Columbia
Loss, Tragic for America
Washington, Feb. 1 2003 (VOA News) -- The U.S. space
agency NASA has suspended all space shuttle flights
until investigators can determine why the space shuttle
Columbia broke apart over Texas Saturday. The United
States and much of the world are reacting with shock
and sorrow to the loss of Columbia and its seven crew
members.
The
shuttle Columbia was only minutes from its planned
landing in Florida when something caused it to break
apart in the skies over Texas.
Texan
Larry Watley had watched the shuttle land before,
but this time he noticed something different, a massive
fireball immediately behind the orbiter.
"It
was going behind the shuttle," he recalled. "I
mean, you could definitely see it was falling. And
then once I quit watching that [the fireball], I went
back to the shuttle again and it was almost out of
sight and you could see just tons of little fireballs
coming off."
Other
eyewitnesses in Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana also
reported seeing flames and debris falling to the ground
after hearing a loud bang in the sky.
At
about the same time, Mission Control in Houston reported
that it had abruptly lost voice and data contact with
Columbia:
"Communications
were lost at approximately 8 a.m. Central Time this
morning as Columbia was at an altitude of approximately
200,000 feet [60,000 meters] traveling at a speed
of about 12,500 miles an hour [20,000 kilometers]."
A
short time later, President Bush confirmed the worst
in a brief statement from the White House. "This
day has brought terrible news and great sadness to
our country. The Columbia is lost. There are no survivors,"
he said.
Space
agency officials were stunned and told reporters that
there was no immediate indication as to what caused
the shuttle to break up in flight.
NASA
Administrator Sean O'Keefe paid tribute to Columbia's
crew, which included six Americans and Israel's first
astronaut.
"They
dedicated their lives to pushing the scientific challenges
for all of us here on earth and they dedicated themselves
to that objective and did it with a happy heart, willingly,
and with great enthusiasm," he said.
The
demise of the space shuttle Columbia immediately brought
to mind images of the last shuttle disaster, the explosion
shortly after liftoff of the space shuttle Challenger
in 1986.
That
was 17 years ago, long enough for many to forget that
launching a rocket into space still entails a degree
of risk.
"Today
was a very stark reminder that this is a very risky
endeavor, pushing back the frontiers in outer space,"
said Bill Readdy, a former shuttle commander who now
supervises NASA's human space flight program. "And
after 113 flights, unfortunately people have a tendency
to look at it as something that is more or less routine.
Well, I can assure you it is not."
At
the White House, it fell to President Bush to try
to reassure the nation in the wake of the loss of
Columbia, much as then President Ronald Reagan did
in the wake of the Challenger disaster 17 years ago.
"Mankind
is led into the darkness beyond our world by the inspiration
of discovery and the longing to understand,"
he said. "Our journey into space will go on.
In the skies today, we saw destruction and tragedy.
Yet, farther than we can see, there is comfort and
hope."
Shuttle
missions are now on hold while an independent commission
investigates the Columbia tragedy.
U.S.
officials say the grounding of the three remaining
shuttles will not immediately affect the Russian and
two Americans currently aboard the international space
station.
The
space station includes a Russian escape vehicle and
a Russian re-supply flight scheduled to launch Sunday
should contain enough food and other items that would
allow the space station crew to remain aboard until
June.
--
Jim Malone
- Voice of America in Washington
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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