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The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is delaying its next crewed mission to the International Space Station (ISS). NASA and SpaceX were slated to fly the Crew-9 mission to the ISS later this month, but now, the mission has been delayed by more than a month to late September. The delay follows as Boeing's Starliner continues to remain at the ISS, with no details from NASA's front about its plans to bring Starliner and its crew safely back to Earth.
While Starliner's manufacturer Boeing is adamant that it has conducted extensive safety tests of the ship, NASA is yet to share details of an agency review that would have given the potential go ahead for astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams to return to Earth on the same ship that they flew on.
Crew 9's launch delay to September 24th was initially reported by ArsTechnica earlier today, and NASAS confirmed it in a release moments back. In it, the agency cut to the chase and shared right off the bat that the delay was to enable "mission managers to finalize return planning for the agency’s Boeing Crew Flight Test currently docked to the orbiting laboratory." In its report, Ars had outlined that teams on Earth had to update Starliner's software to allow it to autonomously undock from the ISS - an aspect of its performance that NASA's Steve Stich had also alluded to in a press conference.
As of Monday, "no decisions" have been made by NASA for Williams and Wilmore's return journey. The agency and Boeing "continue to evaluate the spacecraft’s readiness," but interestingly, the NASA release does not share any updates for Crew-9's crew. Right now, a SpaceX Crew Dragon for Crew 8 and
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