Boeing Starliner, NASA
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"Responsibility with Boeing, yes. Responsibility with NASA, yes, all the way up and down the chain. We all are responsible. We all own this."
From ABC News
NASA astronauts stranded in the International Space Station for 278 days said they want to share their input with Boeing.
From Yahoo
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All told, Williams and Wilmore traveled more than 121 million miles during their mission, spent 286 days in space, and completed 4,576 Earth orbits.
NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore put some of the blame on himself when asked who was responsible for Boeing Starliner’s failure on last year’s Crew Flight Test.
The last Boeing Starliner mission was extended from eight days to over nine months due to capsule issues after docking at the International Space Station.
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ABC13 Houston on MSNNASA astronauts reflect on failed Starliner flight and hope it doesn't impact private productionFor the first time, NASA astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore are opening up after their dramatic splashdown in the gulf.
Astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams took partial responsibility for Boeing's Starliner setback, acknowledging missed questions. Despite issues, they remain confident in Starliner’s future and are committed to rectifying its problems.
NASA said on Thursday it was moving toward certifying Boeing's CST-100 Starliner for crewed flights later this year or by early 2026 after its inaugural mission to the International Space Station was marred by a system fault,
NASA has officially revealed that it was moving towards certifying Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner for crewed flights by the end of this year or early 2026.This move was followed by its inaugural mission to the International Space Station
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Space.com on MSNBoeing's next Starliner launch for NASA could slip to early 2026 after fixes"It is likely to be in the timeframe of late this calendar year or early next year for the next Starliner flight."
NASA's celebrity astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams said Monday that they hold themselves partly responsible for what went wrong on their space sprint-turned-marathon and would fly on Boeing's Starliner again.