
Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely
The two-man U.S.-Russian crew of a Soyuz spacecraft taking them to the orbiting International Space Station had to make a dramatic emergency landing in Kazakhstan on Thursday when its booster rocket failed in mid-air. U.S. astronaut Nick Hague and Russian cosmonaut Alexei Ovchinin landed safely without harm and rescue crews who raced to locate them on the Kazakh steppe quickly linked up with them.

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely

Soyuz rocket fails in mid-air, two-man U.S.-Russian crew lands safely
