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Afghan data breach unmasked UK spies, special forces: reports
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US health experts reassess hormone replacement therapy risks
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France court orders release of Lebanese militant after 40 years in jail
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Goodbye 'Downton Abbey' auction and UK exhibition announced
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Soaked Scheffler battles elements to make solid British Open start
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Ons Jabeur announces break from tennis 'to rediscover joy of living'
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UK, Germany vow to tackle people smuggling gangs
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Zuckerberg settles lawsuit over Cambridge Analytica scandal
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Global markets rise as Trump weighs future of Fed boss
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Syria troops quit Druze heartland after violence leaves over 500 dead
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TikTok Germany moderators raise alarm over layoff plans
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Pogacar retakes Tour de France lead in crushing mountain win
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Women's marathon world record holder Chepngetich suspended for doping suspicions
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EU readies retaliatory list targeting US services
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'Back in love': MotoGP champion Martin stays with Aprilia
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Israeli strike on Gaza's only Catholic church kills three
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'I'm not an old guy': Usyk says age won't matter in Dubois bout
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Fan energy key for Swiss in Euros clash with Spain, says Maritz
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'Like a dream': Druze reunited across Golan Heights buffer zone
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US health experts to reassess hormone replacement therapy risks
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Scheffler makes bright British Open start before McIlroy takes centre stage
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El Salvador rights group says forced into exile by Bukele crackdown
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Shock and sadness as Tomorrowland music festival opens after fire
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Napoli sign Dutch international forward Lang
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Westwood rolls back years on British Open return
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UK to lower voting age to 16 in general elections
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Sri Lanka returns orphaned elephants to the jungle
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Russian deputies back fines for clicking on 'extremist' content
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Ukraine's new PM: a deal-maker as head of wartime government
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Britain seeks German help against people smuggling gangs on landmark Merz visit
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Fake AI videos of R. Kelly, pope spread cult of Burkina junta chief
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Israeli strike on Gaza's only Catholic church kills two
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Rare Gandhi portrait smashes estimate to sell for nearly £153,000
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Syria troops quit Druze heartland leaving bodies on streets
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South Africa warns global turmoil threaten development goals
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Novartis first half net profits up 29 percent
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Strike on Gaza's only Catholic church injures several people
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Iraq shopping mall fire kills more than 60
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Taipei holds air raid drill to prepare for Chinese attack
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Migration, defence on agenda for German chancellor's first UK visit
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Swatch profits plunge on weak China sales
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Kluivert's Indonesia to face Saudi Arabia in World Cup qualifying
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EasyJet boss hits out over French air traffic walkouts
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Stocks extend Wall St gains, 7-Eleven owner plunges
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Wallabies Tupou, Daugunu added to Pasifika squad for Lions clash
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New Zealand, France make mass changes to sides for third Test
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54 people killed in 24-hours of heavy monsoon rain in Pakistan
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'I thought I was going to die': sailor recounts Huthi attack in Red Sea
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Three dead as South Korean region hit by most rain in 120 years
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Lions leave out Farrell, Pollock for first Australia Test

NASA expected to push back Moon missions
NASA is holding a briefing Tuesday in which it is widely expected to push back the timeline for the Artemis missions to return astronauts to the Moon, amid delays to the delivery of key components by contractors.
Artemis, named after the sister of Apollo in Greek mythology, was officially announced in 2017 as part of the US space agency's plans to establish a sustained presence on Earth's nearest space neighbor, and apply lessons learned there for a future mission to Mars.
Its first mission, an uncrewed test flight to the Moon and back called Artemis 1, took place in 2022, after several postponements.
According to the current plan the Artemis 2 launch, involving a crew that doesn't land on the surface, is set for late this year. Artemis 3, in which the first woman and first person of color are to set foot on lunar soil, should take place in 2025 at the Moon's south pole, where NASA hopes to exploit the ice to produce rocket fuel.
NASA is also looking to build a lunar space station called Gateway where spacecraft will dock during later missions.
Elon Musk's SpaceX has won the contract for a landing system for Artemis 3 based on a version of its prototype Starship rocket, which remains far from ready. Both of its orbital tests have so far ended in explosions.
What's more, delays to Starship have knock-on effects because the spacesuit contractor needs to know how the suits will interface with the spacecraft, and simulators need to be built for astronauts to learn its systems.
"As of March 2023, NASA has obligated approximately $40 billion to 860 contractors in support of the Artemis campaign," an official watchdog report published in October 2023 said.
The report added that the space agency "does not have comprehensive visibility into the Artemis campaign's subcontractors or sub-tier suppliers," preventing it from being able to manage "numerous and ongoing" challenges to the supply chain, contributing to delays.
A key difference between the 20th-century Apollo missions and the Artemis era is the increasing role of commercial partnerships, part of a broader strategy to involve the private companies in space exploration to reduce costs and to make space more accessible.
For example, the space agency paid the company Astrobotic more than $100 million to carry important scientific probes to a mid-latitude region of the Moon.
That mission, which blasted off this weekend, looks set to fail after suffering a critical loss of fuel due to a problem with its propulsion system.
P.Costa--AMWN