Ride-share return from space station on Russian Soyuz still on track -
NASA
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[March 15, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - A U.S. astronaut is still
slated to share a ride back from the International Space Station with
two cosmonauts aboard their Soyuz capsule later this month, despite
U.S.-Russian antagonism over the war in Ukraine, NASA officials said on
Monday.
Joel Montalbano, manager of NASA's International Space Station (ISS)
program, also said U.S.-Russian cooperation aboard the orbital research
outpost, currently home to four Americans, two Russians, and one German
from the European Space Agency, remained free of tension.
"We both need each other to operate the International Space Station,"
Montalbano told a news briefing on two upcoming ISS spacewalks by NASA
crew members, the first of which was to begin on Tuesday.
The durability of longstanding U.S.-Russian collaboration in space was
called into question last month when Dmitry Rogozin, head of Russia's
space agency, Roscosmos, suggested U.S. sanctions imposed against Moscow
over the Ukraine crisis could "destroy" ISS teamwork and lead to the
demise of the space station itself.
When U.S. President Joe Biden announced high-tech export restrictions on
President Vladimir Putin's government on Feb. 24, he said they were
designed to "degrade" Russia's aerospace industry, including its space
program.
A week later, Moscow retaliated by announcing it would stop supplying or
servicing Russian-made rocket engines used by two American aerospace
companies doing business with NASA.
At about the same time, Moscow said it had ceased joint ISS research
with Germany and forced the 11th-hour cancellation of a satellite launch
British broadband company OneWeb had planned to conduct from Russia's
Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
Rogozin also said last month Roscosmos was suspending its cooperation
with European launch operations at the European Spaceport in French
Guiana.
Asked whether escalating geopolitical tensions over Putin's invasion of
Ukraine, which Russia calls a "special military operation", might spill
over to undermine morale or U.S.-Russian cooperation on the space
station, Montalbano insisted ISS "interdependency" between the two
former space rivals remains firmly intact.
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The International Space Station (ISS) crew members Mark Vande Hei of
NASA, cosmonauts Oleg Novitskiy and Pyotr Dubrov of Roscosmos are
pictured during space suit check at the Baikonur Cosmodrome,
Kazakhstan April 9, 2021. Irina Spector/GCTC/Roscosmos/Handout via
REUTERS
"When you're in space, there's no
borders. You don't see country lines or state lines," Montalbano
told reporters. "The teams continue to work together. Are they aware
of what's going on on Earth? Absolutely. But the teams are
professional," he added. "They've trained to do a job, and they're
going to do that job."
NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei, who flew to the orbital outpost
aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft launched last April from Baikonur,
is due to return to Kazakhstan on March 30 in a different Soyuz
craft with cosmonaut peers Pyotr Dubrov and Anton Shkaplerov.
Montalbano said Roscosmos had recently confirmed "Mark Vande Hei is
coming home March 30 with Anton and Pyotr, period."
Logging a NASA record-breaking 355 days in orbit by the time he
returns, Vande Hei will be greeted in Kazakhstan by a team of about
20 NASA personnel flying into the former Soviet republic for the
homecoming as they have for previous ride-sharing liftoffs and
landings by U.S. astronauts over the years, Montalbano said.
The new three-member cosmonaut team replacing Vande Hei, Dubrov and
Shkaplerov aboard the ISS is expected to arrive on the orbiting
laboratory on March 18 as planned, Montalbano added.
He said NASA was also still in talks with Roscosmos on a new "crew
exchange" deal that would pave the way for astronauts and cosmonauts
to routinely share flights to the space station on each other's
spacecrafts.
NASA began paying to fly its astronauts to ISS aboard Soyuz after
the U.S. space shuttle ended in 2011, only resuming launches from
U.S. soil aboard SpaceX rockets over the past two years. None of
those crews have included cosmonauts.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Karishma
Singh)
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