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tv   Keiser Report  RT  October 11, 2018 10:30am-10:54am EDT

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try and work out what went wrong while it's still in their memory as best they can remember and have examinations you can see the american this time they've been studying at their telemetry which is like the data you get for example from a flight recorder on a plane but on the plane is still there the plane with the with the soyuz rocket it is beamed on so it's a lot of those got a heads up already and so yeah. there are two versions both have to deal with the first booster one suggests that one of the first boosters modules kind. deployed and kicked detached and kicked to the second stand this caused the pressure to drop which is a sort of a chain reaction. launched emergency saw those shocks are there if enough of us who were watching the launch earlier on we saw those shots where you saw them both struct in their chairs and there's very little you can do it was about point you really get on with it you fail to take its course and there was a big wobble you can see there
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a very very very heavy vibration was that when things started to go wrong it was not normal it's not clear yet but it does look like something was off at that moment and another version suggests that simply which is which according to a cosmonaut we talked to earlier sounds kind of more plausible is that it's just one of the modules of the first boosted actually did not detach at the time when it should have so it kind of dragged along with the rocket and that's how the crew knew where is all of this is are long and so everything we know with the cap surely as well as everything else back on the ground to the apparently according to some reports. the drop basically is making difficult to examine these things but well first of all the first booster the full to booster has not been located wherever the location of where it where it's dropped is unclear right now but even even. if they find that report suggests that it will be
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incredible incredibly difficult to name the cause to kind of do because because it's been badly damaged burnt in the atmosphere is lively also because of the impact but the key is they've got all that info because there's been so many monitors on so much information automated information about the parameters the technical specs of it what was happening we heard about some sort of drop in pressure early or what was that about for a non-technical person what drop in pressure of the engine pushing dropping pressure of the engine pushing us and basically it's an emergency situation and i guess the protocol would be if something goes wrong if it's possible to bring people down safely then do it i mean it's better safe than sorry. nothing more come in the last couple couple of minutes on the investigation is just another word you know the big thing another big thing is that a criminal investigation the russian investigative committee has opened a criminal case into what the call is criminal negligence want to put ourselves on
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ministers and it does it does criminal negligence and when it comes to the safety protocols during the assembly of the rockets apparently they believe right we can gather from this statement that they believe that things went wrong that there were violations on the process of manufacturing of the rocket so this is this this is what we have a from the from officials there are a lot of questions here that's the that's a whole nother ball game and it will continue for the or it go well let you keep to the ground on it let's. hear some more elements to this there the russian space agency hailed the coordinated actions of the international rescue team earlier on which helped the crew survive a potential let's face it what could have been a catastrophe. but what we really appreciate the actions of the group they remained absolutely cool headed i've heard conversations between the operators they stayed
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very professional and who had to sell all together their actions have to have to ending the other conclusions will be late in. space law professor frans van de dung spoke he says the highly trained crew knew how to handle a situation peyton. but i would imagine that it's not so much that psychological shock because these people are extraordinarily well trained including you know being clear headed at the moment of danger and if you go back in history many astronauts and cosmonauts that's a stranger situations and usually they're absolutely on top of their game in terms of being able to handle that psychologically speaking both during the event and afterwards i find it unlikely that something there has gone wrong but certainly a long face is something where as an astronaut or across an org you don't have too much control over it's basically got ground control which is carole's of that part of the flight and then usually only after separation you have the the actual commom
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are being able to take over and to to to to recalibrate all the instruments to make sure that they're still in the right path and stuff like that and if necessary adjust the trajectory a little bit in order to make sure that they you know arrived at the space station at the right moment at the right place at the right speed and all that kind of stuff when the other side of this of course very much the guys who follow that made it safely back to ground the astral the cosmonaut but what about their wives their spouses their partners well we spoke exclusively to the time speak to us concerning what the pings were did they his first line of the wife or the rescued calls when they told us what it is like for relatives in emergency situations like we witnessed today in kazakhstan. i watched the launch on t.v. and then i got the news from my neighbors you can understand my feelings at the time it was hard but the support of the team my friends my relatives but you know they supported me so much you can be ready for that cosmonauts are prepared they
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get training but the wives just stay down here and lori after an hour and a half i was able to talk to him he called and said that he was ok and we're going to see each other soon but of course this is somewhat of a miracle. but i want to see think you to the rescue team which is a peacekeeper system thanks to that the crew returned alive and not injured. yeah one very very relieved person if you could see the relief of course the families faces most of them were there to meet them. into tears as we. say goodbye to your partner every day when they go into the job a lot of pilots go to the same thing doesn't it but it's incredibly rare that these things ever go wrong what was the safety record of the soyuz was pretty good last time it was almost forty years ago last time the flight i think it was back in one thousand nine hundred eighty three definitely still the most risky way to travel is no matter how you look at it and i was mentioning that that's not
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a fair comparison to talk about airline flying because it is ever so safe. i think that still to go up in a rocket is still man's biggest challenge isn't it to get there safely at the other end but when you look at the technology involved and the parameters involved it is still an amazing feat of engineering of humankind isn't it indeed and there was really one thing that did work well today was the emergency rescue system that's what saved the lives of both of both cosmonauts know it i'm confused here because early on we thought. we'd give it to believe that it was the commander in chief. of chin in the actually. the so-called eject button whatever to say we're getting out of here in this rocket propelled pod if you like which took them down to the kazakstan we heard earlier on from our learned friend russian cosmonaut saying no he thought this would have been fully automatic that they basically are strapped in face to take its course there's very little they can do because the computers can work so much quicker and they would have been basically. expelled from that thing
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for their own safety quickly the more you're reading up on this and the more you're hearing from the experts that's more the handle on it that it was an automatic safety system they kicked in rather than human intervention as well what i'd certainly to. the former cosmonauts word on this rather than the. interior ministry's because that's where the initial information will come from just simply because he has experience with the thing and yeah indeed we do know what happened next and it happened like a swiss clock like a swiss watch if you want because what happened was the point of this whole thing now of this whole emergency rescue system is to kind of ejects as you've rightly said the capsule and push it as far away from the makes it illegal because we were talking about this ballistic what was the term used it's called the ballistic descent you know what i mean i will get to that so the capsule the capsule is jets from the rocket it detaches and so the urgency you rescue system kind of drives it
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pushes it as far away from the failing rocket and. it does does have a does is it does have its own engines it's like a small small rocket in itself and that's the thing we're seeing on the screens in our this is not all of that over there rather over there i should say we are seeing the the the capsule itself. which landed on earth so after the after detaching from the rocket the capsule goes into as you've rightly said the ballistic descent mode so it means it kind of goes down. with a parachute and they kind of. know what we see on the screen this is exactly about this is the the module this is the capsule the line that so the crew and this is already after the crew module is separated from this hole emergency rescue system because you know you watch closely you don't see the engines there so it
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detaches as one thing that separates us from the parachute by then with a parachute got it i was thinking where's the rest of it returns this spacecraft capsule so this is the person. just to go we'll go through the facts one more time so the emergency rescue system detaches fire is of the rocket moves the crew as far away from the rocket as possible and starts the ballistic descent on earth then it detaches itself from the capsule and the parachute opens out to the big parachute opens and well that's what sort of forces they hit the ground with when they were going to get down the now well it's it should be it should be a standard a standard force because it's no different from landing when they return from the i says but during the old flight nasa told us the experienced g. force of around six or seven which is more than twice the norm but still as we're
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going to play and as we've been explained by the as we've been explained by the former cosmonaut here it's nothing special really it's not it's not out of the ordinary so to speak because they are trained for this sort of this sort of. say look remarkably well that remarkably well when they got there as far as we could see anyway ok so if you're just joining us let me take you through some of the timeline of what's happened here by the way if you look at the clocks actually quarter to six moscow time there all this happened when was it he goes but eleven o'clock this morning mother told her six hours old now this story is still running with it as more and more coming in and we've got some great exclusive pictures to show you there is the time on your screens the russian soyuz spacecraft launching at two forty pm local time just two minutes into the flight after it took off everyone thought it was going well but then we heard rocket failure a rocket booster malfunction was detected the crew made a successful emergency landing in central cuz exam we heard it was all pretty much
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automated it did not end in disaster for them that is the rosy side to this story today the two men seem to have only picked up minor injuries if any obviously the shaken by it but they look pretty fit and well we saw them walking over to the. plan to take the baikonur couple of hours flight hence real escape for the day the rescue operation began right after the crash landing four helicopters as well as army paratroopers were sent to the area the astronaut and cosmonaut were extracted from that capsule they were exclusive pictures amazing pictures we brought you here on this channel and they were taken for a medical examination as to say all seem to be looking pretty well now several to cover this yesterday we see if you're watching yes you are seeing don's preview don't quarter this is first time to go to baikonur wasn't for you we thought we'd send on this time and he was asked in the newsroom he said was he going to be like see this sort of rocky spoken about it and i know you've recalled the story so many times was one thing to see on the television another thing with this great big
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things like salsa going to the ground shakes but i did say that dawn just make a little contingency plan ahead if it doesn't go quite to plan did you think of it it didn't go quite the plan maybe i should have said anything anyway this is the this is him there watching the moment a takeoff and then witnessing the moment when it didn't quite go to plan. nick cave and the russian cosmonaut aleksei have chin and they've they landed in an emergency capsule military parachutes were deployed somewhere in northern cassock stand. because. we we've been here since days before the rocket launch so basically the spirits were very optimistic two days ago starting two days ago when we got here we saw the astronauts at a press conference giving it talking to the media saying their last good bye their
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last good bye to their families. preparing for their six month journey in in orbit you know the. astronaut in the cars went out there ok but when the launch happened we saw it clearly from here everything looked fine the the rocket ascended into the sky several was clapping taking videos. i but one thing that people mentioned hearing about a minute after the the launch was that they heard a sound that a lot of people were saying sounded like the rocket launch itself but far off away so perhaps that was that was them hearing the emergency capsule back in orbit we don't know but but basically that's what happened. and come back because of
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a five foot tall never did well now the moment they detected something was wrong was when that booster rocket began to malfunction of course. right and i cheated a. bit sick. once the problem with the booster rocket was known and decided on it was decided then very quickly to abandon the whole thing activating the second stage of the launch is how the delicate and complex launch procedure is supposed to happen and the journey this crew was supposed to be making.
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oh oh oh oh. oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh. oh oh. oh oh oh oh the. oh oh. oh oh to. that rush space agencies hailed the coordinated actions of the international rescue team and so quickly stepped in and help the crew survive what could have been a potential catastrophe. were really appreciate the actions of the group they
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remained absolutely had it i've heard conversations between the operators they stayed very professional and who had to so all together actions have led to that have to ending the other conclusions will be late and. throughout the day we brought you various comments from various experts about what they thought could have been behind this and how it was handled crucially space law professor. told us the highly trained crew knew handle the situation so patently. i would imagine that it's not so much psychological shock because these people are extraordinarily well trained including you know being clear headed at the moment of danger and if you go back in history many astronauts and cosmonauts that say stranger situations and usually they're absolutely on top of their game in terms of being able to handle that psychologically speaking bolt during you then and afterwards i find it unlikely that something there has gone wrong but certainly
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a large face is something where as an astronaut or across the hall you don't have too much control over it's basically got ground control which is taking care of that part of the flight and then usually only after separation you have the actual commom are being able to take over and to to to to recalibrate all the instruments to make sure that they're still in the right path and stuff like that and if necessary adjust the trajectory a little bit in order to make sure that they you know arrived at the space station at the right moment at the right place at the right speed and all that kind of stuff. and the human side of this we've got you so many exclusive pictures and also we spoke exclusively at the time to make for us today considering all she's gone through but headliner of chinon are the wife of the rescued cosmonaut the toll of what it is like for relatives in emergency situations like this in near tragedy moments in kazakstan today. i watched the launch on t.v.
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and then i got the news from my neighbor as you can understand my feelings at the time it was hard but the support of the team my friends my relatives they supported me so much you can be ready for that cosmonauts are prepared they get trained but the wives just stay down here and lori after an hour and a half i was able to talk to him he called and said that he was ok and we're going to see each other soon of course this is somewhat of a miracle but i want to say thank you to the rest. team who designed the escape system thanks to that the crew returned alive and not injured. so you never know what's coming along in the news world to you in the world around this you started the day going to cover this successful launch up to the i.s.a.'s didn't go to plan but it's being. at least a safe ending to it the two astronauts the pub the pilot and the the cosmonaut and the astronaut back down on earth we've been bringing you rolling coverage exclusive
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pictures exclusive access to the witnesses to this and the family relatives over the last six hours i'm going to be here in about five minutes time with more of the day's news and the latest updates as well it will give you a bit of a break for a minute well yeah indeed and i guess the most important outtake from today's situation is that even despite the launch was failed everybody is alive safe and sound and i mean looking at those looking at those relatives looking at the wife and it's really heartbreaking you go thank you thank you for watching as well this is art international live from moscow. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy. let it be an arms race. spearing dramatic to follow only closely i'm going to exist i don't see how that strategy will be successful very critical time to sit down and
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