SpaceX aborts its rescue mission for stranded astronauts at the last minute.
NASA astronauts Barry ‘Butch’ Wilmore and Sunita ‘Suni’ Williams have been on board the International Space Station (ISS) since last June on what was supposed to be a week-long mission.
The mission was set to launch aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft at 7:48 p.m. EDT from Kennedy Space Center in Florida.


The astronauts have been stranded in space since June 2024 (MIGUEL J. RODRIGUEZ CARRILLO/Contributor/Getty Images)
A new group of ‘Crew-10’ astronauts were scheduled to arrive on the ISS by approximately 6am on Thursday and facilitate the pair’s return to Earth.
However, less than an hour before it was due to blast off, NASA stood down the launch and Elon Musk’s SpaceX made a last-minute announcement saying that it had aborted its plans.
This is reportedly due to an issue with the hydraulic system of the launch tower.
SpaceX clarified that the problem wasn’t with the rocket or spacecraft itself, but rather a ground system issue.
The next launch is now scheduled for Friday (14 March).
SpaceX shared an update on their website regarding the postponed Crew-10 Mission: “SpaceX and NASA are targeting no earlier than Friday, March 14 for Falcon 9’s launch of Dragon’s 10th operational human spaceflight mission (Crew-10).
“Launch is targeted for 7:03 p.m. ET, with a backup opportunity available on Saturday, March 15 at 6:41 p.m. ET.”
Crew-10 is the tenth crew rotation mission of SpaceX’s human space transportation system, set to replace Crew-9 on the ISS and bring back Wilmore and Williams.
The international group on Crew-10 includes NASA’s Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers, along with Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s Takuya Onishi and Roscosmos’ Kirill Peskov.


The SpaceX crew were due to launch earlier today (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
Once Crew-10 finally arrives at the ISS, they will spend several months familiarising themselves with the station’s ongoing science and maintenance while Crew-9 prepares to return home, the space agency said.
“The crew will spend several months aboard the orbiting laboratory conducting spacewalks, research demonstrations and experiments for the benefit of humanity and deep space exploration,” NASA explained.
Wilmore and Williams were originally part of Boeing’s first crewed test flight of its new Starliner capsule. However, technical issues forced the capsule to return to Earth without them last September – leaving them stranded nine months longer than expected.
Despite media narratives calling them ‘stuck’, both astronauts have maintained that they are not in distress and have been making the most of it.
“Of course, you know, we came up here thinking we’d be only here for a little while and do our test flight, but then the added time here has allowed us to do all the science experiments,” Williams explained.
“We’ve gone through a lot of holidays together. We’ve learned how to make cakes up here for each other. So it’s been a lot of fun actually.”
Meanwhile, both President Trump and his close ally Musk have repeatedly blamed the Biden administration for ‘[allowing it] to happen.’
Trump said earlier this month: “We love you, and we’re coming up to get you, and you shouldn’t have been up there so long.”
Featured Image Credit: Brandon Bell/Getty Images


The elongated saga of Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore could soon be coming to an end, as NASA is finally due to rescue the pair of astronauts. Williams and Wilmore have become the face of space after they were marooned on the International Space Station last year. Although Williams has reiterated they aren’t stranded, their eight-day mission aboard the ISS was massively extended due to a fault with their Boeing Starliner capsule, which forced it to fly back without them.
As the days tick by, Williams and Wilmore have currently been aboard the ISS for 272 days…and counting.


Williams and Wilmore are finally set to be rescued in March 2025 (NASA)
Things are finally wrapping up following calls from President Donald Trump for Elon Musk to go and get them, Musk claiming they were abandoned by the Biden administration, and the world’s richest man calling one famed astronaut an ‘idiot’.
SpaceX‘s long-awaited Crew-10 launch is scheduled for March 12, with the dynamic duo finally set to get their feet back on terra firma. After this, there are expected to be some major adjustments to life back on Earth.
Williams has explained the brutal daily regime they’re undertaking in space, involving two hours of exercise to stop help try and combat damage to their bones and muscle.
We already knew there would be a physical toll trying to return to ‘normal’ life, but speaking to DailyMail.com, doctors have explained a little more about what Williams and Wilmore might have to deal with.
As soon as Williams and Wilmore emerge from their capsule, they’re expected to be put on stretchers and rushed away for medical examination.
Dr Vinay Gupta is a pulmonologist and Air Force veteran who claims it could take up to six weeks of brutal regimens to regain their strength.
This will start as soon as they’re back on Earth and initially focus on walking, as well as flexibility and muscle strengthening. The second phase of the 45-day regime involves proprioceptive exercises and cardio reconditioning. The third and final phase is the longest, focusing on returning them to peak physical performance via ‘functional development training’.
Given that Williams and Wilmore have been exposed to the equivalent of one year’s of Earth radiation during a single week in space, Gupta added: “‘If I was their physician, I would think about a more proactive strategy for cancer screening…We want to take a different approach here, given that they had such a unique exposure history.”
With research suggesting that an astronaut aged between 30 and 50 can lose about half their strength following a six-month period in space, biomedical engineer Dr. John Jaquish goes on to explain the effects of low gravity on bone and muscle loss: “The human body needs the Earth’s gravitational pull, and in an absence of that, a lot of things are not functioning correctly.”
Despite their exercise regime, Gupta added: “The reality is, they’re effectively getting a fraction of the sort of exercise that we all take for granted just by walking in [Earth’s] gravity.
“Invariably, despite them doing all the right things (which I know they are), you’re going to see a decrease in muscle mass and strength — no question.”
Although most astronauts can get back to their pre-mission fitness after just 45 days, it can sometimes take months or even years to return to where they were.
Featured Image Credit: NASA


Spending months in space might sound like the ultimate adventure, but for NASA astronaut Sunita Williams, the experience came with an unexpected emotional toll.
Williams, who was only supposed to be on an eight-day mission, has now been in space for over 270 days after a series of technical failures left her and fellow astronaut Butch Wilmore stranded on the International Space Station (ISS).
Responding to a press question from the ISS on as part of a pre-departure news conference, from 6:06 in the video above: Williams revealed: “the hardest part of being stuck in space wasn’t the weightlessness or the isolation — it was the uncertainty of when she’d be able to come home”.
“The hardest part is having the folks on the ground not know exactly when we’re coming back. It’s been a rollercoaster for them – probably more so than for us,” she added.
Williams and Wilmore launched aboard Boeing’s Starliner on June 5, 2024, for what was supposed to be a quick trip to the ISS. But things quickly went south when the spacecraft experienced multiple technical failures.
NASA later deemed it too unsafe to bring them back, forcing the astronauts to stay aboard the station while alternative plans were made. Starliner was eventually sent back to Earth without them in September, leaving them quite literally without a ride home.
Now, after months of uncertainty, NASA has confirmed that the two astronauts will finally return to Earth on March 19 or 20. But instead of Boeing bringing them back, they’ll be catching a lift with Elon Musk’s SpaceX on the Crew-9 return flight.


SpaceX & Tesla CEO, Elon Musk (Getty Images)
The extended stay has sparked major controversy back on Earth, with Elon Musk suggesting that the delay was politically motivated. Former US President Donald Trump echoed the claims, accusing the Biden administration of deliberately holding them in space longer than necessary.
Despite the swirling speculation, Williams and Wilmore have largely avoided getting dragged into the politics of it all. When asked about the controversy, Williams simply responded, “We know what we’ve lived up here. We have the utmost respect for everyone trying to get us home.”
Wilmore, however, admitted that he and Williams have been kept in the dark regarding the politics of their situation. Referring to Musk’s claim, he said: “That’s information that we simply don’t have, so I believe him”.
For now, the focus remains on getting the astronauts back safely. After spending nearly a year in space, their long-awaited return is finally in sight.
Featured Image Credit: Joe Raedle / Staff / Getty


We imagine you don’t get to become the world’s richest man without having to make some pretty tough decisions or by holding your tongue.
Known as someone to speak his mind, Elon Musk has again fired shots at NASA and the situation involving astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore.
While Williams has previously insisted they aren’t ‘stranded’, the pair have been stuck aboard the International Space Station since July 2024 when they flew on the first crewed mission of the Boeing Starliner.
Although the mission was only supposed to take eight days, an issue with their craft meant it was sent back unmanned, and they were marooned in the stars.
President Donald Trump has called on Musk to ‘go get’ the astronauts, while NASA has confirmed when their rescue is due to happen.


Williams and Wilmore have been on the ISS for over eight months (NASA)
There’s been much debate about when they’ll be brought back, with Musk suggesting the Biden administration purposefully left them up there for political reasons. This irked ESA astronaut Andreas Morgensen, who branded Musk a liar for these claims.
In return, Musk called Morgensen an ‘idiot’, and the whole thing turned into a bit of an internet feud. In one particularly heated exchange, Musk wrote: “You are fully retarded.
SpaceX could have brought them back several months ago.
“I OFFERED THIS DIRECTLY to the Biden administration and they refused.
“Return WAS pushed back for political reasons. Idiot.”
Musk has once again discussed the fates of Williams and Wilmore, this time, giving his own thoughts in an interview with Joe Rogan on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast.
Reiterating his plan to build a civilization on Mars, Musk then addressed the astronauts when Rogan asked if he was still supposed to be rescuing them.
Musk said: “Yeah, that’s coming up in a couple of weeks…They were supposed to be up there for like eight days, and they’ve been up there for like I think eight months, so a little longer than expected.”
When Rogan asked what it will be like for the pair trying to adjust to life back on Earth, Musk continued to explain some of the side effects of extended stay in space and referred to the whole situation as ‘political football’ after the Biden administration supposedly rejected his offer to bring them back much earlier.
Explaining his stance on the situation, the billionaire concluded: “There’s no way they’re [the Biden administration] going to make anyone who’s supporting Trump look good.”
Musk went on to say the Biden administration was trying to sue SpaceX for not hiring asylum seekers, so it’s clear there’s no love lost there.
He claimed that the SpaceX Dragon is the only craft considered safe enough to rescue the astronauts, and while the Russians could’ve used their own rockets to get them, Musk thinks they would’ve charged ‘crazy’ money and used it as a propaganda victory.
It’s clear Musk still has a bee in his bonnet about all of this, but at least we’re one day closer to getting Williams and Wilmore back on terra firma.
Featured Image Credit: PowerfulJRE/YouTube


SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has suggested deorbiting the International Space Station within two years.
NASA has plans to crash the space station into the Pacific Ocean, which they aim to be done by the end of this decade, of which they have awarded a contract for $843 million to Musk’s SpaceX.
Although NASA have stated they want to deorbit the space station by the end of the decade, Musk is now suggesting he would like to deorbit the ISS within as little as two years.
As part of the mission to bring down the ISS, SpaceX will be developing a U.S. Deorbit vehicle that will be used to crash the space station back down to earth, where following a controlled re-entry, it should land safely in a remote part of the Pacific Ocean.
While Musk has publicly stated that the International Space Station “has very little incremental utility.” stranded NASA astronaut Sunita Williams disagrees, claiming now isn’t the right time to get rid of the space station. Not only has Williams argued that the ISS shouldn’t be destroyed before 2030, she has also stated, “This place is ticking. It’s just really amazing. So I would say we’re actually in our prime right now.”.


Captain Sunita Williams (Joe Scarnici / Getty)
Contrary to Musk’s statement about the station having served its purpose, Williams has suggested that NASA would be wasting tax payers money by not allowing the “word class science that this laboratory is capable of” to continue.
Suntia Williams is one of two stranded NASA astronauts currently stranded on the International Space Station. Williams and her fellow stranded astronaut Butch Wilmore were delayed in retuning home to earth following a technical glitch in Boeing’s new Starliner capsule, but are expected to finally return home at the end of this month.


NASA’s Boeing CST-100 Starliner Spacecraft (Paul Hennessy / Getty)
The ISS was originally launched back in November 1998 and has since grown to an impressive 16 modules, weighing more than a whopping 4,30,000 kg.
Due to the sheer size of the space station, the mission requires careful planning and precision to make sure the stations orbit is slowly lowered and steered away from populated areas and into the ocean.
Elon Musk might be looking to take the space station out of commission within the next two years, but with so much planning and development required to pull it off, and Suntia Williams calling for him to hold off, there’s every chance the ISS could still be up in space until closer to NASA’s 2030 deadline.