As the Endeavour space shuttle streaks toward the International Space Station, NASA mission managers are reviewing the blastoff videotapes for heat shield damage to the spacecraft. NASA reports that Endeavour endured multiple debris hits during the liftoff.
– As the Space Shuttle Endeavour heads for a July 17 docking with the
International Space Station, NASA mission managers are poring over photos and
data to determine extent of the July 15 launch damage to Endeavour’s heat
shields. The spacecraft took multiple debris hits from what are likely to be …
Posts Tagged ‘mission’
Endeavour Suffers Debris Dings on Liftoff
Clinton heading to India to enhance strategic partnership
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton leaves Washington for India Thursday on a mission aimed at advancing an emerging U.S.-Indian strategic partnership. The trip will also take her to Thailand for meetings with Southeast Asian foreign ministers on issues including North Korea’s nuclear program.
UN monitors to leave Georgia
By Tom Esslemont
BBC News, Tbilisi

The last remaining United Nations observers in Georgia leave their posts on Wednesday, a month after their mandate expired.
The UN Security Council failed to extend the mission of the 130 observers last month, due to a Russian veto.
Last August, Russia backed Abkhazia’s declaration of independence from Georgia. But no other international organisation has done so.
The monitors have been in the region for 16 years, monitoring a ceasefire.

Their mandate ceased to exist exactly one month ago.
So, as they prepare to leave their field offices in Abkhazia and Georgia, there will be no farewell ceremony. They will simply pack their bags and leave.
Russia backed the region’s declaration of independence from Georgia following the short but devastating war in the other disputed territory of South Ossetia.
This has made it very difficult for international organisations to go about their work.
The UN says it deeply regrets the end of the mission’s mandate.
It had been in the region since 1993, when it was deployed to report violations of an earlier ceasefire between Georgian forces and Abkhaz separatists.
From now on, there will be no international peace monitors working inside either of the volatile, disputed territories of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
There are concerns that the remaining populations will now live in a security vacuum, finding it harder to draw attention to their problems. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Jarvis Coffin: Rupert Murdoch engages in a bit of portal-speak
The Wall Street Journal reports that Rupert Murdoch said MySpace “needs to be refocused as an entertainment portal.” I have mostly stopped reading stories about…
Man’s first trip to moon recreated for internet generation
Weather Again Halts Endeavour Blastoff to ISS
Thunderstorms and lightning strikes within 20 miles of the Cape Canaveral launch facilities again force NASA to cancel the blastoff of the Space Shuttle Endeavour on a mission to the International Space Station. If the weather cooperates, NASA will on July 15 attempt again to get Endeavour off the ground.
– Stormy Florida weather July 13
postponed the launch of the Space Shuttle Endeavour for the third consecutive
day and marked the fifth time since June that NASA has been forced to postpone
the mission to deliver and install Japan’s
4.5 million-ton Kibo space-exposed laboratory complex.
NASA w…
UK Afghan deaths prompt mission debate
The surge in British deaths in Afghanistan has stoked the debate about the mission, and whether there is still the political will to continue. Five soldiers from one unit died yesterday when their foot patrol was hit by two bombs. It took the number of British victims in Afghanistan to 184, five more than the total number of fatalities in Iraq.
US president sets Afghan target

The increasingly deadly conflict in Afghanistan is a "serious fight" but one essential for the future stability of the country, the US president says.
Insisting that US and allied troops have pushed back the Taliban, Barack Obama said the immediate target was to steer Afghanistan through elections.
The country is due to hold a presidential vote in August.
Mr Obama spoke to Sky News as concern grew in the UK at the rising British death toll in Afghanistan.
UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown was also forced on Saturday to justify British involvement in Afghanistan.
Mr Brown said the UK’s military deployment there was aimed at preventing terrorism in the UK.
Fifteen British troops have died in the past 10 days, pushing the country’s number of deaths in Afghanistan past the number killed in action in Iraq.
‘Extraordinary role’
Speaking during a day-long visit to Africa, Mr Obama also told Sky News that the battle in Afghanistan was a vital element in the battle against terrorism.
He said the continued involvement of British troops in the conflict was necessary, right and was a vital contribution to UK national security.

"This is not an American mission," Mr Obama said.
"The mission in Afghanistan is one that the Europeans have as much if not more of a stake in than we do.
"The likelihood of a terrorist attack in London is at least as high, if not higher, than it is in the United States."
He praised the efforts of all troops currently fighting the Taleban in gruelling summer heat, singling out British forces for praise when asked if their role was still important.
"Great Britain has played an extraordinary role in this coalition, understanding that we can not allow either Afghanistan or Pakistan to be a safe haven for al-Qaeda, those who with impunity blow up train stations in London or buildings in New York.
"We knew that this summer was going to be tough fighting. They [the Taliban] have, I think, been pushed back but we still have a long way to go. We’ve got to get through elections."
‘Core mission’
Since taking office in Washington in January of this year, Mr Obama has announced a troop "surge" in Afghanistan.

The US has said it is sending up to 30,000 new troops to Afghanistan this year to take on a resurgent Taleban. They will join 33,000 US and 32,000 other Nato troops already in the country.
He also replaced the incumbent US commander in the country, ousting Gen David McKiernan less than a year into his command.
The new US chief in Afghanistan, Gen Stanley McChrystal, has a stellar reputation from his days commanding special forces operations in Iraq.
He has been tasked with the mission of outsmarting the Taliban, who continue to win support among ordinary Afghans often caught in the crossfire of the bitter fighting.
High numbers of Afghan civilian casualties have become an issue of major concern to the US. Afghan President Hamid Karzai has regularly called on the international forces to reduce the numbers of Afghans killed in its operations.
Speaking to Sky News, Mr Obama said although forces were currently engaged in heavy fighting, new strategies for building bridges with Afghan society would be considered once the country had held its presidential election.

Afghanistan needed its own army, its own police and the ability to control its own security, Mr Obama said – a strategy currently being implemented in Iraq, where security is being handed over to Iraqi forces.
"All of us are going to have to do an evaluation after the Afghan election to see what more we can do," the president said.
"It may not be on the military side, it might be on the development side providing Afghan farmers alternatives to poppy crops, making sure that we are effectively training a judiciary system and a rule of law in Afghanistan that people trust."
"We’ve got a core mission that we have to accomplish."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Lightning Strikes Delay Endeavour’s Launch
Twice delayed in June, NASA again scratches its mission to the International Space Station after 11 lightning strikes are recorded in the launch area. After a check of all systems, NASA hopes to finally get the mission under way July 12.
– NASA called off the launch of the space shuttle Endeavour for a third time
July 11 after lightning strikes in the Cape Canaveral area prompted the space
agency to move the liftoff to July 12. The mission to deliver equipment to the International
Space Station was scratched twice in June due to a …
UN to withdraw mission from Caucasus
Military observers and policemen from the UN mission in the Caucasus will complete their withdrawal from the region by the end of the next week. This is according to Michele Montas, a spokeswoman for the UN secretary general.



