So for the past two weeks, he's been helping out with his friends' extended stay. He said he spoke with Suni Williams on Thursday and expressed pride in how she and Butch Wilmore have coped with their situation.
Williams and Wilmore should have returned to Earth on Boeing's troubled Starliner capsule back in June, a week after blasting off on its first test flight with a crew. After extensive tests and analysis of thruster problems and helium leaks, NASA decided last weekend it would be safer for SpaceX to fly them home, but that won't happen until February, more than eight months after they blasted off.
"They're doing great work, really maintaining a positive attitude up there, setting a great example and knocking out a whole lot of extra work on the space station," Rubio told The Associated Press from NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston.
While remaining in space until next year is not "the optimal outcome," Rubio said, "they've done a fantastic job of dealing with adversity." Their families, like his own, also have had to make sacrifices because of the switch in plans.
"But that's part of our job is just to adapt and overcome and make the best of the situation," he said, "and they've done just that, so super proud of them."
Williams and Wilmore haven't spoken publicly about the Starliner dilemma since their lone orbital news conference last month, well before the decision to bump them to SpaceX and bring Boeing's capsule back empty in early September.
Rubio's own mission was extended after his Russian Soyuz capsule was hit by space junk and leaked all its coolant. A new Soyuz had to be rushed up for him and his two Russian crewmates, and they rode it back to Earth last September. Rubio holds the U.S. record for the longest single spaceflight with his 371-day mission.
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