Arab Times

Hague describes close call:

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The NASA astronaut who survived last week’s failed launch and emergency landing knew he needed

to stay calm.

Air Force Col Nick Hague on Tuesday described the closest call of his career: His space capsule violently ripped from his damaged rocket shortly after liftoff, then with lights flashing and alarms sounding, plunged steeply back to Earth with punishing force.

Hague said he and his commander,

Russian Alexei Ovchinin, were flung from side to side and shoved back hard into their seats, as the drama unfolded 50 kilometers (31 miles) above Kazakhstan last Thursday. One of the four strap-on boosters failed to separate properly two minutes into the flight to the Internatio­nal Space Station and apparently struck the core rocket stage,

resulting instantane­ously in a rare launch abort.

It was the first aborted launch for the Russians in 35 years and only the third in history. Like each one before, the rocket’s safety system kept the crew alive.

Hague – the first American to experience a launch abort like this – communicat­ed in Russian

throughout the more than half-hour ordeal.

Meanwhile,The first launch of a Russian Soyuz rocket into orbit since a failed launch last week is planned for Oct 24-26 and will carry a military satellite into space, Interfax news agency cited a source in the space industry as saying on Wednesday. (Agencies)

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