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3 Kommentare
[Longtime NASA astronaut Suni Williams](https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/20/science/nasa-suni-williams-retires-starliner-astronaut?utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=missions&utm_source=reddit) announced her retirement Tuesday — officially making the unexpectedly long Boeing Starliner test flight her final foray to orbit as a member of the astronaut corps.
Williams, who has set multiple spaceflight records since joining the agency in 1998, did not give insight into the timing of her retirement in a statement issued by the space agency on Tuesday.
“Anyone who knows me knows that space is my absolute favorite place to be,” Williams said. “It’s been an incredible honor to have served in the Astronaut Office and have had the opportunity to fly in space three times.”
Williams first traveled to the International Space Station in 2006 aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery and returned to orbit in a Russian Soyuz capsule in 2012.
But her latest mission, in which she and fellow NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore set out to test fly Boeing’s new Starliner capsule on its first crewed mission, was perhaps her most well-known.
Wilmore and Williams had expected to spend about a week on the space station during the test flight. But the duo ultimately stayed more than nine months because of technical issues that cropped up en route with the Starliner vehicle — which NASA opted to fly home empty due to safety concerns.
Williams has logged 608 days in space, the second-most cumulative amount of time by a NASA astronaut behind [Peggy Whitson](https://www.nasa.gov/international-space-station/space-station-astronaut-record-holders/).
She has also accrued 62 hours free-floating in space across nine different spacewalks, making her the highest-ranking woman in that category and fourth in the world.
Williams’ exit from the astronaut corps comes months after she and Wilmore returned from the space station, concluding their test flight mission.
Wilmore’s and Williams’ departures from NASA follow the example set by Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, the two astronauts who piloted the first crewed test flight of SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule in 2020. That mission, which did not involve any major technical hangups or issues, marked the last for both Behnken and Hurley, who have each since retired.
Well earned. Best wishes to both.
I am not surprised. They are both in their 60s and have served enough time to be able to retire. They are old enough to where it is far from a certainty they would stay healthy long enough to get assigned to another flight even if they did want to stay in the astronaut corp.