Rogozin has threatened to pull out of the ISS altogether and ended on-orbit science activities between cosmonauts and their international astronaut counterparts.NASA/Mike Vrbanic
“They’re not getting money because a good part of their space program had been selling seats on Soyuz missions to the United States,” Handberg said. “The Russians have lost their leverage, as you say, over the United States because they provided the access. Now we have independent access.” A Soyuz-2.1b rocket booster carrying British OneWeb satellites is transported to a launch pad in Kazakhstan on March 2, 2022.Secondly, the US, Europe and Japan are working to extendIf Russia drops out by 2030, that’s where things get complicated.
at the ISS will conduct the first US reboost test while in orbit, potentially providing an alternative option.
The West started and everything is fair play. Russia protect your interest!