Baltimore Sun

NASA: Cause of ISS mystery hole will be determined

- By Jim Heintz

MOSCOW— The head of the U.S. space agency said Tuesday that he’s sure investigat­ors will determine the cause of a mysterious hole that appeared on the Internatio­nal Space Station, which his Russian counterpar­t has said was deliberate­ly drilled.

NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e also said that collaborat­ion with Russia’s Roscosmos remains important, despite recent com- ments by agency head Dmitry Rogozin that Russia wouldn’t accept a “secondtier role” in a NASA-led plan to build an outpost near the moon.

The hole that appeared in a Russian Soyuz capsule docked to the ISS caused a brief loss of air pressure in August before being patched. The incident sparked speculatio­n and consternat­ion.

“I strongly believe we’re going to get the right answer to what caused the hole on the Internatio­nal Space Station and that together we’ll be able to continue our strong collaborat­ion,” Bridenstin­e said. “What we’ve got to do is we’ve got to very dispassion­ately allow the investigat­ion to go forward without speculatio­n, without rumor, without innuendo, without conspiracy.”

Although the U.S. is working toward commercial launches to the ISS, Russia shouldn’t regard itself as sidelined, he said.

“There is coming a day when we’re going to have our own access to the Internatio­nal Space Station through a commercial crew. I want to be really clear — that is not a replacemen­t for the Russian Soyuz capabiliti­es. We see it as redundancy and we want to make sure that even when a commercial crew is up and running we are still going to be launching American astronauts on Soyuz rockets and we would love to have Russian cosmonauts launching on commercial crew rockets in the United States,” Bridenstin­e said.

Regarding the NASA-led Gateway project to build an orbiting moon outpost, Rogozin said recently that Russia couldn’t afford to participat­e in other countries’ projects in a secondary role. But Bridenstin­e said internatio­nal involvemen­t in the project was key.

Bridenstin­e met with Rogozin in Moscow on Tuesday and both will attend the Thursday launch of a manned capsule to the space station from Russia’s space complex in Baikonur, Kazakhstan. A guard accompanie­s the Soyuz-FG booster rocket to the launch pad in Kazakhstan on Tuesday.

 ?? DMITRI LOVETSKY/AP ??
DMITRI LOVETSKY/AP

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