- President Donald Trump said he will attend the historic
NASA andSpaceX launch at Kennedy Space Center next week, local outlet WESH2 reported. - This would be the first time NASA has sent astronauts into space in a spacecraft built by a private company.
- It's been nearly a decade since Americans were launched into outer space on US soil. They have been relying on Russian craft to get to the International Space Station.
President Donald Trump said he will travel to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida to attend the historic NASA and SpaceX launch next week, local outlet WESH-TV reported.
"Our destiny, beyond the Earth, is not only a matter of national identity, but a matter of national security," Trump said, according to the outlet.
NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley crew SpaceX's new Crew Dragon ship launched from a Falcon 9 rocket on May 27.
This is the first time that SpaceX, which was founded by
According to Politico, Rep. Michael Waltz of Florida urged Trump to attend. Waltz said Trump was "fired up" after a discussion they had on "the importance of the event to the evolution of the US space program," Politico reported.
"With everything going on, the relaunch of America, the relaunch of our economy, the relaunch of Florida, the symbolism I think is really exciting," Waltz, who plans to fly aboard Air Force One from Washington with Trump for the event said, according to Politico.
The astronauts will live on the space station for about three months, then return to Earth in a space capsule, and finally parachute into the Atlantic Ocean, Business Insider reported.
On Thursday, Trump also joked about sending reporters into space "to get rid of you for a while," The Hill reported.
"I'm thinking about going, that'll be next week, to the rocket launch," Trump said when asked about the launch at a press conference on Thursday. "I hope you're all going to join me. I'd like to put you in the rocket and get rid of you for a while."
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