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Astronauts Sunita Williams and Barry Wilmore ahead of the first crewed flight test of Boeingâs Starliner spacecraft.
| Photo Credit: PTI/File photo
On Tuesday night, Trump said he had asked Elon Muskâs SpaceX to return two NASA astronauts from the International Space Station, who were already scheduled to fly back on a SpaceX capsule in March.
Earlier, Musk said Trump had asked him to return the two astronauts âas soon as possible,â suggesting a change to NASAâs current plan for a late March return. âWe will do so,â Musk said.
âI have just asked Elon Musk and @SpaceX to âgo getâ the 2 brave astronauts who have been virtually abandoned in space by the Biden Administration,â Trump wrote on Truth Social. âThey have been waiting for many months on @Space Station. Elon will soon be on his way. Hopefully, all will be safe. Good luck Elon!!!â
The astronauts were left on the ISS because of problems with Boeingâs Starliner capsule, which led NASA in August to tap SpaceX for their return instead. Former President Joe Biden and his White House had no involvement in the agencyâs decision-making on the mission.
Trumpâs demand that SpaceX retrieve veteran NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, who have been assigned a SpaceX ride home since August, was an unusual intervention by a U.S. president into NASAâs operations that caught many agency officials by surprise, two officials said.
Wilmore and Williams are among seven astronauts on the ISS, and they remain healthy and busy with routine scientific research aboard the station, NASA has said.
A spokesperson with NASA, which oversees SpaceXâs flights to the ISS, said âNASA and SpaceX are expeditiously working to safely return the agencyâs SpaceX Crew-9 astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore as soon as practical, while also preparing for the launch of Crew-10 to complete a handover between expeditions.â
Wilmore and Williams flew Boeingâs Starliner spacecraft to the ISS last summer for an eight-day test mission that instead has lasted nearly a year because of problems with the craftâs propulsion system.
NASA in August, during Bidenâs administration, deemed Starliner too risky to bring them back to Earth and tapped SpaceX to return them on a Crew Dragon spacecraft.
That craft is already docked with the space station, having flown there for NASAâs Crew-9 astronaut rotation mission in September with empty seats for Wilmore and Williams.
The astronautsâ original February departure date on Crew-9 was delayed to late March because SpaceX needed more time âto complete processingâ of a new Crew Dragon capsule that will replace theirs for the Crew-10 mission, NASA said in December.
The agency has a delicately coordinated ISS schedule, and an early Crew-9 return might leave the stationâs U.S. contingent understaffed.
It had been unclear whether Trumpâs demand would mean NASA bringing Crew-9 back to Earth before the Crew-10 capsule arrives, or SpaceX launching Crew-10 earlier than planned. While NASA appeared to affirm the astronautâs return plan remains unchanged, it did not answer a question on whether the Crew-10 launch date would be sooner.
Returning Crew-9 to Earth before Crew-10âs arrival would mean NASA astronaut Don Pettit, who flew to the ISS with a Russian crew in September, would be the only American aboard the station, a rare staffing imbalance that NASA has said complicates maintenance of the stationâs U.S. components.
Though Starlinerâs development since 2019 has been a persistent challenge for Boeing, rife with engineering troubles and cost overruns, some Trump advisers in recent months have sought to blame Biden, although the former president had no involvement in Starlinerâs development.
NASA since 2020 has used SpaceXâs Crew Dragon to ferry U.S. astronauts to and from the International Space Station. The spacecraft was developed under a more than $3 billion NASA contract under the agencyâs Commercial Crew Program, a program created under former U.S. president Barack Obama.
Boeingâs Starliner was developed under the same program in a roughly $4.5 billion contract but has faced uncrewed testing mishaps and an array of engineering challenges.
Wilmore and Williamsâ mission marked Starlinerâs first crewed flight and was intended to be its final test before it conducts routine missions. But Starlinerâs propulsion system issues forced NASA to bring it back uncrewed in September and threw its development future into uncertainty.
Published – February 02, 2025 09:35 am IST
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