NASA breaks silence about reason they left astronauts stranded in space for nine months as rescue mission delayed
- NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams have been stranded on the ISS for nine months after their Boeing Starliner spacecraft experienced problems and were originally meant to stay for just eight days.
- A SpaceX Crew-10 mission has launched to replace the astronauts at the International Space Station, departing from NASA's Kennedy Space Centre in Florida.
- NASA clarified that the mission is a routine replacement rather than a rescue mission.
- Wilmore expressed that they were prepared for a long stay, stating, 'We came prepared to stay long, even though we planned to stay short.
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After ten months: Return mission with SpaceX for stranded astronauts launched to the ISS
Suni Williams and Barry Wilmore were only supposed to be in space for about a week. That's almost ten months. But now an astronaut team is taking their return flight capsule to the ISS – with a space capsule from Elon Musks SpaceX.
·Dortmund, Germany
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Leaning Left6Leaning Right4Center2Last UpdatedBias Distribution50% Left
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