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NASA's Bill Nelson Says Donald Trump's

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Artemis Target Was Never Realistic

NASA administrator Bill Nelson has said Donald Trump's plan to put humans on the moon by 2024 via the Artemis program was unrealistic. "The target is 2025," he told Newsweek. "2024 was set by the Trump administration and that was never a realistic goal."

NASA is about to launch its first test flight of its moon-bound Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and crew-capable Orion spacecraft on Monday, August 29. 

The uncrewed mission, known as Artemis I, will see Orion circle the moon for several days as mission controllers test its capabilities before it speeds back to Earth at around 24,500 miles per hour, putting its heat shield through its paces.

It's the first step in NASA's Artemis program to return humans to the surface of the moon for the first time in over 50 years.

In March 2019, Trump's vice president Mike Pence announced a goal to return humans to the moon by 2024, citing competition from other countries such as China as justification for the target.

"What we need now is urgency," Pence told the National Space Council at the time.

"Make no mistake about it—we're in a space race today, just as we were in the 1960s. And the stakes are even higher. Last December, China became the first nation to land on the far side of the moon and revealed their ambition to seize the lunar strategic high ground and become the world's pre-eminent space-faring nation."

A few years on, the situation hasn't changed. Today, NASA faces competition not just from China but from Russia, which announced that it would depart from the International Space Station (ISS) in July this year amid strained international tensions as a result of its invasion of Ukraine.

It marks a shift in the American relationship with Russia in space, which only a few years ago remained close. The U.S., as well as the rest of the world, had relied on Russia as the sole means of ferrying astronauts to and from the ISS from 2011 onwards, until Elon Musk's SpaceX enabled launches from American soil in 2020.

Nelson said the recent uncontrolled atmospheric re-entries of Chinese rocket parts is an example of this. "When they put up their first component of their space station, they didn't reserve fuel to have a controlled re-entry on the [rocket's] huge first stage, and it's coming down uncontrolled," he said.

"And they will not share with anybody the trajectory. Not only did they do that for the first station a year or so ago, but the second component they just put up just recently, they did the same thing again."

Nelson also said China has been unwilling to share its scientific discoveries with the world in the same way NASA has. He said that when NASA returned samples from the moon, they were made available to the international community. When China returned samples, they were not.

"The short answer is, the whole idea of working in space is to work together to help each other out," Nelson said. "And hopefully China will get to that point, but thus far they haven't."


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Artemis Target Was Never Realistic

NASA administrator Bill Nelson has said Donald Trump's plan to put humans on the moon by 2024 via the Artemis program was unrealistic. "The target is 2025," he told Newsweek. "2024 was set by the Trump administration and that was never a realistic goal."

NASA is about to launch its first test flight of its moon-bound Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and crew-capable Orion spacecraft on Monday, August 29. 

The uncrewed mission, known as Artemis I, will see Orion circle the moon for several days as mission controllers test its capabilities before it speeds back to Earth at around 24,500 miles per hour, putting its heat shield through its paces.

It's the first step in NASA's Artemis program to return humans to the surface of the moon for the first time in over 50 years.

In March 2019, Trump's vice president Mike Pence announced a goal to return humans to the moon by 2024, citing competition from other countries such as China as justification for the target.

"What we need now is urgency," Pence told the National Space Council at the time.

"Make no mistake about it—we're in a space race today, just as we were in the 1960s. And the stakes are even higher. Last December, China became the first nation to land on the far side of the moon and revealed their ambition to seize the lunar strategic high ground and become the world's pre-eminent space-faring nation."

A few years on, the situation hasn't changed. Today, NASA faces competition not just from China but from Russia, which announced that it would depart from the International Space Station (ISS) in July this year amid strained international tensions as a result of its invasion of Ukraine.

It marks a shift in the American relationship with Russia in space, which only a few years ago remained close. The U.S., as well as the rest of the world, had relied on Russia as the sole means of ferrying astronauts to and from the ISS from 2011 onwards, until Elon Musk's SpaceX enabled launches from American soil in 2020.

Nelson said the recent uncontrolled atmospheric re-entries of Chinese rocket parts is an example of this. "When they put up their first component of their space station, they didn't reserve fuel to have a controlled re-entry on the [rocket's] huge first stage, and it's coming down uncontrolled," he said.

"And they will not share with anybody the trajectory. Not only did they do that for the first station a year or so ago, but the second component they just put up just recently, they did the same thing again."

Nelson also said China has been unwilling to share its scientific discoveries with the world in the same way NASA has. He said that when NASA returned samples from the moon, they were made available to the international community. When China returned samples, they were not.

"The short answer is, the whole idea of working in space is to work together to help each other out," Nelson said. "And hopefully China will get to that point, but thus far they haven't."


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