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'You can start with me': Commander of NASA flight that was stranded in space for more than nine months says he is partly to blame

One of the astronauts who was stranded on the International Space Station (ISS) has said some of the blame for what went wrong lies with him.

Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams splashed down off the coast of Florida earlier this month after more than nine months onboard the ISS.

The two astronauts docked at the ISS on 5 June last year, expecting to be there for just eight days.

Instead, issues with Boeing's long-awaited Starliner meant NASA decided to leave them waiting in orbit for months.

Wilmore: 'Start with me' for blame

Mr Wilmore was asked at a NASA news conference on Monday evening where he lays the blame for the issues with Starliner, to which he said, "I'll start with me".

"There were issues, of course, with what happened with Starliner," he added. "There were some issues, of course, that happened that prevented us from returning on Starliner.

"And I'll start with me because there were questions that, as the commander of the spacecraft that I should have asked. And I did not, I didn't know I needed to...

"Blame, that's a term - I don't like that term - certainly there's responsibility throughout all the programmes, and certainly you can start with me."

He then added that responsibility for the issues with returning home can be found "all throughout the chain", including with NASA and Boeing.

Williams: 'Life goes on up there'

Ms Williams also said she was somewhat surprised by the interest in their prolonged space mission.

"Life goes on up there. I mentioned today that we pivoted and became [ISS] crew members," she said. "You maybe sort of get tunnel visioned into doing your job.

"We were just really focused on what we were doing... 'the world doesn't revolve around us but we revolve around it'."

Ms Williams then said: "I don't think we were aware to the degree [people were interested], pretty honoured and humbled by the fact of when we came home, it was like 'wow there are a lot of people'."

During their long wait in space, the two US navy veterans completed spacewalks, experiments and even helped sort out the plumbing onboard the ISS.

Sky's science and technology editor Tom Clarke asked the astronauts if the politics around their stay in the ISS made a difficult situation worse. Nick Hague - who also was onboard the Crew-9 flight - disagreed.

After explaining the timeline from the launch of SpaceX's Falcon 9 to the return of the two astronauts, he said: "That was never in question the entire time.

"The politics don't make it up there when we're making operational decisions. There were a lot of options that were discussed, and the team on the ground... is gigantic, and everyone was working with a singular focus."

Read more:
Stranded astronauts have just returned to a very different world

The crew were also asked about how weird it was to return to Earth in the SpaceX capsule - and about the welcome party of dolphins that swam around the vessel after splashdown.

"I can tell you that returning from space to Earth through the atmosphere inside of a 3000-degree fireball of plasma is weird, regardless of how you look at it," Mr Wilmore said.

"It's thrilling, it's amazing, I remember thinking about the structure of the capsule," as the Dragon Freedom capsule descended at pace toward our planet.

"And then the parachutes open and... it's exhilarating."

Mr Hague then remarked, "I had requested dolphins as kind of a joke".

Sky News

(c) Sky News 2025: 'You can start with me': Commander of NASA flight that was stranded in space for more than nine months says he i

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