Berliner Boersenzeitung - Amid Ukraine war, US set to fly Russian cosmonaut to ISS

EUR -
AED 4.052595
AFN 75.580652
ALL 98.914442
AMD 427.047019
ANG 1.989305
AOA 1028.86732
ARS 1072.159653
AUD 1.611641
AWG 1.98601
AZN 1.872652
BAM 1.954921
BBD 2.228697
BDT 131.900661
BGN 1.955799
BHD 0.415941
BIF 3189.752003
BMD 1.103339
BND 1.431556
BOB 7.627569
BRL 6.049716
BSD 1.103803
BTN 92.665612
BWP 14.600432
BYN 3.612275
BYR 21625.437305
BZD 2.224899
CAD 1.494859
CDF 3166.581602
CHF 0.940597
CLF 0.036796
CLP 1015.303176
CNY 7.773904
CNH 7.776656
COP 4623.540563
CRC 572.242564
CUC 1.103339
CUP 29.238474
CVE 110.663253
CZK 25.329016
DJF 196.084769
DKK 7.460001
DOP 66.861668
DZD 146.567322
EGP 53.344553
ERN 16.55008
ETB 133.338331
FJD 2.428724
FKP 0.840257
GBP 0.840711
GEL 3.017601
GGP 0.840257
GHS 17.510128
GIP 0.840257
GMD 76.130286
GNF 9527.84423
GTQ 8.538159
GYD 230.926113
HKD 8.568694
HNL 27.528697
HRK 7.501612
HTG 145.644479
HUF 401.550176
IDR 17057.615344
ILS 4.197889
IMP 0.840257
INR 92.664502
IQD 1445.373616
IRR 46450.556945
ISK 149.30356
JEP 0.840257
JMD 174.241613
JOD 0.781937
JPY 161.864168
KES 142.330984
KGS 93.187937
KHR 4482.31262
KMF 491.372018
KPW 993.004149
KRW 1471.980646
KWD 0.337556
KYD 0.919886
KZT 532.790312
LAK 24363.366795
LBP 98803.975752
LKR 324.404059
LRD 213.799432
LSL 19.175903
LTL 3.257872
LVL 0.667399
LYD 5.24639
MAD 10.793411
MDL 19.31631
MGA 5020.190337
MKD 61.582296
MMK 3583.600858
MNT 3749.144642
MOP 8.830527
MRU 43.85773
MUR 51.161544
MVR 16.947277
MWK 1914.877053
MXN 21.399286
MYR 4.657742
MZN 70.475751
NAD 19.176346
NGN 1814.991982
NIO 40.564269
NOK 11.712144
NPR 148.265299
NZD 1.774643
OMR 0.4248
PAB 1.103803
PEN 4.106595
PGK 4.329225
PHP 62.210094
PKR 306.314418
PLN 4.308674
PYG 8606.128337
QAR 4.01698
RON 4.976827
RSD 117.038841
RUB 104.542267
RWF 1472.957082
SAR 4.142877
SBD 9.149374
SCR 14.664643
SDG 663.654138
SEK 11.368178
SGD 1.43119
SHP 0.840257
SLE 25.208312
SLL 23136.453897
SOS 630.006252
SRD 33.988896
STD 22836.882175
SVC 9.658655
SYP 2772.171358
SZL 19.175744
THB 36.509287
TJS 11.744317
TMT 3.872719
TND 3.359656
TOP 2.584133
TRY 37.704816
TTD 7.486632
TWD 35.30077
TZS 3001.080769
UAH 45.459649
UGX 4043.181083
USD 1.103339
UYU 46.239198
UZS 14108.940967
VEF 3996902.179506
VES 40.682386
VND 27313.147984
VUV 130.99058
WST 3.086549
XAF 655.662036
XAG 0.034412
XAU 0.000415
XCD 2.981827
XDR 0.814634
XOF 649.316078
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.19328
ZAR 19.295844
ZMK 9931.375854
ZMW 29.112903
ZWL 355.274591
  • RBGPF

    -0.8100

    59.99

    -1.35%

  • BCC

    -1.2400

    138.29

    -0.9%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    6.98

    +1.15%

  • SCS

    -0.2500

    12.62

    -1.98%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.74

    -0.16%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    9.69

    -0.52%

  • GSK

    -1.0800

    38.37

    -2.81%

  • BTI

    -0.8600

    35.11

    -2.45%

  • RIO

    -0.9900

    69.83

    -1.42%

  • NGG

    -1.8100

    66.97

    -2.7%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.3

    -0.6%

  • RELX

    -0.6800

    46.61

    -1.46%

  • BCE

    -0.6000

    33.84

    -1.77%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.89

    -0.16%

  • BP

    0.0900

    32.46

    +0.28%

  • AZN

    -1.6500

    77.93

    -2.12%

Amid Ukraine war, US set to fly Russian cosmonaut to ISS
Amid Ukraine war, US set to fly Russian cosmonaut to ISS / Photo: Jim WATSON - AFP

Amid Ukraine war, US set to fly Russian cosmonaut to ISS

The United States will on Wednesday carry a Russian to the International Space Station aboard a SpaceX ship, in a voyage that carries symbolic significance amid the Ukraine war.

Text size:

Anna Kikina, the only female cosmonaut in service, is part of the Crew-5 mission, which also includes one Japanese and two American astronauts.

Blast-off is set for noon from the Kennedy Space Center, with the weather forecast so far promising.

Two weeks ago, an American astronaut took off on a Russian Soyuz rocket for the orbital platform.

The long-planned astronaut exchange program has been maintained despite soaring tensions between the two countries since Moscow's invasion of Ukraine in February.

Ensuring the operation of the ISS has become one of the few remaining areas of cooperation between the United States and Russia.

"When you each are flying other's crew members, you know that you have a huge responsibility that you're promising to the other country," NASA associate administrator Kathy Lueders told reporters in a recent press conference.

"At a working level, we really appreciated the constancy in the relationship, even during some really, really tough times geopolitically."

- Fifth female cosmonaut -

Kikina, 38 and an engineer by training, will become the fifth Russian female professional cosmonaut to go into space.

"I hope in the near future we have more women in the cosmonaut corps," the Novosibirsk native told AFP in August.

The Soviet Union put the first woman in space, Valentina Tereshkova, in 1963, nearly 20 years before the first American woman Sally Ride. Since then, America has flown dozens more women.

It will also be the first spaceflight for American astronauts Nicole Mann and Josh Cassada, but the fifth for Japan's Koichi Wakata.

After a journey of about 30 hours, their ship will dock with the station on Thursday, ready to begin a five-month science mission and relieve the four members of Crew-4, who will stay a few days for handover.

Crew-5's arrival will bring the total number of astronauts on the ISS to 11, including two other Russians and an American who arrived on the recent Soyuz.

- ISS future unclear -

Kikina will be the first Russian to fly with Elon Musk's SpaceX which, along with Boeing, has a "taxi service" contract with NASA.

Musk himself waded into the conflict Thursday by proposing a peace deal that involved re-running, under UN supervision, annexation referendums in Moscow-occupied regions of Ukraine and acknowledging Russian sovereignty over the Crimean peninsula.

The post enraged Ukrainians, including the country's envoy to Germany, who responded with an expletive.

Tensions between Moscow and Washington have increased considerably in the space field after the announcement of American sanctions against the Russian aerospace industry, in response to the invasion of Ukraine.

Russia thus announced this summer that it wanted to leave the ISS "after 2024" in favor of creating its own station, albeit without setting a precise date.

The director of manned flights at Roscosmos, Sergei Krikaliov, declared Monday he hoped the Russian government agrees to extend participation in the ISS after 2024.

The United States, for its part, wants to continue operating until at least 2030, then transition to commercially run stations.

As things stand, the ISS cannot function without joint cooperation, as the US side is responsible for power and life support and the Russian side for propulsion and maintaining orbit.

Between 2011 -- when the Space Shuttle program ended -- and SpaceX's first flight to the ISS in 2020, the United States was dependent on Russia for flying its crew to the station, paying tens of millions of dollars per seat.

The loss of this monopoly represents a significant income reduction for the Russian space program. The current crew exchange program, by contrast, is a barter-based agreement with no exchange of money.

(Y.Berger--BBZ)