he witnessed as a young engineer at Hughes, only 27 years of age. Using the moon as an essential element of a geosynchronous transfer orbit had never been proposed before. However, Salvatore had introduced (in the public domain) the idea of the “super-synchronous transfer orbit” in planning the Intelsat 6 STS REBOOST mission in 1992. This increased the life of the salvaged satellite by ~ 2 years. This technique became common in the industry and is still in use today, some 20 years later.

Apollo 13 was a damaged spacecraft with limited propulsion heading for the moon. The genius of this rescue was to combine limited propulsive burns of the lunar module with a moon slingshot back to earth that set up a proper re-entry angle/speed for a safe ballistic return of the astronauts to earth.

AsiaSat 3 was a healthy spacecraft with full propulsion but an impossible task to reach GEO from its highly inclined orbit relative to the equator. The genius of this rescue was to use part of the propulsive capability to go to the moon, use the moon’s slingshot to raise its perigee to synchronous altitude, remove as much inclination as possible on a moon flyby near the equator, and then brake “like hell” with the remaining propulsion on the return to perigee. The braking maneuver would lower the apogee from roughly twice lunar distance to synchronous radius, resulting in a geosynchronous (24 hour) orbit. The second moon flyby was ad hoc and performed to maintain the perigee at synchronous radius but further reduce the inclination of the eventual orbit. The double lunar flyby reduced the inclination of HGS 1 from 51.6 degrees to about 8 degrees and achieved a geosynchronous orbit south of Hawaii.

Salvatore received his first AW&ST laureate award in 1984 at the age of 41. He worked for 11 months with NASA to return 2 stranded satellites, Westar 6 and Palapa B2, to earth with the shuttle (STS 51A). He had the opportunity to fly them both, refurbished, back up to the geostationary corridor in 1990. He would not be able to execute that mission again at the age of 55, when the HGS 1 double lunar flyby was accomplished.

The HGS 1 mission, the first and maybe the last of its kind, lasted some 5 months, and required less youthful stamina but the more thoughtful experience of an older pilot. Salvatore was honored to receive his second AW&ST award but was disturbed by his company in the award. How could this most prestigious space magazine reward two pretenders whose only claim was the moon was necessary for the salvage? They capitalized on a propaganda campaign to steal this award. Unfortunately, Salvatore was duty bound not to speak openly to the media. With his silence, the media made a serious mistake. Ridenoure was right 15 years ago: “The story got out and stuck”. He is dead wrong to resurrect this fictional story on the 15th anniversary of this historic event. The REAL story is now in the public domain!

Ocampo quotes: “the lack of ethics and integrity of certain HSC officials concerning the acknowledgement of external contribution from Belbruno and Ridenoure placed a blemish on the mission”. I ask the reader after reading the facts and my opinions in this article, where the lack of ethics and integrity are and who blemished and continues to lie about this mission. If you come to the obvious answer, then I have written what I needed to say.

Thank you for listening and God bless the Hughes culture of excellence that allowed this mission to take place and become part of the Hughes SCG Heritage.