hour. there. is high on the pacific. to a gentle landing 300 miles south of san diego. splash down. the latest chapter of nasa s journey to the moon comes to a close. ryan, back on earth. when the entire mission is picture perfect. with exceeding the engineering expectations, when some of the stage for the next flight and the moon landing. we go back to the moon to learn to live, to, work to invent, to create. in order to go on into the cosmos, to further explore. we america and international partners may be poised to go to the moon, was trying to just behind by a few years, and determined to stay. and then to mars. it is the beginning of the
partnership seemed in danger, then suddenly, in the summer of 22, rogozin was replaced and the head of russia s human spaceflight program, a former cosmonaut, highly respected at nasa, suddenly changed course for. how committed is rushed to this international cooperation, to the space station, and how long will you be a partner with the united states, with japan, with canada and with the international partners on this program? as i said more than 40 years, ago we will continue our cooperation as long as i can imagine. that was a bombshell. russia, saying it will continue to cooperate. i wonder if it s part of a concerted effort to re-ease the tension and she turned down the temperature of it. the answer is yes. the answer he said, is. yes we understand that it makes sense to keep flying because there is excellent infrastructure that building
satellite weapons, but does the u.s. also have satellite based weapons? u.s. commanders won t say. well i think we have options on the table, but i would prefer not go into those right now. does the united states have offensive capabilities in space already? so i am not going to talk about what capabilities we may have or may not have, i will definitely say that what the chinese and russians have done is irresponsible and, frankly, do not help in terms of this domain. but many in the u.s. say that it is time to declassify some of america s capabilities in space, there are some things that we can do that i think would help children through s jasmine for aggression if they do more about our capability. copy, copy. for decades, the u.s. air
airlines rely on. u.s. military sources also claimed russia has launched cyber attacks against the spacex starling satellites over ukraine that provide the country with internet access. though the u.s. military says that spacex engineers were able to defend against to the attack by rewriting several lines of computer code i think a lot of us expected at the start of the ukraine conflict like that that everything would go lights out. with the ukrainians they would be locked out from the rest of the world, but when starlinks it they can continue to have access to the internet no matter what is happening to them. i think that is causing russians a little bit of discomfort. while russia china and europe all have their own gps satellite networks, most of the world, including ukraine in the global economy, still depend on the u.s. gps network provided by the u.s. military. major lauren taylor directs the operations here. how accurate is the u.s. system? within a foot and a half
lunar surface. how do you see this playing out? we kind of have already been, they re all right? so in that sense, it is not a race. however, right now we don t have the capacity to send humans back. not yet. and so it is a race that isn t being run anymore. i think american pride, if china gets there before us even for a second time, that might bruises a little. and maybe we will redouble it and say okay, you take the moon, we are going to mars, if that we doubles that. by the way that would be a geopolitical decision, sure, go for it. using infrared satellites, every rocket and missile launch anywhere in the world is immediately tracked here. this is missile warning officer. i m tracking 0098 zulu. at the us space command, the joint operation center in a.